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Manuscripts[X]
1Author:  Barton, Benjamin Smith, 1766-1815
 Physician, naturalist. Medical practice, Philadelphia, 1789-1815; professor of natural history and botany, College of Philadelphia, 1790-95, of materia medica, 1895-1813; chair of theory and practice of medicine, 1813-15; physician to Pennsylvania Hospital, 1798-1815; founder and editor, Philadelphia Medical and Physical Journal, 1805-08. Barton's interests and research included studies in botany, materia medica, and American ethnography. 


 Title:  Queries Concerning the Northern Indians     
 Type:  Text items 
 Format:  Manuscripts 
 Language:  English 
 Dates:  31 March 1797 
 Extent:  2 leaves 
 Abstract:   none  
 Source:  American Philosophical Society Historical and Literary Committee, American Indian Vocabulary Collection (497 V85) 
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 Subjects:  Physical studies -- Physical anthropology, medical anthropology, anthropometrics, craniology, race, human evolution 
2Author:  Morton, Samuel George, 1799-1851
 Physician, naturalist. Practicing physician, Philadelphia, 1826-1851; professor of anatomy, Pennsylvania Medical College, 1839-1843; member of the American Philosophical Society and the Philadelphia Academy of Natural Sciences; researcher and writer in paleontology, geology, zoology, medicine, and physical anthropology. Morton, a noted polygenist, wrote on craniology and human hybridity 


 Title:  Samuel George Morton Papers     
 Type:  Collection 
 Format:  Manuscripts 
 Language:  English 
 Dates:  1819-1850 
 Extent:  1.75 linear feet (approximately 600 items) 
 Abstract:  Correspondents include Thomas Hodgkin, Benjamin Silliman, John Bachman, George Combe, J.C. Prichard, George Gliddon. Race; craniology; human hybridity 
 Source:  Samuel George Morton Papers (B M843) 
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 Subjects:  Physical studies -- Physical anthropology, medical anthropology, anthropometrics, craniology, race, human evolution 
3Author:  Sapir, Edward, 1884-1939
 Anthropologist, linguist. Research assistant, anthropology, University of California, Berkeley, 1907-1908; instructor, anthropology, University of Pennsylvania, 1908-1910; chief of division, anthropology, Canadian National Museum, 1910-1925; associate professor, anthropology, University of Chicago, 1925-1927, professor, anthopology and general linguistics, 1927-1931; Sterling professor, anthropology and linguistics, Yale University, 1931-1939 


 Title:  American Indian Grammatical Categories     
 Type:  Text items 
 Format:  Manuscripts 
 Language:  English 
 Dates:  Circa 1929 
 Extent:  6 leaves 
 Abstract:   none  
 Source:  Miscellaneous Manuscripts (Misc. Mss.) 
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 Subjects:  Physical studies -- Physical anthropology, medical anthropology, anthropometrics, craniology, race, human evolution 
4Author:  Gajdusek, D. Carleton, 1923-2008
 Pediatrician, virologist, medical anthropologist. Senior resident pediatrician, Boston Children's Medical Center, 1949-1952; senior investigator in infectious disease, Pasteur Institute, Iran, 1954-1955; visiting investigator, Walter and Eliza Hall Institute for Medical Research, Australia, 1955-1957; chief, Laboratory of Central Nervous System Studies, National Institute of Neurological and Communicative Disorders and Stroke, NIH, 1958-. Gajdusek's research includes the study of evolution in isolated populations and disease patterns in primitive cultures 


 Title:  Daniel Carleton Gajdusek Papers     
 Type:  Collection 
 Format:  Manuscripts 
 Language:  English 
 Dates:  Circa 1945-2003 
 Extent:  126 linear feet 
 Abstract:  The Gajdusek Papers include the complete run of his professional correspondence and an important series of journals that record his medical and epidemiological research (especially that on Kuru), pediatric studies, and human and population genetics work in Africa, Australia, Colombia, Guam, Indonesia, Libya, Melanesia, New Guinea, New Hebrides, Pacific Islands, Paraguay, Soviet Union, and the Western Caroline Islands. Restricted access. 
 Source:  Daniel Carleton Gajdusek Papers (B G13j) 
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 Subjects:  Anthropological and archaeological fieldwork | Physical studies -- Physical anthropology, medical anthropology, anthropometrics, craniology, race, human evolution 
5Author:  Galton, Francis, 1822-1911
 Explorer, independent scientific writer and scholar, founder of eugenics. Galton was an important participant in the councils of 19th-century British science, and his writings on the inheritance of intellectual skills influenced many human biologists and physical anthropologists. In particular, Galton's researches into the comparative roles of human nature and nurture in shaping social behavior and achievement led to the founding of the eugenics movement. 


