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Plains exactIndians in subject [X]
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MANUSCRIPT COLLECTION

Dates:
1852-1869
Abstract:  

A shadowy figure at best, the artist Antonio Zeno Shindler worked at the Smithsonian Institution from after the Civil War until the turn of the 20th century, specializing in ethnographic subjects. He was responsible for printing or taking a large number of photographs of American Indians exhibited there in 1869. The 95 studio portraits in the Shindler Collection were part of a suite of 301 images that comprised the first photographic exhibition at the Smithsonian, and that are documented in the catalogue Photographic Portraits of North American Indians in the Gallery of the Smithsonian Institution (1867). The individuals depicted were members of delegations sent to Washington during the years 1852, 1857-1858, and 1867-1869 from the following nations: Cherokee, Cheyenne, Chippewa, Choctaw, Dakota Sioux (Brule, Miniconjou, Sans Arc, Santee, Sisseton, Two-Kettle, Yankton), Osage, Pawnee, Ponca, Potawatomi, Sac and Fox, Seminole, and Ute. Shindler printed the earlier photographs (mostly taken by the McClees Gallery) and was photographer for the later delegations.
Call #:  
Mss.970.1.Sh6
Extent:
0.5 Linear feet



MANUSCRIPT COLLECTION

Dates:
1869-1898
Abstract:  

Dalton Dorr (1846-1901) was the curator, secretary and director of the Pennsylvania Museum and School of Industrial Art in Philadelphia, the forerunner of the Philadelphia Museum of Art, from 1880-1899. A journal, written in 1897, copied from his notes and from memory, of travels in Greenland (1869), the Indian Territory, Colorado and the Pacific coast (1872-73); Paris, England, Scotland, and Ireland (1882-85), with some sketches. He took the Greenland cruise with Isaac I. Hayes in 1869, which was described by Hayes in his "Land of Desolation" (New York: Harper, 1872). See also, a companion volume of albumen prints taken by William Bradford and other members of "Under the midnight sun: a pleasure cruise in Greenland" in the summer of 1869.
Call #:  
Mss.B.D735
Extent:
1 volume(s)



MANUSCRIPT COLLECTION

Dates:
1670-1964
Abstract:  

In 1910, the Eugenics Record Office was founded in Cold Spring Harbor, New York, as a center for the study of human heredity and a repository for genetic data on human traits. It merged with the Station for Experimental Evolution in 1920 to become the Department of Genetics at the Carnegie Institution, and under the direction of Charles B. Davenport and later of Albert Blakeslee and Milislav Demerec, it became the most important center for eugenic research in the nation. However with intellectual currents shifting, the Carnegie Institution stopped funding the office in 1939. It remained active until 1944, when its records were transferred to the Charles Fremont Dight Institute for the Promotion of Human Genetics at the University of Minnesota. When the Dight closed in 1991, the genealogical material was filmed by the Genealogical Society of Utah and given to the Center for Human Genetics; the non-genealogical material was not filmed and was given to the American Philosophical Society Library. Following the original order, the ERO Records are organized into thirteen series: I. Trait Files, 1670-1964 ; II. Trait Card Boxes, 1904-1939 ; III. Family Traits Card Boxes, 1920-1939 ; IV. RFT Submitters Card Catalog, 1910s-1930s ; V. Record of Family Traits, 1911-1940 ; VI. Fitter Family Studies, 1913-1936 ; VII. Field Worker Files, 1911-1926 ; VIII. Volunteer Collaborators, 1912-1939 ; IX. Pedigrees, 1828-1926 ; X. Harry H. Laughlin Files, 1915-1938 ; XI. Bibliographia Eugenica, 1734-1934 ; XII. Midget Schedules, 1919-1964 ; XIII. Index Card Boxes, 1910s-1930s.
Call #:  
Mss.Ms.Coll.77
Extent:
330.5 Linear feet



MANUSCRIPT COLLECTION

Dates:
1804-1806
Abstract:  

Meriwether Lewis and William Clark were explorers. This collection contains the manuscript journals kept by Lewis and Clark on their travels to the source of the Missouri River and across the continent to the Pacific Ocean. There are interlineations throughout by Nicholas Biddle, who published his narrative "History of the Expedition of Captains Lewis and Clark" (1814).
Call #:  
Mss.917.3.L58
Extent:
30 volume(s)



MANUSCRIPT COLLECTION

Dates:
1817-1875
Abstract:  

The youngest son of Charles Willson Peale, Titian Ramsay Peale was an accomplished artist, naturalist, and explorer. This collection of ink, pencil, and watercolor sketches, with some engravings and lithographs, forms the bulk of Peale's artistic output. The drawings can be grouped into several periods of artistic output: pre-1818 (primarily watercolors of butterflies); from the Stephen Harriman Long Expedition to the American west in 1819-1820, on which Peale traveled as zoologist (there are views of animals, Indians, landscapes, etc.); for his 1821-1838 interlude period, spent primarily on the east coast (insects, animals, moose hunting in Marine, his trip to South America in 1830-1831, coin and medal designs); his period as a naturalist on the worldwide U.S. Exploring Expedition under the command of Charles Wilkes, 1838-1842; from the 1849-1873 period when he sketched around Washington, D. C. and in New Jersey; and there are more than 160 undated sketches of: animal skulls and bones, birds, plants, fish, insects, landscapes, and zoology.
Call #:  
Mss.B.P31.15d
Extent:
550 item(s)



