O. P. Anderson Map & Blue Print Company Inc., compiler, publisher
Published / Created:
[1897]
Call Number:
741 1897
Image Count:
1
Resource Type:
cartographic image
Description:
BEIN 741 1897: Map removed from cover and mounted on linen; cover housed separately. Autograph on inside front cover: J.L. Hiller[?], Oct. 15, 1898, Junneau. Manuscript note on inside front cover: Gold seekers map, Seattle, 1897., Negative blueline print., Relief shown by hachures and spot heights., Distances in miles between various locations are shown in tables for the main map as well as for the inset map "Lake Routes.", "N.B. This map has been duly copyrighted and must not be reproduced.", This map focuses on the Canadian territory Yukon. In 1897 it was still part of the Northwest Territories and is called that on this map. In 1898 the western part of the Northwest Territories became the Yukon. The border dispute between Alaska and Canada was resolved in 1903 by arbitration. This maps appears to show the border between Southeast Alaska and Canada as claimed by the United States before the arbitration., and Includes inset maps of Klondike River; Lake Routes; Rink Rapids.
Lantern slides of photographs that chiefly document an expedition led by Samuel Prescott Fay in the northern Canadian Rockies from Jasper, Alberta, to Hudson's Hope, British Columbia, from June to November 1914. The expedition received financial support from the United States Bureau of Biological Survey to collect and record wildlife species in the region, as well as determine the northern range of Rocky Mountain bighorn sheep. The lantern slides were probably created to illustrate lectures delivered by Fay in 1915, The photographs include informal portraits of expedition members, including Fay, Frederick Archibald Brewster, Charles Robert Cross, Robert Boydell Jones, and John Barnes Symes. Images of the men include depictions of camp life and activities related to the expedition, including hiking, hunting, fishing, paddling canoes, and managing a herd of twenty horses that accompanied them. Other individuals depicted include Ewan Henri Moberly, a Métis homesteader at Grande Cache, Alberta, and the family of Cree Indian Joseph Calliou at Moberly Lake, British Columbia. A few images depict unidentified American Indians, and Photographs of landscapes depict the terrain encountered by the expedition, including mountains, alpine ridges, meadows, burned over forests, rivers, and bogs. Identified sites include Grande Cache, Jarvis Pass, Kinuseo Falls, Moberly Lake, Mount Alexander, Mount Herman, Mount Ida, Murray River, Sapphire Lake, Smoky River, and Thunder Mountain, later known as Mount Cross. Several lantern slides reproduce maps of the region traversed by the expedition
Description:
Samuel Prescott Fay (1884-1971) was born in Boston, Massachusetts, and graduated from Harvard in 1907. He was an early member of the American Alpine Club and first visited the northern Canadian Rockies in 1906. From 1912 to 1914, Fay made a series of expeditions in Alberta and British Columbia. During World War I, he volunteered with the American Ambulance Field Service, and later served as a first lieutenant and aerial observer in the United States Army. After the war, he worked as a stockbroker and an investment counselor, as well as a trustee for the American Field Service. Fay died at his home in Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts., Title devised by cataloger., and Stored in 3 boxes.
Subject (Geographic):
Alberta, Alexander, Mount (B.C.), British Columbia, Canadian Rockies (B.C. and Alta.), Cross, Mount (B.C.), Grande Cache (Alta.), Herman, Mount (B.C.), Hudson's Hope Region (B.C.), Ida, Mount (B.C.), Jarvis Pass (B.C.), Jasper (Alta.), Kinuseo Falls (B.C.), Moberly Lake (B.C.), Murray River (B.C.), Peace River (B.C. and Alta.), Sapphire Lake (B.C.), Smoky River (Alta.), Yellowhead Mountain (Alta. and B.C.), and Yellowhead Pass region (Alta. and B.C.)
Subject (Name):
Brewster, Frederick Archibald, 1884-1969., Calliou, Joseph, ca. 1890-1960., Cross, Charles Robert, 1881-1915., Fay, Samuel Prescott, 1884-1971., Jones, Robert Boydell, 1893-1954., Moberly, Ewan Henri, 1859-1918., Symes, John Barnes, 1891-1917., and United States. Bureau of Biological Survey.