 Title:  Sir Francis Galton Collection     
 Type:  Collection 
 Format:  Manuscripts 
 Language:  English 
 Dates:  1867-1909 
 Extent:  0.25 linear feet (26 items) 
 Abstract:  Correspondents include Hyde Clarke, H.G. Jebb, Mrs. Annie Procter, E.G. Ravenstein. Various scientific and personal topics; human intelligence and inheritance. 
 Source:  Sir Francis Galton Collection (B G136.m) 
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 Subjects:  Physical studies -- Physical anthropology, medical anthropology, anthropometrics, craniology, race, human evolution | Personal matters 
6Author:  Jennings, Herbert Spencer, 1868-1947
 Geneticist, eugenicist. Instructor, botany and bacteriology, Montana State College, Bozeman, 1897-1898; instructor, zoology, Darthmouth College, 1898-1899; instructor, University of Michigan, 1899-1901; assistant professor, 1901-1903; assistant professor, University of Pennsylvania, 1903-1906; associate professor, physiological zoology, Johns Hopkins University, 1906-1907; professor, experimental zoology, 1907-1910; Henry Walters professor of zoology, and director of the zoological laboratory, 1910-1938; emeritus professor, 1938-1947; research associate, UCLA, 1939-1947. Jennings was an active scholar in genetics and eugenics after 1907, with a special interest in the significance of genetic discoveries for society. His writings in the 1920s and 1930s include studies on heredity and environment, biology and the human future, eugenics and race progress, and the biological bases to human nature and behavior. Jennings was involved in controversies in the 1920s over immigration and its influence on the nation's racial stock 


 Title:  Herbert Spencer Jennings Papers     
 Type:  Collection 
 Format:  Manuscripts 
 Language:  English 
 Dates:  Circa 1893-1947 
 Extent:  14.5 linear feet (approximately 7,000 items) 
 Abstract:  The collection includes manuscript writings, lectures, notes, and correspondence on human inheritance, nature versus nurture in heredity, racial heredity, genetics and behavior. Paper and lecture topics include "Biology and the Principles of Human Conduct," "Biology of Democracy," "Concerning the Lunatic Fringe," "Biological Results of Race Crossings." See also the collection description in Bentley Glass, Guide to the Genetics Collections. 
 Source:  Herbert Spencer Jennings Papers (B J44) 
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 Subjects:  Social uses and context of anthropology and archaeology | Physical studies -- Physical anthropology, medical anthropology, anthropometrics, craniology, race, human evolution 
7Author:  Klineberg, Otto, 1899-1992
 Social psychologist. Instructor, Psychology, Columbia University, 1931-1937, assistant professor, 1937-1945, associate professor, 1947-1950, professor, 1950-1952, emeritus professor, 1962-1992; professor, Sao Paulo University, 1945-1947. 


 Title:  Varieties of Abnormality     
 Type:  Text items 
 Format:  Manuscripts 
 Language:  English 
 Dates:  n.d. 
 Extent:  1 item 
 Abstract:  Piblokto (Arctic Hysteria) Research. From the text Social Psychology 
 Source:  Wallace Family Papers, Subcollection I, Anthony F. C. Wallace Papers (Ms. Coll. 64) 
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 Subjects:  Cultural description and analysis, social organization and structure, ceremonial behavior, material culture | Physical studies -- Physical anthropology, medical anthropology, anthropometrics, craniology, race, human evolution 
8Author:  Barton, Benjamin Smith, 1766-1815
 Physician, naturalist. Medical practice, Philadelphia, 1789-1815; professor of natural history and botany, College of Philadelphia, 1790-95, of materia medica, 1895-1813; chair of theory and practice of medicine, 1813-15; physician to Pennsylvania Hospital, 1798-1815; founder and editor, Philadelphia Medical and Physical Journal, 1805-08. Barton's interests and research included studies in botany, materia medica, and American ethnography. 