MANUSCRIPT COLLECTION

Dates:
1808-1840
Abstract:  

The correspondence is principally to Zaccheus Collins (1810-1840), with bills, receipts, and notes on Rafinesque vs. Parker; letters from Collins, L.A. Tarascon, Lewis C. Beck, John Torrey, and Charles W. Short (1817-1835); and miscellaneous correspondence and documents relating to Rafinesque vs. Parker, with an account of the Felician Society of Feliciana County, Illinois (1820). The writings are chiefly on botanical topics, and include notes and essays on Indians, Blacks, grapes and wine-making, banking, and speculation. Rafinesque's growing interest in Indian antiquities, linguistics, and history is apparent in letters after 1820. There is an account of Rafinesque's scientific travels in North America and southern Europe (1800-1832), and a bibliography. The botanical notes include descriptions of specimens collected by Lewis and Clark, Patrick Gass, and Henry Muhlenberg.
Call #:  
Mss.B.R124
Extent:
1.75 Linear feet



MANUSCRIPT COLLECTION

Dates:
Circa 1940-1978
Abstract:  

The collection of Charles Coleman Sellers (1903-1980) contains copious and detailed documentation of the art of Charles Willson Peale and his family. It consists of working files for Sellers's numerous publications, including his Portraits and Miniatures by Charles Willson Peale (1952); Charles Willson Peale with Patron and Populace (1969); C. W. Peale's Portraits of Washington (1951); Benjamin Franklin in Portraiture (1962); Mr. Peale's Museum (1980). Most files include photographs of the art work, notes on the piece, and correspondence with authorities or owners. Other series include one relating to the paintings of various other Peales, including Anna C., James, Mary Jane, Raphaelle, Rembrandt, Rubens, and Sarah Miriam, and a miscellaneous artist file, which includes the same type of material and information on many eighteenth- and nineteenth-century artists, including Thomas Eakins, George Healy, Robert Edge Pine, William Rush, Thomas Sully, Benjamin West, James Abbott McNeill Whistler, etc. There is a separate Sellers collection at Dickinson College, primarily personal in nature.
Call #:  
Mss.Ms.Coll.3
Extent:
19.5 Linear feet



MANUSCRIPT COLLECTION

Dates:
1925-1993
Abstract:  

Edward Adamson Hoebel (1906-1993) was an anthropologist and educator best known for his studies of the legal systems of pre-literate societies. Graduating from Columbia, where he had studied with Ralph Linton, Franz Boas, and Ruth Benedict, Hoebel early became a scholar on the legal cultures of the Plains Indians, including the Comanches and Cheyennes. After appointments at New York University and the University of Utah, he spent the majority of his academic career at the University of Minnesota, from which he became emeritus professor in 1972. The E. Adamson Hoebel Papers (1925-1993) contain correspondence, subject files, manuscripts of published and unpublished works by Hoebel, papers by colleagues and students, Hoebel's research notes, course materials, and photographs.
Call #:  
Mss.Ms.Coll.43
Extent:
11.75 Linear feet



MANUSCRIPT COLLECTION

Dates:
1500-2000
Abstract:  

This online guide brings together photographs, engravings, lithographs, and paintings from a legacy APS collection known as the Prints and Photographs collection. The guide was created to provide online access to descriptive information for prints and photographs that were not associated with manuscripts collections. Some of these items are also described in the APS online public access catalog for printed materials. An in-house Print Collection card file arranged by name and subject provides item-level access to some of the items below and additional prints and photographs that do not yet have online descriptions. Former designations for these included the following: Persons, Places and things, Group pictures, Collections (manuscripts); Oversize--Persons, Oversize--Places and things, and Oversize--Collections (manuscripts). When researching at the library, please consult with reference staff to locate these items.
Call #:  
Mss.Prints
Extent:
1000 item(s)



MANUSCRIPT COLLECTION

Dates:
1743-1990
Abstract:  

Founded in 1743 by Benjamin Franklin, the American Philosophical Society was the first learned society in the United States. For over 250 years, the Society has played an important role in American cultural and intellectual life. Until the mid-nineteenth century, the Society fulfilled the role of a national academy of science, national library and museum, and even patent office. Early members of the Society included Thomas Jefferson, David Rittenhouse, Benjamin Rush, Stephen Peter Du Ponceau, George Washington, and many other figures prominent in American history. The Archives of the American Philosophical Society consists of 192.25 linear feet of material, organized into thirteen record groups dating back to 1743. The Society's archives extensively documents not only the organization's historical development but also its role in American history and the history of science and technology.
Call #:  
APS.Archives
Extent:
192.25 Linear feet



MANUSCRIPT COLLECTION

Dates:
1986-2003
Abstract:  

An anthropologist, Pamela Wallace was the Head of Education at the Sam Noble Oklahoma Museum of Natural History at the University of Oklahoma. The papers include correspondence, research, works by Wallace, audio recordings, color slides, photographs, and videos of Yuchi Indians.
Call #:  
Mss.Ms.Coll.130
Extent:
20.5 Linear feet
Subjects:  