Subject (Topic):
Cree Indians, Indians of North America, Métis, and Rocky Mountain bighorn sheep
Lantern slides of photographs that chiefly document an expedition led by Samuel Prescott Fay in the northern Canadian Rockies from Jasper, Alberta, to Hudson's Hope, British Columbia, from June to November 1914. The expedition received financial support from the United States Bureau of Biological Survey to collect and record wildlife species in the region, as well as determine the northern range of Rocky Mountain bighorn sheep. The lantern slides were probably created to illustrate lectures delivered by Fay in 1915, The photographs include informal portraits of expedition members, including Fay, Frederick Archibald Brewster, Charles Robert Cross, Robert Boydell Jones, and John Barnes Symes. Images of the men include depictions of camp life and activities related to the expedition, including hiking, hunting, fishing, paddling canoes, and managing a herd of twenty horses that accompanied them. Other individuals depicted include Ewan Henri Moberly, a Métis homesteader at Grande Cache, Alberta, and the family of Cree Indian Joseph Calliou at Moberly Lake, British Columbia. A few images depict unidentified American Indians, and Photographs of landscapes depict the terrain encountered by the expedition, including mountains, alpine ridges, meadows, burned over forests, rivers, and bogs. Identified sites include Grande Cache, Jarvis Pass, Kinuseo Falls, Moberly Lake, Mount Alexander, Mount Herman, Mount Ida, Murray River, Sapphire Lake, Smoky River, and Thunder Mountain, later known as Mount Cross. Several lantern slides reproduce maps of the region traversed by the expedition
Description:
Samuel Prescott Fay (1884-1971) was born in Boston, Massachusetts, and graduated from Harvard in 1907. He was an early member of the American Alpine Club and first visited the northern Canadian Rockies in 1906. From 1912 to 1914, Fay made a series of expeditions in Alberta and British Columbia. During World War I, he volunteered with the American Ambulance Field Service, and later served as a first lieutenant and aerial observer in the United States Army. After the war, he worked as a stockbroker and an investment counselor, as well as a trustee for the American Field Service. Fay died at his home in Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts., Title devised by cataloger., and Stored in 3 boxes.
Subject (Geographic):
Alberta, Alexander, Mount (B.C.), British Columbia, Canadian Rockies (B.C. and Alta.), Cross, Mount (B.C.), Grande Cache (Alta.), Herman, Mount (B.C.), Hudson's Hope Region (B.C.), Ida, Mount (B.C.), Jarvis Pass (B.C.), Jasper (Alta.), Kinuseo Falls (B.C.), Moberly Lake (B.C.), Murray River (B.C.), Peace River (B.C. and Alta.), Sapphire Lake (B.C.), Smoky River (Alta.), Yellowhead Mountain (Alta. and B.C.), and Yellowhead Pass region (Alta. and B.C.)
Subject (Name):
Brewster, Frederick Archibald, 1884-1969., Calliou, Joseph, ca. 1890-1960., Cross, Charles Robert, 1881-1915., Fay, Samuel Prescott, 1884-1971., Jones, Robert Boydell, 1893-1954., Moberly, Ewan Henri, 1859-1918., Symes, John Barnes, 1891-1917., and United States. Bureau of Biological Survey.
Subject (Topic):
Cree Indians, Indians of North America, Métis, and Rocky Mountain bighorn sheep
Lantern slides of photographs that chiefly document an expedition led by Samuel Prescott Fay in the northern Canadian Rockies from Jasper, Alberta, to Hudson's Hope, British Columbia, from June to November 1914. The expedition received financial support from the United States Bureau of Biological Survey to collect and record wildlife species in the region, as well as determine the northern range of Rocky Mountain bighorn sheep. The lantern slides were probably created to illustrate lectures delivered by Fay in 1915, The photographs include informal portraits of expedition members, including Fay, Frederick Archibald Brewster, Charles Robert Cross, Robert Boydell Jones, and John Barnes Symes. Images of the men include depictions of camp life and activities related to the expedition, including hiking, hunting, fishing, paddling canoes, and managing a herd of twenty horses that accompanied them. Other individuals depicted include Ewan Henri Moberly, a Métis homesteader at Grande Cache, Alberta, and the family of Cree Indian Joseph Calliou at Moberly Lake, British Columbia. A few images depict unidentified American Indians, and Photographs of landscapes depict the terrain encountered by the expedition, including mountains, alpine ridges, meadows, burned over forests, rivers, and bogs. Identified sites include Grande Cache, Jarvis Pass, Kinuseo Falls, Moberly Lake, Mount Alexander, Mount Herman, Mount Ida, Murray River, Sapphire Lake, Smoky River, and Thunder Mountain, later known as Mount Cross. Several lantern slides reproduce maps of the region traversed by the expedition
Description:
Samuel Prescott Fay (1884-1971) was born in Boston, Massachusetts, and graduated from Harvard in 1907. He was an early member of the American Alpine Club and first visited the northern Canadian Rockies in 1906. From 1912 to 1914, Fay made a series of expeditions in Alberta and British Columbia. During World War I, he volunteered with the American Ambulance Field Service, and later served as a first lieutenant and aerial observer in the United States Army. After the war, he worked as a stockbroker and an investment counselor, as well as a trustee for the American Field Service. Fay died at his home in Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts., Title devised by cataloger., and Stored in 3 boxes.