 Title:  Benjamin Smith Barton Papers     
 Type:  Collection 
 Format:  Manuscripts 
 Language:  English 
 Dates:  1789-1794 
 Extent:  17 letters; 3 printed documents 
 Abstract:  Includes letters to Thomas Pennant concerning color and morphology of American Indians. Also "Proposals for Printing... An Historical... Inquiry into... Remains of Antiquity," 1789. 
 Source:  Benjamin Smith Barton Papers. Letters to Thomas Pennant (B B284) 
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 Subjects:  Archaeology, prehistory | Physical studies -- Physical anthropology, medical anthropology, anthropometrics, craniology, race, human evolution 
9Author:  Werner, Oswald, 1928-
 Anthropologist. The anthropologist Oswald Werner was a member of the faculty at Northwestern University from 1963 until his retirement in 1998. A student of Navajo language and culture, he had a particular interest in Navajo medicine and science 


 Title:  The Navaho Ethnomedical Domain     
 Type:  Text items 
 Format:  Manuscripts 
 Language:  English 
 Dates:  1964 
 Extent:  34 leaves 
 Abstract:  The Werner Collection consists of two of Oswald Werner's early works on Navajo language and culture. One of which is a paper entitled "The Navaho ethnomedical domain: prolegomena to a componential semantic analysis" 
 Source:  Oswald Werner Collection (497.3 W50) 
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 Subjects:  Linguistics and philology | Physical studies -- Physical anthropology, medical anthropology, anthropometrics, craniology, race, human evolution 
10Author:  Wallace, Anthony F. C., 1923-
 Anthropologist. Instructor anthropology Bryn Mawr College, 1948-1950; assistant instructor anthropology University of Pennsylvania, research secretary Behavioral Research Council, 1951-1955; research assistant professor University of Pennsylvania, 1952-1955, visiting associate professor, 1955-1961, professor, 1961, chairman, 1961-1971; Geraldine R. Segal professor social thought, 1980-1983, University professor, 1983-1988, professor emeritus, 1988- 


 Title:  The Institutionalization of Cathartic and Control Strategies in Iroquois Religious Psychotherapy     
 Type:  Text items 
 Format:  Manuscripts 
 Language:  English 
 Dates:  [1957] 
 Extent:  1 item 
 Abstract:   none  
 Source:  William N. Fenton Papers (Ms. Coll. 20) 
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 Subjects:  Disciplinary professionalization, professional societies, education, employment | Folklore, mythology, religion | Physical studies -- Physical anthropology, medical anthropology, anthropometrics, craniology, race, human evolution 
11Author:  Caspari, Ernst Wolfgang, 1909-1988
 Geneticist. Assistant professor of zoology and research associate, University of Rochester, 1944-1946; associate professor, biology, Wesleyan University, 1945-1946, professor, 1949-1960; professor, biology, University of Rochester, 1965-1975, professor emeritus, 1975-1988. 


 Title:  Ernst Wolfgang Caspari Papers     
 Type:  Collection 
 Format:  Manuscripts 
 Language:  English 
 Dates:  1938-1980 
 Extent:  9.5 linear feet 
 Abstract:  Caspari's interest in genetics and behavior extended into anthropology, psychology, and sociology. His work has been applied by social scientists to problems in their particular fields. Caspari's papers contain correspondence with the American Psychological and Sociological Associations. Included under the heading of the latter is a copy of his 1963 conference address to the ASA on "Genetic Constitution and Social Factors in Man." There is correspondence (1968-72) with Bernard Campbell on the topic of a published volume dealing with sexual selection in human evolution, to commemorate the centenary of Charles Darwin's Descent of Man, and also with the Wenner-Gren Foundation. Other relevant subject materials include records dealing with Caspari's membership on the Committee on Genetics and Behavior of the National Research Council; a study on "The Biological Basis of Female Hierarchies" of 1975; and various public addresses and papers dealing with heredity and environment in the determination of human behavior, human origins, and the interactions between biological and cultural evolution. 
 Source:  Ernst Wolfgang Caspari Papers (Ms. Coll. 1) 
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 Subjects:  Cultural description and analysis, social organization and structure, ceremonial behavior, material culture | Physical studies -- Physical anthropology, medical anthropology, anthropometrics, craniology, race, human evolution | Publishing, publications, miscellaneous 
12Author:  Darwin, Charles, 1809-1882
 Naturalist. Darwin was independently wealthy and pursued much of his work at home, in Kent. His travels with the Beagle, 1831-1836, set the stage for his later studies in geology, zoology, and botany. Subsequent to the publication of The Origin of Species in 1859, he was made an honorary member (1861) of the London Ethnological Society. Darwin did not specifically write upon human evolution until the later 1860s, when The Descent of Man was composed (published 1871), followed in 1872 by Expression of the Emotions in Man and Animals. Both books were influential upon later writing and research in anthropology. 