Archaeology | Ardennes, Battle of the, 1944-1945 | Beggs (Okla.) | Bristow (Okla.) | Broken Arrow (Okla.) | Claremore (Okla.) | Concentration camps | Coweta (Okla.) | Creek Indians | Creek language | Deer hunting | Diabetes | Ebenezer (Effingham County, Ga.) | Fishing | Funeral rites and ceremonies | Gelatin silver prints | Glenpool (Okla.) | Indians of North America -- Oklahoma | Indians of North America -- Texas -- History | Japan -- Description and travel | Japan -- Economic conditions -- 1945-1989 | Jerusalem Lutheran Church (Ebenezer, Ga.) | Kellyville (Okla.) | Kiowa Indians -- Folklore | Kiowa Indians -- History | Lutheran Church -- Georgia -- History | Maps. | Names, Yuchi | Native American Church of North America | Negatives | Objectivity | Oklahoma | Oklahoma City (Okla.) | Okmulgee (Okla.) | Peyote | Photographs -- Color | Plains Indians | Pool (Game) | Poverty -- Japan | Sapulpa (Okla.) | Science -- Philosophy | Sewing | Slides. | Sound recordings | Tulsa (Okla.) | Videotapes | Wake services | Wallace, Pamela | Wise County (Tex.) -- History | World War, 1939-1945 -- Participation, Indian | Yuchi Indians | Yuchi Indians -- Economic conditions | Yuchi Indians -- Education | Yuchi Indians -- Folklore | Yuchi Indians -- Genealogy | Yuchi Indians -- Government relations | Yuchi Indians -- History | Yuchi Indians -- Kinship | Yuchi Indians -- Material culture | Yuchi Indians -- Medicine | Yuchi Indians -- Music | Yuchi Indians -- Mythology | Yuchi Indians -- Politics and government | Yuchi Indians -- Religion | Yuchi Indians -- Rites and ceremonies | Yuchi Indians -- Social life and customs | Yuchi dance | Yuchi language | Yuchi women



MANUSCRIPT COLLECTION

Dates:
Circa 1910-1996
Abstract:  

The Mary Rosamond Haas papers are extensive, including correspondence, research notes, field notes, texts, lexical slip files, audio recordings, photographs, reprints and more, covering more than 100 languages of North America and Southeast Asia. Of particular value are notes and audio recordings from fieldwork from the 1930s on Ditidaht, Tunica, Natchez and Muscogee, work toward pedagogical materials for Thai, and groundbreaking comparative studies of several language families of North America.
Call #:  
Mss.Ms.Coll.94
Extent:
95 Linear feet
Subjects:  

Abenaki language | Achumawi language | Alabama language | Algonquian languages | Anthropological linguistics -- America. | Anthropology | Apalachee language | Arapaho language | Atakapa language | Atayal language | Athapascan languages | Atikamekw language | Aymara language | Baptists -- Oklahoma | Beothuk language | Berkeley (Calif.) | Biloxi language | Blackfoot language | Brighton Reservation (Fla.) | Burmese language | Cahuilla language | California | Catawba language | Central Yupik language | Chehalis language | Cherokee Indians | Cherokee language | Chevak Cup'ik language | Cheyenne language | Chickasaw Indians | Chickasaw language | Chief Peter | Chimariko language | Chipewyan language | Chitimacha language | Choctaw Indians | Choctaw language | Cocopa language | Comanche language | Comecrudo language | Correspondence. | Cree language | Creek Indians | Creek Indians -- Oklahoma -- Religion | Creek language | Crow language | Dakota language | Dane-zaa language | Deg Xitan language | Del Norte County (Calif.) | Delaware language | Dictionaries. | Ditidaht Indians | Ditidaht language | Ethnographic texts | Ethnography | Ethnomusicology | Eyak language | Fiddle tunes | Gelatin silver prints | Gore (Okla.) | Gwich'in language | Haas, Mary R. (Mary Rosamond), 1910-1996 | Halkomelem language | Harjo, Alice | Harrington, John Peabody | Hidatsa language | Highland Chontal language | Hill, James | Hitchiti language | Hollywood Indian Reservation (Fla.) | Hoopa (Calif.) | Huave language | Hunting songs | Hupa Indians -- Folklore | Hupa Indians -- Medicine | Hupa Indians -- Music | Hupa Indians -- Religion | Hupa Indians -- Social life and customs | Hupa language | Hymns | Illinois language | Incas. | Indians of North America -- British Columbia | Indians of North America -- Oklahoma | Indians of North America -- Oklahoma -- Languages | Kalapuya language | Karankawa language | Karok language | Karuk language | Kickapoo language | Kiliwa language | Kiowa Apache language | Klamath language | Koasati Indians | Koasati language | Konawa (Okla.) | Kumeyaay language | Kuna language | Kutenai language | Kwakiutl Indians | Lakota language | Language and languages | Latin language | Lectures. | Linguistic texts | Linguistics. | Love songs | Luiseno language | Lullabies | Lushootseed | Maidu language | Makah language | Maps. | Maya Indians | Menominee language | Miami language (Ind. and Okla.) | Michif language | Micmac language | Mikasuki language | Miwok language | Mobilian trade language | Molala language | Munsee language | Muskogean languages | Muskogee Indians -- Folklore | Muskogee language | Natchez Indians | Natchez Indians -- Folklore | Natchez Indians -- Music | Natchez Indians -- Rites and ceremonies | Natchez language | Navajo language | Nitinat language | Nootka Indians | Nootka language | Northern Paiute language | Northwest Coast Indians | Nuu-chah-nulth | Nuu-chah-nulth language | Ofo language | Ojibwa language | Oklahoma | Oneida language | Orleans (Calif.) | Osage language | Paiute language | Patwin language | Pawnee language | Penobscot language | Photographs | Photographs. | Photomechanical prints | Plains Indians | Pomo language | Potawatomi language | Pueblo Indians | Quapaw language | Quechua language | Quileute language | Research notes. | Rumsen language | S'gaw Karen language | Salinan language | Salishan languages | Sarsi language | Seminole Indians | Seminole Indians -- History | Seminole Indians -- Music | Seminole Indians -- Oklahoma -- Religion | Seminole Indians -- Politics and government | Seminole Indians -- Social life and customs | Seminole language | Shasta language | Shawnee language | Siouan languages | Siouan languages -- Mutual intelligibility | Slavic languages | Sound recordings | Spanish language | Sulphur, Alex | Sulphur, Fannie | Takelma language | Tanana language | Taos language | Thai language | Timucua language | Tlingit language | Tol language | Tonkawa language | Tunica Indians | Tunica language | Tutelo language | United States. Congress. Senate. Select Committee on Presidential Campaign Activities. | Upper Tanana language -- Glossaries, vocabularies, etc. | Uto-Aztecan languages | Vietnamese language | Wappo language | Watergate Affair, 1972-1974 | Western Apache language | Winnebago language | Wintu language | Wintun languages | Wiyot language | Wiyot-Yorok | Yana language | Yokuts language | Youchigant, Sesostrie | Yuchi language | Yuki language | Yurok Indians -- Folklore | Yurok Indians -- Music | Yurok language | Zuni language