Subject (Geographic):
Alberta, Alexander, Mount (B.C.), British Columbia, Canadian Rockies (B.C. and Alta.), Cross, Mount (B.C.), Grande Cache (Alta.), Herman, Mount (B.C.), Hudson's Hope Region (B.C.), Ida, Mount (B.C.), Jarvis Pass (B.C.), Jasper (Alta.), Kinuseo Falls (B.C.), Moberly Lake (B.C.), Murray River (B.C.), Peace River (B.C. and Alta.), Sapphire Lake (B.C.), Smoky River (Alta.), Yellowhead Mountain (Alta. and B.C.), and Yellowhead Pass region (Alta. and B.C.)
Subject (Name):
Brewster, Frederick Archibald, 1884-1969., Calliou, Joseph, ca. 1890-1960., Cross, Charles Robert, 1881-1915., Fay, Samuel Prescott, 1884-1971., Jones, Robert Boydell, 1893-1954., Moberly, Ewan Henri, 1859-1918., Symes, John Barnes, 1891-1917., and United States. Bureau of Biological Survey.
Subject (Topic):
Cree Indians, Indians of North America, Métis, and Rocky Mountain bighorn sheep
Lantern slides of photographs that chiefly document an expedition led by Samuel Prescott Fay in the northern Canadian Rockies from Jasper, Alberta, to Hudson's Hope, British Columbia, from June to November 1914. The expedition received financial support from the United States Bureau of Biological Survey to collect and record wildlife species in the region, as well as determine the northern range of Rocky Mountain bighorn sheep. The lantern slides were probably created to illustrate lectures delivered by Fay in 1915, The photographs include informal portraits of expedition members, including Fay, Frederick Archibald Brewster, Charles Robert Cross, Robert Boydell Jones, and John Barnes Symes. Images of the men include depictions of camp life and activities related to the expedition, including hiking, hunting, fishing, paddling canoes, and managing a herd of twenty horses that accompanied them. Other individuals depicted include Ewan Henri Moberly, a Métis homesteader at Grande Cache, Alberta, and the family of Cree Indian Joseph Calliou at Moberly Lake, British Columbia. A few images depict unidentified American Indians, and Photographs of landscapes depict the terrain encountered by the expedition, including mountains, alpine ridges, meadows, burned over forests, rivers, and bogs. Identified sites include Grande Cache, Jarvis Pass, Kinuseo Falls, Moberly Lake, Mount Alexander, Mount Herman, Mount Ida, Murray River, Sapphire Lake, Smoky River, and Thunder Mountain, later known as Mount Cross. Several lantern slides reproduce maps of the region traversed by the expedition
Description:
Samuel Prescott Fay (1884-1971) was born in Boston, Massachusetts, and graduated from Harvard in 1907. He was an early member of the American Alpine Club and first visited the northern Canadian Rockies in 1906. From 1912 to 1914, Fay made a series of expeditions in Alberta and British Columbia. During World War I, he volunteered with the American Ambulance Field Service, and later served as a first lieutenant and aerial observer in the United States Army. After the war, he worked as a stockbroker and an investment counselor, as well as a trustee for the American Field Service. Fay died at his home in Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts., Title devised by cataloger., and Stored in 3 boxes.