 Title:  Charles Darwin Collection     
 Type:  Collection 
 Format:  Manuscripts 
 Language:  English 
 Dates:  1837-1882 
 Extent:  Approximately 950 items 
 Abstract:  The American Philosophical Society Library holds an extensive collection of Darwin letters, either in original or photo-copy form. The manuscript letter collection includes approximately 730 Darwin letters (B D25.m, B D25.L, B D25.L1, B D25.r, B D25.1-361). The large groups of letters are to Charles Lyell and to George Romanes. The Library also holds photocopy or microfilm copies of almost the entirety of Darwin's known surviving correspondence, listed in A Calendar of the Correspondence of Charles Darwin, 1821-1882, Frederick Burkhardt and Sidney Smith, editors, New York: Garland, 1985. Cambridge University Press is now publishing the letters in a multi-volume series. The correspondence most useful for studies in the history of anthropology includes the letters between Darwin and T.H. Huxley, Charles Lyell, George Rolleston, A.R. Wallace, Armand de Quatrefages, John Lubbock, Karl von Baer, E.B. Tylor, Herbert Spencer, H.W. Flower, and Francis Galton. 
 Source:  Charles Darwin Collection (B D25) 
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 Subjects:  Archaeology, prehistory | Cultural description and analysis, social organization and structure, ceremonial behavior, material culture | Physical studies -- Physical anthropology, medical anthropology, anthropometrics, craniology, race, human evolution 
13Author:  Huxley, Thomas Henry, 1825-1895
 Naturalist, anatomist. Assistant surgeon, Royal Navy, 1846-1854; lecturer in natural history, Royal School of Mines, 1854-1881, professor, biology, 1881-1885; naturalist, Geological Survey, 1855-1882; Hunterian professor of comparative anatomy, Royal College of Surgeons, 1863-1869; Fullerian professor of physiology, Royal Institution, 1863-1867; lord rector, Aberdeen University, 1872-1875; chief inspector, salmon fisheries, 1881-1885. 


 Title:  Thomas Henry Huxley Collection     
 Type:  Collection 
 Format:  Manuscripts 
 Language:  English 
 Dates:  1851-1895 
 Extent:  5 linear feet (approximately 270 items) 
 Abstract:  Huxley's papers and correspondence cover much of zoology, paleontology, and comparative anatomy, between 1850 and his death in 1895. In the 1860s and 1870s he was particularly active in research and the controversy concerning evolutionary biology and physical anthropology. His Zoological Evidences as to Man's Place in Nature (1863) was an important scientific work which applied evolutionary theory to the exploration of man's physical ancestry.Huxley manuscript papers at the Library (B H981) include approximately 239 letters, dated between 1851 and 1896. Important sets of correspondence include those with W. H. Flower, Hugh Falconer, and Thomas Wright 
 Source:  Thomas Henry Huxley Collection (B H981) 
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 Subjects:  Archaeology, prehistory | Disciplinary professionalization, professional societies, education, employment | Physical studies -- Physical anthropology, medical anthropology, anthropometrics, craniology, race, human evolution 
14Author:  Carpenter, Edmund Snow, 1922-
 Archaeologist, ethnologist 


 Title:  Rappahanock Talking Dances     
 Type:  Text items 
 Format:  Manuscripts 
 Language:  English 
 Dates:  1942 
 Extent:  1 item 
 Abstract:  Report on graduate student field trip; description and use of traps and hunting devices 
 Source:  Frank Gouldsmith Speck Papers (Ms. Coll. 126) 
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 Subjects:  Cultural description and analysis, social organization and structure, ceremonial behavior, material culture | Disciplinary professionalization, professional societies, education, employment | Anthropological and archaeological fieldwork | Folklore, mythology, religion | Physical studies -- Physical anthropology, medical anthropology, anthropometrics, craniology, race, human evolution 
16Author:  Couch, Jonathan, 1789-1870
 British physician, naturalist 


