IDNO
P.86325.PAT
Description
Richard de Feachem sitting in possibly an Inuit house ruin holding a camera?
'According to James Wordie's album, this is Charles Lethbridge looking into what appears to be a house run. Imogen Gunn 29/08/2024'
Place
N America; Arctic; Canada; Nunavut; Devon Island [Tallurutit]; Cape Sparbo [Cape Hardy]
Cultural Affliation
Named Person
?de Feachem, Richard; ?Lethbridge, Thomas Charles
Photographer
None
Collector / Expedition
Paterson, Thomas Thompson
Date
22 - 25 August 1937
Collection Name
Paterson Collection
Source
Paterson, Erik T.
Format
Print Black & White
Primary Documentation
Other Information
'The dates given in Wordie's album (22-25 August) do coincide with the expedition being at Cape Sparbo [Cape Hardy] on Devon Island, rather than Carey Island, which was previously listed in the Place field. This has now been updated. Imogen Gunn 29/08/2024'
Related Image: Same image mounted in James Wordie’s 1937 album with the number and caption:
“August 22 - 25”
“Cape Hardy (Sparbo).”
“688 - Lethbridge looks in.”
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. 392 and p. 394 includes:
“The ship meantime proceeded on August 9 to the Cary Islands to see if balloon flights were possible from this mid-water position”.
“We were not surprised therefore to find that there had been old Eskimo villages both on the south side of North West Island and at the ship anchorage at Isbjorn Island. At the former there were the remains of at least five huts, but they had been partly excavated by some previous visitor and only a few whale bones were present. It seems certain that this was the site visited by Markham in 1851, and the chance of making any study of these huts had gone. The anchorage site on the other hand had never been disturbed, and we found two umiak rests and five long houses, each accommodating several families. Whale bones were visible jutting through the turf of the longest house, and the turf was therefore stripped to expose a complete framework of rafters of whale bones. The house was three-roomed, two short walls projecting and acting as rests for the long whale-bone girders ; an interesting peculiarity was the symmetrical arrangement of whale scapulae. Measurements were made, but the bones were left untouched just as they were found and no excavations undertaken at this large hut, though digging was done at a smaller house alongside for comparative purposes”.
[JD 12/2/2007]
Biographical Information: Lethbridge, T. C., 1939. ‘Archaeological Data from the Canadian Arctic’ in The Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland.
P.86084.PAT to P.86583.PAT were found wrapped in the card now numbered C446/1/.
This catalogue record has been updated with the support of the Getty Grant Program Two. [Jocelyne Dudding 20/12/2006]
FM:220975
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