Subject (Geographic):
Alberta, Alexander, Mount (B.C.), British Columbia, Canadian Rockies (B.C. and Alta.), Cross, Mount (B.C.), Grande Cache (Alta.), Herman, Mount (B.C.), Hudson's Hope Region (B.C.), Ida, Mount (B.C.), Jarvis Pass (B.C.), Jasper (Alta.), Kinuseo Falls (B.C.), Moberly Lake (B.C.), Murray River (B.C.), Peace River (B.C. and Alta.), Sapphire Lake (B.C.), Smoky River (Alta.), Yellowhead Mountain (Alta. and B.C.), and Yellowhead Pass region (Alta. and B.C.)
Subject (Name):
Brewster, Frederick Archibald, 1884-1969., Calliou, Joseph, ca. 1890-1960., Cross, Charles Robert, 1881-1915., Fay, Samuel Prescott, 1884-1971., Jones, Robert Boydell, 1893-1954., Moberly, Ewan Henri, 1859-1918., Symes, John Barnes, 1891-1917., and United States. Bureau of Biological Survey.
Subject (Topic):
Cree Indians, Indians of North America, Métis, and Rocky Mountain bighorn sheep
Lantern slides of photographs that chiefly document an expedition led by Samuel Prescott Fay in the northern Canadian Rockies from Jasper, Alberta, to Hudson's Hope, British Columbia, from June to November 1914. The expedition received financial support from the United States Bureau of Biological Survey to collect and record wildlife species in the region, as well as determine the northern range of Rocky Mountain bighorn sheep. The lantern slides were probably created to illustrate lectures delivered by Fay in 1915, The photographs include informal portraits of expedition members, including Fay, Frederick Archibald Brewster, Charles Robert Cross, Robert Boydell Jones, and John Barnes Symes. Images of the men include depictions of camp life and activities related to the expedition, including hiking, hunting, fishing, paddling canoes, and managing a herd of twenty horses that accompanied them. Other individuals depicted include Ewan Henri Moberly, a Métis homesteader at Grande Cache, Alberta, and the family of Cree Indian Joseph Calliou at Moberly Lake, British Columbia. A few images depict unidentified American Indians, and Photographs of landscapes depict the terrain encountered by the expedition, including mountains, alpine ridges, meadows, burned over forests, rivers, and bogs. Identified sites include Grande Cache, Jarvis Pass, Kinuseo Falls, Moberly Lake, Mount Alexander, Mount Herman, Mount Ida, Murray River, Sapphire Lake, Smoky River, and Thunder Mountain, later known as Mount Cross. Several lantern slides reproduce maps of the region traversed by the expedition
Description:
Samuel Prescott Fay (1884-1971) was born in Boston, Massachusetts, and graduated from Harvard in 1907. He was an early member of the American Alpine Club and first visited the northern Canadian Rockies in 1906. From 1912 to 1914, Fay made a series of expeditions in Alberta and British Columbia. During World War I, he volunteered with the American Ambulance Field Service, and later served as a first lieutenant and aerial observer in the United States Army. After the war, he worked as a stockbroker and an investment counselor, as well as a trustee for the American Field Service. Fay died at his home in Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts., Title devised by cataloger., and Stored in 3 boxes.
Subject (Geographic):
Alberta, Alexander, Mount (B.C.), British Columbia, Canadian Rockies (B.C. and Alta.), Cross, Mount (B.C.), Grande Cache (Alta.), Herman, Mount (B.C.), Hudson's Hope Region (B.C.), Ida, Mount (B.C.), Jarvis Pass (B.C.), Jasper (Alta.), Kinuseo Falls (B.C.), Moberly Lake (B.C.), Murray River (B.C.), Peace River (B.C. and Alta.), Sapphire Lake (B.C.), Smoky River (Alta.), Yellowhead Mountain (Alta. and B.C.), and Yellowhead Pass region (Alta. and B.C.)
Subject (Name):
Brewster, Frederick Archibald, 1884-1969., Calliou, Joseph, ca. 1890-1960., Cross, Charles Robert, 1881-1915., Fay, Samuel Prescott, 1884-1971., Jones, Robert Boydell, 1893-1954., Moberly, Ewan Henri, 1859-1918., Symes, John Barnes, 1891-1917., and United States. Bureau of Biological Survey.