 Title:  Jonathan Couch Papers     
 Type:  Collection 
 Format:  Manuscripts 
 Language:  English 
 Dates:  1839-1891 
 Extent:  1 linear foot 
 Abstract:  Couch's papers deal mostly with natural history, but some correspondence and mss. are on the history of language; myth and superstition; and the physical history of man. Included here are manuscripts on "Charms", "Language", "The Cross Buns of Easter", "On the History and Development of Man", and the "Prehistoric in Cornwall." 
 Source:  Jonathan Couch Papers (B C831) 
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 Subjects:  Archaeology, prehistory | Folklore, mythology, religion | Linguistics and philology | Physical studies -- Physical anthropology, medical anthropology, anthropometrics, craniology, race, human evolution 
17Author:  Davenport, Charles Benedict, 1866-1944
 Biologist, eugenicist. Instructor, zoology, Harvard University, 1892-1899; assistant professor, University of Chicago, 1899-1891, associate professor, 1901-1904; director, summer biological lab, of the Brooklyn Institute of Arts and Sciences, 1898-1923; director, Station for Experimental Evolution, Cold Spring Harbor, 1904-1934; director, Eugenics Record Office, 1910-1934 (1920-1934, Department of Genetics, Carnegie Institution). Davenport was a central figure in American eugenics and, secondarily, in genetics research, from the founding of the Cold Spring Harbor Station in 1904 to the 1930s. He frequently found himself in serious disagreement with Boas and his supporters over the role of environment versus heredity in shaping racial morphology and social behavior. 


 Title:  Charles Benedict Davenport Papers     
 Type:  Collection 
 Format:  Manuscripts 
 Language:  English 
 Dates:  1874-1944 
 Extent:  63 linear feet 
 Abstract:  Professional correspondence and administrative correspondence, from the Station for Experimental Evolution. Correspondents include Franz Boas, A. C. Haddon, M. J. Herskovits, Ales Hrdlicka, Arthur Keith, E. Linton, E. Sapir, F. von Luschan, the American Foundation for Prehistoric Study in France, the Committee for Human Behavior, the Draper Fund for Studying Race Crossings, and others. Notes, paper manuscripts, and lectures are also present. Lecture topics include "Coordinates in Anthropometry", "Comparative Social Traits of Various Races", "Do Races Differ in Mental Capacity", "Factors of Heredity and Environment in Criminality", "How Early in Ontogeny Do Human Racial Characteristics Show Themselves?", "Methods in Comparative Racial Psychology", "Racial Factors in International Relations", etc. 
 Source:  Charles Benedict Davenport Papers (B D27) 
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 Subjects:  Social uses and context of anthropology and archaeology | Archaeology, prehistory | Cultural description and analysis, social organization and structure, ceremonial behavior, material culture | Physical studies -- Physical anthropology, medical anthropology, anthropometrics, craniology, race, human evolution | Publishing, publications, miscellaneous 
18Author:  Dobzhansky, Theodosius, 1900-1975
 Population geneticist, biologist. Researcher, Rockefeller Foundation, 1927-1929; assistant professor, genetics, California Institute of Technology, 1929-1936, professor 1936-1940; professor, zoology, Columbia University, 1940-1962; adjunct professor, 1962-1970; adjunct professor, University of California at Davis, 1971-1975. 