MANUSCRIPT COLLECTION

Dates:
1903-1950
Abstract:  

Anthropologist and ethnographer Frank Gouldsmith Speck was one of Franz Boas' early graduate students and from 1907 till his death in 1950 spent his career in a variety of positions at the University of Pennsylvania, including its Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology. Unlike most of his contemporaries, Speck chose to study the cultures of Indigenous peoples of eastern North America, especially the Haudenosaunee, Cherokee, and peoples speaking Algonquian languages, such as Anishinaabe, Wabanaki, Innu, Lenape, and other Algonquian peoples within the eastern United States. Speck spent a larger amounnt of time in the field than was typical of most ethnographers, collecting documentary information and physical objects. The Frank G. Speck Papers consist of 15.5 linear feet of Speck's professional correspondence, field notes, lecture notes, and manuscripts of published and unpublished works. The material focuses on the Eastern Woodlands Indians, particularly the Catawba, Cherokee, Creek, Delaware, Houma, Haudenosaunee ("Iroquois"), Labrador Inuit ("Eskimo"), Innu ("Montagnais-Naskapi"), Nanticoke, Penobscot, Powhatan, Algonquian, and Yuchi. The collection is divided into two subcollections: Subcollection 1 is comprised of Speck's research material and correspondence, and Subcollection 2 consists of his manuscripts and related correspondence. The two subcollections were acquired separately by the Society, and were originally cataloged as the Frank G. Speck Papers (572.97 Sp3) and the Frank G. Speck Manuscripts on Native Americans (970.3 Sp3p) respectively.
Call #:  
Mss.Ms.Coll.126
Extent:
28.5 Linear feet
Subjects:  

