IDNO
P.86208.PAT
Description
Full-length frontal portrait of four Inuit men standing with two expedition members, one of which is Richard W. de Feachem and the other the Bestyrer (manager or warden in Danish and Norweigan). Three of the Inuit men wear dark cloth parkas, with the fourth wearing knitted cardigans and jerseys. All four wear European style trousers with de-haired fur boots. The expedition member on the left is smoking a cigar and the other member is smoking a pipe. In the background is a group of Inuit watching on, and a turf and stone house?.
Place
N America; Arctic; Greenland; Nugssuak Peninsula
Cultural Affliation
Named Person
Richard W. de Feachem
Photographer
None
Collector / Expedition
Paterson, Thomas Thompson
Date
24 - 30 July 1937
Collection Name
Paterson Collection
Source
Paterson, Erik T.
Format
Print Black & White
Primary Documentation
Other Information
Related Image: imilar image mounted in James Wordie’s 1937 album with the number and caption:
“July 24 - 30”
“Nugssuaq Greenlanders.”
“261. The Bestyrer, 3 men, & the Katachit,
with 5ft 10 - Feachem to show their
height.”
See Related Documents File. [Jocelyne Dudding 7/3/2008]
Bibliographical Reference: J. M. Wordie; H. Carmichael; E. G. Dymond; T. C. Lethbridge, ‘An Expedition to North West Greenland and the Canadian Arctic in 1937’ in The Geographical Journal, Vol. 92, No. 5. (Nov., 1938), pp. 385-418. Text on p. 388 includes:
“We left early on July 24 and during a day of mist and fog passed up the Vaigat, aiming to anchor at the western end of Nugssuak Peninsula. By now we knew that there was practically no pack-ice in Davis Strait, and had therefore given up the idea of launching the balloons out at sea. The Nugssuak Peninsula juts prominently westwards, and appeared to have much the same strategic advantages as Godhavn, there being a small fairly sheltered harbour, near the extreme west point. The approaches are narrow, and it was only with the help of local Greenlanders that we were able to feel our way in and secure the ship by a combination of anchoring and tying up to ring bolts. The harbour lay lengthwise between dipping ledges, and is not much more than a boat harbour, and ours was probably the limit of size of ship which can be accommodated”.
[JD 12/2/2007]
Place: In the BFI’s synopses of Wordie’s 1937 film of Greenland, mention is made of footage of “Nugssnag [sic] settlement, eskimoes, a kayak maker, and girls showing off their best boots”. [Reel 2, 96 foot] [Source:
BFI, http://ftvdb.bfi.org.uk/sift/title/14564?view=synopsis] [JD 13/2/2007]
P.86589.PAT to P.86600.PAT were found in the film wallet now numbered C446/3/.
This catalogue record has been updated with the support of the Getty Grant Program Two. [Jocelyne Dudding 7/2/2007]
FM:220858
Images (Click to view full size):