Subject (Topic):
Cree Indians, Indians of North America, Métis, and Rocky Mountain bighorn sheep
Photograph album depicting the landscape and participants of a pack trip to the Grand Canyon along the Mystic Springs and Hange trails, including views of boating on the Colorado River, Cataract Creek Canyon, the Havasupai Indian Agency, Havasupai Point and the Painted Desert, These images are followed by a series of photographs of the Hopi pueblos of Walpi and Oraibi, showing flute and basket dancers, domestic scenes such as tending corn plants and grinding corn, spinning, weaving, making pottery, and tending children. There are several scenes in the pueblos that show the campers from the earlier series of Grand Canyon views, and A series of ten portraits of Navajo Indians follows the Hopi scenes. These are followed by a picture of a women with a 216 lb. tuna hoisted beside her, and then by a series of poor quality snapshots of a big horn sheep hunting trip and several color postcards of British Columbia
Description:
Album lacks covers. Individual photographs are 15 x 20 cm. or smaller, and have repeating orotone letterpress captions. Numbers inscribed in negatives of some prints.
Publisher:
George L. Rose
Subject (Geographic):
Arizona, Oraibi (Ariz.), Walpi (Ariz.), Havasupai Reservation (Ariz.), British Columbia, and Grand Canyon (Ariz.)
Subject (Topic):
Indians of North America, Pictorial works, Hopi Indians, Navajo Indians, Rites and ceremonies, and Hunting
Photographs of Niagara Falls; Yosemite National Park, Shasta Springs, and the Siskiyou Mountains in California; Portland, Oregon; and Bow Falls in Banff, the Selkirk mountains, the Great Glacier, and other scenes along the Canadian Pacific Railway. Includes one image of the ruins of Pompeii, and one of other, unidentified ruins. Also includes a photograph of a drawing of Cunard's Atlantic liner "Umbria". and Photographers include Isaiah Taber of San Francisco; J. Thompson of New Westminster, B.C.; Wm. Notman & Son of Montreal; and G. Sommer of Naples, Italy
Description:
Photographer's captions printed in the negative for most images. and Label inside back cover: "A & N*C*S*Ld., Stationery Dept., 105 Victoria St. S.W."
Subject (Geographic):
Yosemite National Park (Calif.), Shasta Springs (Calif.), Siskiyou Mountains (Calif. and Or.), California, Portland (Or.), Oregon, Banff (Alta.), Selkirk Range, British Columbia, Alberta, Niagara Falls (N.Y. and Ont.), and Pompeii (Extinct city)
Subject (Name):
Taber, I. W. 1830-1912. (Isaiah West),, J. Thompson (Firm), Wm. Notman & Son., Canadian Pacific Railway Company, and Umbria (Steamship)
Photographs of Alaska and British Columbia, including views of scenery along the Frazer River, ice flows, steamships, totem poles, and views of Sitka and of the Block House at Nanaimo, British Columbia
Description:
Manuscript and/or letterpress captions on some mounts.
Photographs of Neah Bay, Washington, and Haida Gwaii (formerly known as the Queen Charlotte Islands), British Columbia, created during the summer of 2010 and March 2011, that document the culture of Makah Indians and Haida Indians. The collection also includes a group of images that document the centennial birthday celebration in 2010 of Claude Morrison, who is also known as Mii Ju, Mķijuu, and Kúng Skiís., A group of images documents Makah Indians and participants in the Inter-Tribal Ocean-Going Canoe Journey, Paddle to Makah, at Neah Bay, Washington, in July 2010, Images of Haida Gwaii include views of Masset and portraits of Haida artisans, including Gwaai Edenshaw, Jaalen Edenshaw, and Donnie Edenshaw. Discrete groups of images document the wedding between Donnie Edenshaw and Beverly Anne Samuels, and the coronation ceremony of hereditary chief Percy Williams in Skidegate, as well as an end-of-winter feast at the community hall in Masset on March 12, 2011, and Six oversize photographic prints in the collection include photographs of Haida artwork, as well as portraits of Haida artisans Gwaai Edenshaw and Evelyn Vanderhoop
Description:
Accompanied by descriptions of the images by the photographer (in box 1)., Title devised by cataloger., and Stored in 6 boxes.
Subject (Geographic):
Alaska, British Columbia, Haida Gwaii (B.C.), Hydaburg (Alaska), Masset (B.C.), Neah Bay (Wash.), and Washington (State)