 Title:  Theodosius Dobzhansky Papers     
 Type:  Collection 
 Format:  Manuscripts 
 Language:  English 
 Dates:  Circa 1917-1975 
 Extent:  12.25 linear feet; circa 9,000 items 
 Abstract:  Correspondence, 1927-1975; 54 notebooks and diaries, circa 1917-1975. Dobzhansky was one of the foremost population geneticists of this century. His studies on genetics and race, on race and behavior, on culture, cultural achievement, and genetics, on nature and nurture in human heredity, and on human evolution are extremely important for social biology and its relation to both cultural and physical anthropology. Particularly interesting are Dobzhansky's writings on the origin and significance of human races, and on anthropology and the natural sciences. The Dobzhansky papers include a manuscript copy of his last book, Human Culture: A Moment in Evolution (published posthumously in 1983); lectures on "Man in the Light of Evolutionary Biology;" correspondence with numerous scientists (Ashley Montagu, L. C. Dunn, Ernst Mayr, E. W. Caspari, Frederick Osborn, and many others) on social biology and race; and papers relating to symposia, books, articles, speeches, and research topics. There is also Dobzhansky correspondence in the M. Demerec, L. C. Dunn, E. W. Caspari, A. F. Blakeslee, Frederick Osborn, F. P. Rous, and related collections. See also the description in the Bentley Glass Guide to Genetics Collections. 
 Source:  Theodosius Dobzhansky Papers (B D65) 
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 Subjects:  Social uses and context of anthropology and archaeology | Cultural description and analysis, social organization and structure, ceremonial behavior, material culture | Physical studies -- Physical anthropology, medical anthropology, anthropometrics, craniology, race, human evolution | Publishing, publications, miscellaneous 
19Author:  Dunn, Leslie Clarence, 1893-1974
 Geneticist. Geneticist, Connecticut Agricultural Station, Storrs, 1920-1928; professor, zoology, Columbia University, 1928-1962, emeritus professor, 1963-1974; director, Institute for the Study of Human Variation, 1952-1958. 


 Title:  L. C. Dunn Papers     
 Type:  Collection 
 Format:  Manuscripts 
 Language:  English 
 Dates:  Circa 1920-1974 
 Extent:  15.5 linear feet (approximately 15,000 items) 
 Abstract:  Dunn was interested in the topic of race and wrote several books and papers on the subject. They include Heredity, Race and Society with Theodore Dobzhansky in 1946; Biology and Race in 1951; and Heredity and Evolution in Human Populations, 1958. His papers contain the manuscript for a 1960 revision of Race and Biology (sic); letters to Franz Boas, 13 June 1934 to 21 October 1941, on the characteristics of races and genetic versus environmental factors; correspondence and notebooks concerning a genetic study of the Jewish community in Rome; personal correspondence (1945-1955) with Gunnar Dahlberg, professor of race biology, Uppsala, Sweden; and communication with Roger Pineau of the U. S. State Dept. regarding an UNESCO conference on the "Biological Aspects of Race" in 1964. There is extensive correspondence between Dunn and many of the foremost geneticists of this century on many topics. See also the description in the Bentley Glass Guide to Genetics Collections 
 Source:  L. C. Dunn Papers (B D917) 
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 Subjects:  Social uses and context of anthropology and archaeology | Physical studies -- Physical anthropology, medical anthropology, anthropometrics, craniology, race, human evolution | Publishing, publications, miscellaneous | Personal matters 
20Author:  Hale, Horatio, 1817-1896
 Ethnologist, lawyer. Member of scientific corps, Wilkes Exploring Expedition, 1838-1842; lawyer, Clinton, Canada, 1856-96. Hale served as an officer in several learned societies and acted as chief Canadian agent for the BAAS, in its survey of the Northwest Coast Indians. 


 Title:  Reprints of cover pages and select writings of Horatio Hale     
 Type:  Text items 
 Format:  Manuscripts 
 Language:  English 
 Dates:  1880-1897, 1967, 1973 
 Extent:  1 folder 
 Abstract:  Reprints of cover pages and some writings (in Fenton's subject files), for example "Iroquois Ethnology"; "Iroquois Sacrifice of the White Dog"; "The Origins of Languages and the Antiquity of Speaking Man. An Address"; "Race and Language"; "Chief George H.M. Johnson, Onwanonsyshon; his Life and Work among the Six Nations"; "The Development of Language. A Paper Read before the Canadian Institute"; "Was America Peopled from Polynesia? A Study in Comparative Philology"; etc. Also includes Wampum (Hale), 5 photographs. Reprinted articles have been re-housed with APS' printed materials collection. 
 Source:  William N. Fenton Papers, Series IIa (Ms. Coll. 20) 
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 Subjects:  Cultural description and analysis, social organization and structure, ceremonial behavior, material culture | Anthropological and archaeological fieldwork | Linguistics and philology | Physical studies -- Physical anthropology, medical anthropology, anthropometrics, craniology, race, human evolution | Publishing, publications, miscellaneous 
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