Abenaki Indians | Achumawi Indians | Alaska | Albumen prints | Algonquian Indians | Algonquian art | Algonquin Indians | Anishinaabe | Aquinnah, Massachuetts | Argentina | Arizona | Athapascan Indians | Atikamekw Indians | Atmore, Alabama | Baffin Island, Nunavut, Canada | Baily, A. G. | Bar Harbor (Me. : Town) | Battle Harbor, Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada | Bayou Blue, Louisiana | Bayou La Combe, Louisiana | Bear Island | Bear Island, Lake Temagami | Belle Isle, Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada | Beothuk Indians | Bersimis | Betty's Neck, Massachusetts | Bécancour (Québec) | Big Cove (N.C.) | Blind Pass, St. Petersburg, Florida | Bonners Ferry, Idaho | Bororo Indians | Browning, Montana | Buck, John | Bureau of American Ethnology ( | Cabinet cards | Cabot, W. B. | Canada | Cape Fullerton, Nunavut, Canada | Cape Prince of Wales, Alaska | Carpenter, Edmund, 1922-2011 | Carte de visite photographs | Catawba Indians | Catawba Reservation | Cayuga Indians | Charles, Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada | Chastacosta Indians | Cheroenhaka Indians | Cherokee Indians | Cherokee Reservation, North Carolina | Cherokee, North Carolina | Circumboreal | Colombia | Colusa, Calif. | Comas, Juan, 1900- | Committee for International Research in Arctic Ethnology | Contamana, Peru | Copan, Oklahoma | Craterville Park, Okla. | Cree Indians | Creek Indians | Creek Nation, Oklahoma | Cushing, Oklahoma | Cyanotypes | Dahl, Richard S. | Delaware Indians | Diagrams. | Diamond Jenness | Diomede, Alaska | Dismal Swamp (N.C. and Va.) | Double Curve Motif | Douglas, Frederic Huntington, | Dulac, Louisiana | Dutcher, Willena B. | Elizabeth City (N.C.) | Ellsworth (Me.) | Enfield (Me.) | Eskimo | Ethnography | File Hills, Saskatchewan | Fond-du-Lac, Saskatchewan | Forde, C. Daryll (Cyril Daryll | Forkeau Bay, Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada | Fort Apache, Arizona | Fort Chipewyan, Alberta | Forteau Bay, Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada | Ft. Belknap, Montana | Ft. Myers, Florida | Gelatin silver prints | Gleichen, Alberta | Gloucester, Massachusetts | Gnadenhutten, Ohio | Godbout | Golden Lake, QC | Golden Meadow, Louisiana | Golden Meadow, Louisiana; Pointe-aux-Chenes, Louisiana | Grand Canyon, Arizona | Grand River Reserve | Great Basin Indians | Griffin, James B. | Haddon, Alfred C. (Alfred Cort | Haida Gwaii | Harbor Springs, Michigan | Harrisburg (Pa.) | Hartford (Mich.) | Hassrick, Royal B. | Hayne, Hayward | Herris, R. H. | Hokan-Coahuiltecan languages | Hooper Bay, Alaska | Hopedale, Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada | Houma Indians | Houma, Louisiana | Howley, James Patrick, 1847-19 | Huaiquilaf, J. Martin Collio | Illustrations. | Indian Neck, Virginia | Indians of North America -- Alberta | Indians of North America -- Arizona | Indians of North America -- California | Indians of North America -- Canada | Indians of North America -- Colorado | Indians of North America -- Connecticut | Indians of North America -- Delaware | Indians of North America -- Florida | Indians of North America -- Louisiana | Indians of North America -- Maine | Indians of North America -- Massachusetts | Indians of North America -- Montana | Indians of North America -- New York (State) | Indians of North America -- Newfoundland and Labrador | Indians of North America -- North Carolina | Indians of North America -- Northeastern States | Indians of North America -- Oklahoma | Indians of North America -- Ontario | Indians of North America -- Quebec (Province) | Indians of North America -- Saskatchewan | Indians of North America -- South Carolina | Indians of North America -- Southeastern States | Indians of North America -- Virginia | Indians of South America -- Brazil | Intervale, New Hampshire | Inuit -- Canada | Inukjuak | Iroquois Indians | Isle de Jean Charles, Louisiana | James Bay | James Bay, P.Q. | James Bay, Quebec (?) | Johnson, Frederick | Jones, Volney H. (Volney Hurt) | Kansa Indians | Kent, Connecticuit | King Island, Alaska | Kitigan Zibi Anishinabeg | Kittery Point (Me.) | Kotzebue, Alaska | Kuujjuaq | Lac Saint-Jean | Lac Saint-Jean (Québec) | Lagore, Eli | Lake Missinaibi | Lake St. John, Canada | Lake Temagami, Ont. | Lake of the Woods, Ontario, Canada | Lantern slides. | Laulin, "Redge" | Laulin, Gladys | Leach, Henry Goddard, 1880-197 | Learmouth, D. H. | Ledyard (Conn.) | Les Escoumains (Quebec) | Lips, Julie E. | Lithographs. | Little Grand Rapids, Manitoba | Little Lake Pomo, Round Valley Reservation | MacLeod, William Christie | Malecite Indians | Manitoba, Canada (?) | Maniwaki, P.Q. | Maps | Martha's Vineyard (Mass.) | Mashteuiatsh | Mende (African People) | Messurier, William L. | Michikamau | Micmac Indians | Miller, Samuel "James" | Mingan | Missanabie River, Ontario, Canada | Missinaibi | Missinaibi River | Mistassin Indians | Mistassini | Miwok Indians | Mohawk Indians | Moisie | Montagnais Indians | Mount Desert Island (Me.) | Musa Isle, Florida | Nain, Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada | Nanticoke Indians | Nash Harbor, Nunivak Island, Alaska | Naskapi Indians | Natashquan | Natashquan (Québec) | Natasquan | Native American culture | Native American linguistics | Native American lore & legends | Near Taunton, Mass. | Negatives | New Hampshire | New Mexico | New Orleans, Louisiana | Newfoundland and Labrador | Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada | Newspaper clippings. | Niantic, Connecticut | Nichicun | Noatak, Alaska | North Carolina | Norwich, Connecticuit | Nova Scotia, Canada | Nunivak Island, Alaska | Off-reservation boarding schools--Newfoundland and Labrador | Ohsweken, Ontario | Ojibwa Indians | Ojibwe people | Oka, P.Q. | Oklahoma | Oklahoma Delaware Indians | Old Town (Me.) | Omaha Indians | Onondaga Indians | Ontario, Canada | Oraibi, Arizona | Orchard, W. C. | Ouray, Utah | P.Q. | Paintings. | Pamunkey Indians | Pamunkey River (Va.) | Pamunkey, VA | Passamaquoddy Indians | Pawhuska, Okla. | Pawnee (Okla.) | Pennsylvania | Penobscot Indians | Penobscot, Maine | Pequot Indians | Perdido River, Alabama | Peru | Petrullo | Phoenicia, New York | Photomechanical prints | Picard, L. P. O. | Picture-writing | Pierreville (Québec) | Pinkham Notch (N.H.) | Plains Indians | Point of Pines, Arizona | Pointe-aux-Chenes, Louisiana | Polson, Montana | Postcards | Prince Edward Island | Quaker Bridge, New York | Quebec Citadel, Canada. | Quebec, Canada | Quimby, George | Rapid City, South Dakota | Ravensfork, North Carolina | Raynolds, Frances | Red House, New York | Requa, California | Restigouche, New Brunswick | Revillon FrèresTrading Company | Rockland County, New York | Roddy, South Carolina | Roger Williams Park | Rotorua, New Zealand | Round Mountain Shasta, Co. | Round Valley Reservation | Roxbury, Virginia | Saco River, N.H. | Saguenay | Saint Augustin? Barren Ground Band? | Saint-Augustin (Québec) | San Carlos Reservation | Sault Ste. Marie | Schoenbrunn, Ohio | Sebec Lake, Maine | Seminole Indians | Seneca | Sept-Iles (Québec) | Sept-Iles, Quebec | Shawnee Indians | Sherbro (African People) | Six Nations of the Grand River, Ont. | Sketches. | South Carolina | Speck, Frank G. (Frank Gouldsmith), 1881-1950 | St. Anthody, Newfoundland | St. Anthony, Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada | St. John's Newfoundland | St. John's, Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada | St. Mary's, Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada | Ste. Marguerite | Stern, Theodore, 1917- | Stonington (Conn.) | Strong, William Duncan, 1899-1 | Sub-Arctic Indians | Suffolk (Va.) | Swales, Bradshaw Hall, 1875- | Swan, Sankey | Swanton, John Reed, 1873-1958 | Temagami, Ont. | Terrebonne Parish, Louisiana | The Pas, Manitoba, Canada | Tintypes | Torbay, Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada | Tozzer, Alfred M. -- (Alfred Marston), -- 1877-1954. | Trotter, Spencer, 1860-1931. | Tuscarora Indians | Tyler, Dorothy Louise, 1899-19 | Ungava | Ungava, Barren Ground | Upper Mattaponi, Virginia | Walpole Island, Ontario | Walser, Richard, 1908- | Waskaganish | Wawenock Indians | Weitchpec, California | Weymouth, N.J. | White, Leslie A., 1900-1975. | White, Stewart Edward, 1873-19 | Whiterocks, Utah | Wilder, Harris Hawthorne, 1864 | Windsor Shades, Virginia | Wissler, Clark, 1870-1947 | Wiswall, Richard Hall, 1916- | Wiyot-Yorok | Wyman, Waiter Channing | Yana language | Yao (African People) | Yuchi Indians



MANUSCRIPT COLLECTION

Dates:
1605-2022
Abstract:  

The Phillips Fund Collection consists of materials submitted to the APS by recipients of grants from its Phillips Fund for Native American Research. The materials vary in scope, ranging from linguistics to ethnography, musicology, religion, ethnobotany, and ethnohistory, and including studies of Indigenous peoples of Canada, the United States, and Mexico. Materials in this collection include brief project reports, dissertations, published and unpublished manuscripts, dictionaries and vocabularies, field notes, and audiovisual materials.
Call #:  
Mss.497.3.Am4
Extent:
27.5 Linear feet
Subjects:  

Aaniiih (language) | Acjachemen Nation | Acoma dialect | Acoma language | African Americans | Akimel O'odham language | Alabama Indians | Alabama Indians -- History | Alaska -- History | Aleut language | Aleuts | Aleuts -- History | Algonquian Indians | Algonquian Indians -- Social life and customs | Algonquian languages | Algonquin language | Anishinaabe | Anthropology -- History | Anthropology -- United States -- History. | Apache Indians | Apache Indians -- Music | Arapaho | Arapaho Indians -- Music | Arapaho Indians -- Wyoming | Arapaho dance | Arapaho language | Arapaho language -- Verbs | Archaeology -- Greenland | Archaeology -- Pennsylvania | Arikara Indians | Assiniboine Indians | Assiniboine Indians -- Folklore | Assiniboine Indians -- History | Assiniboine Indians -- Religion | Assiniboine Indians -- Social life and customs | Assiniboine dialect | Athapascan Indians | Athapascan languages | Aymara language | Bibliography | Blackfoot Indians | Blackfoot language | Boas, Franz, 1858-1942 | Caddo Indians | Caddo Indians -- Religion | Caddo language | Cahuilla Indians | Cahuilla language | Carrier language | Catholic Church -- History | Cauqui language | Cayuga Indians | Cayuga Indians -- Politics | Cayuga Indians -- Rites and ceremonies | Cayuga language | Central Yupik language | Cherokee (N.C.) | Cherokee Indians | Cherokee Indians -- Education | Cherokee Indians -- Games | Cherokee Indians -- Government relations | Cherokee Indians -- History | Cherokee Indians -- Land tenure | Cherokee Indians -- Medicine | Cherokee Indians -- Music | Cherokee Indians -- Religion | Cherokee Indians -- Social life and customs | Cherokee language | Cherokee language -- Alphabet | Cherokee language -- Phonology | Cherokee language -- Syntax | Cheslatta Carrier Nation Cheslatta T'En | Chevak Cup'ik language | Cheyenne Indians | Cheyenne Indians -- Folklore | Cheyenne Indians -- History | Cheyenne Indians -- Religion | Cheyenne Indians -- Social life and customs | 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government | Iroquois Indians -- Religion | Iroquois Indians -- Rites and ceremonies | Iroquois Indians -- Social life and customs | Iroquois Indians -- Virginia | Jaqaru language | Jefferson, Thomas, 1743-1826 -- Manuscripts | Jemez language | Jicarilla language | Karok language | Karuk language | Kawchottine Indians | Kawchottine Indians -- Fishing | Kawchottine Indians -- Hunting | Kawchottine Indians -- Social life and customs | Kawchottine language | Kawki language | Keres language | Kickapoo Indians | Kickapoo language | Kiowa Apache Indians -- Social life and customs | Kiowa Apache dance | Kiowa Indians | Kiowa Indians -- Religion | Kiowa Indians -- Rites and ceremonies | Kiowa Indians -- Social life and customs | Kiowa dance | Kiskht language | Klamath Indians | Koasati Indians | Koasati Indians -- History | Koasati language | Kootenai language | Koyukon people | Kumeyaay Indians | Kumeyaay language | Kumiai Indians -- Social life and customs | Kumiai language | Kutenai 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Social life and customs | Nahuatl language | Names, Geographical -- Alaska | Narragansett Indians | Narragansett Indians -- History | Narragansett language | Native American Church of North America | Navajo Indians | Navajo Indians -- Education | Navajo Indians -- Ethnoanatomy | Navajo Indians -- History | Navajo Indians -- Kinship | Navajo Indians -- Material culture | Navajo Indians -- Poetry | Navajo Indians -- Politics and government | Navajo Indians -- Religion | Navajo Indians -- Social life and customs | Navajo Mountain (Utah and Ariz.) | Navajo art | Navajo language | Navajo language -- Semantics | New York (State) -- History -- Colonial period, ca. 1600-1775. | Nez Percé women | Nez Percé Indians | Nez Percé Indians -- History | Nez Percé Indians -- Music | Nez Percé Indians -- Religion | Nez Percé Indians -- Social life and customs | Nez Percé language | Nicollet, J. N. (Joseph Nicolas), 1786-1843 | Niimiipuutímt language | Nisga'a language | Niska Indians | Niska language | Nitinat language | Nlaka'pamuctsin language | Nooksack Indians | Nootka Indians | Nootka language | Northern Paiute Indians -- Folklore | Northern Paiute language | Ntlakyapamuk Indians | Ntlakyapamuk language | Nuu-chah-nulth | Nuu-chah-nulth language | Occom, Samson, 1723-1792 | Odawa people | Ojibwa Indians | Ojibwa Indians -- Canada | Ojibwa Indians -- History | Ojibwa Indians -- Kinship | Ojibwa Indians -- Michigan | Ojibwa Indians -- Social life and customs | Ojibwa dance | Ojibwa language | Ojibwe | Ojibwe -- Economy | Ojibwe -- Ethnobotany | Ojibwe people | Okanagan Indians | Okanagan Indians -- Folklore | Okanagan language | Omaha Indians | Oneida Indians | Oneida Indians -- Religion | Oneida language | Onondaga language | Ooweekeeno language | Oowekeeno Indians | Oregon -- History | Osage Indians | Osage Indians -- Music | Osage dance | Oto indians | Otomi Indians -- Folklore | Otomi language | Ottawa Indians | Ottawa Indians -- History | Painting. | Paiute Indians | Paiute Indians -- History | Paiute language | Panamint language | Papamiento language | Papiamento | Parsons, Elsie Worthington Clews, 1875-1941 | Passamaquoddy Indians | Passamaquoddy language | Passamaquoddy language -- Syntax | Passamaquoddy language -- Texts | Pawnee Indians | Pawnee Indians -- Religion | Pawnee language | Peale's Museum (Philadelphia, Pa.) | Peale, Charles Willson, 1741-1827 -- Art collections. | Penobscot Indians | Penobscot Indians -- History | Penobscot language | Pequot Indians | Peyote | Peyote songs | Photographs | Photomechanical prints | Picuris language | Pima Bajo language | Pima Indians | Pima language | Piman languages | Pit River Tribe | Plains Indians | Plains Miwok language | Plains Sign Talk | Plant names | Pokomam language | Political issues -- Environment | Polynesians -- Dance | Pomo Indians | Pomo language | Ponca Indians | Ponca Indians -- Music | Ponca dance | Poqomam language | Potawatomi Indians | Potawatomi Indians -- History | Potawatomi language | Powhatan Indians | Powhatan language | Powhattan Indians -- History | Powwows | Psychology | Pueblo Indians | Puyallup Indians | Quakers -- Missions. | Quapaw Indians | Quechan Indians | Quechua Indians | Quechua Indians -- History | Quileute Indians | Quileute language | Quiripi language | Sahaptin language | Saint Regis Mohawk Indian Reservation (N.Y.) | Salish Indians | Salishan languages | San Carlos Apache language | San Felipe dialect | Sandia Pueblo (N.M.) | Sandia dialect | Santa Ana dialect | Santo Domingo dialect | Sarsi Indians | Sarsi language | Sauk Indians | Schitsu'umsh | Seminole Indians | Seminole Indians -- History | Seminole Indians -- Politics and government | Seminole language | Seneca | Seneca Indians -- History | Seneca Indians -- Music | Seneca Indians -- New York (State) | Seneca Indians -- Politics and government | Seneca Indians -- Religion | Seneca Indians -- Rites and ceremonies | Seneca art | Seneca dance | Seneca language | Seneca masks | Serrano language | Shawnee Indians | Shawnee Indians -- Folklore | Shawnee Indians -- Music | Shawnee Indians -- Rites and ceremonies | Shawnee Indians -- Social life and customs | Shawnee dance | Shawnee language | Shoshoni Indians | Shoshoni Indians -- History | Shoshoni Indians -- Religion | Shoshoni language | Siksika Indians | Siouan languages | Sioux Nation | Sisseton-Wahpeton Oyate of the Lake Traverse Reservation, South Dakota | Skagit Indians | Sketches. | Slave Indians | Slavey language | Slides. | Smallpox | Smallpox -- United States -- History | Songs, Papiamento | Sound recordings | Southwest Indians | Spanish language | Spokane language | Stockbridge Indians -- History | Stoney language | Stó:lō Indians | Sub-Arctic Indians | Suquamish Indians | Tahltan language | Taino Indians | Taos Indians | Taos language | Teton Indians | Teton Indians -- History | Tewa Indians | Tewa Indians -- Folklore | Tewa Indians -- Music | Tewa art | Tewa dance | Tewa language | Tewa pottery | Tiwa language | Tla'amin First Nation | Tlakluit language | Tlaxcalan Indians | Tlinchon language | Tlingit Indians | Tlingit Indians -- Religion | Tlingit language | Tohono O'odham Indians | Tohono O'odham Indians -- Music | Tohono O'odham dialect | Tojolabal Indians -- Religion | Tolowa Indians | Tolowa language | Trade | Tsimshian Indians | Tsimshian language | Tsuut'ina language | Tuscarora Indians | Tuscarora Indians -- History | Tuscarora Indians -- Politics and government | Tuscarora Indians -- Religion | Tuscarora Indians -- Social life and customs | Tuscarora language | Tuscarora language -- Study and teaching | Tzeltal Indians | Tzeltal Indians -- Religion | Tzotzil Indians | Umatilla language | United States - History - Colonial period, ca. 1600-1775 | United States -- History -- Revolution, 1775-1783 -- American forces | United States -- History -- Revolution, 1776-1783 | United States -- History -- Revolutionary War, 1775-1783 | United States -- Politics and government -- 1815-1861. | United States -- Politics and government -- 19th century. | United States -- Politics and government. | Upernavik (Greenland) | Upper Kuskokwim Athabaskans | Upper Kuskokwim language | Ute Indians | Ute language | Uto-Aztecan languages | Virginia -- History -- Colonial period, ca. 1600-1775. | Virginia -- History. | Virginia -- Politics and government. | Wailaki people | Wakashan language | Walla Walla language | Walpole Island (Ont.) | Wampanoag language | Wappo language | Wasco language | Washo language | Wenatchee language | Wenatchi Indians | West Greenlandic language | Western Apache language | White Clay People | Wichita Indians | Wichita language | Winnebago Indians | World War I | World War, 1914-1918 | World War, 1914-1918 -- Participation, Indian | Xinca language | Yahi language | Yakama language | Yamasee War, 1715 | Yana language | Yaqui language | Yavapai Indians | Yavapai Indians -- History | Yavapai Indians -- Religion | Yavapai language | Yoeme language | Yuchi Indians | Yuchi Indians -- History | Yuchi Indians -- Politics and government | Yuchi Indians -- Religion | Yuchi Indians -- Rites and ceremonies | Yuchi Indians -- Social life and customs | Yuchi dance | Yuchi language | Yuki people | Yuma language | Yuman languages | Yuman–Cochimí languages | Yupik Eskimos | Yupik Eskimos -- Alaska -- Nunivak Island | Yupik Eskimos -- History | Yupik Eskimos -- Religion | Yupik Eskimos -- Social life and customs | Yupik languages | Yurok Indians -- Fishing | Yurok baskets | Yurok language | Zapotec language | Zia dialect | Zuni Indians | Zuni Indians -- Folklore | Zuni Indians -- History | Zuni Indians -- Religion | Zuni Indians -- Rites and ceremonies | Zuni Indians -- Social life and customs | Zuni Pueblo (N.M.) | Zuni language