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Results:  2 Items 
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Arrow Rock (1)
Baffin Island (1)
Browning (1)
Cahokia (1)
Cape Disappointment State Park (1)
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1.Title:  Franz Boas Diaries (1883-1912)
 Dates:  1883 - 1912 
 Extent:  7 volumes  
 Locations:  Baffin Island | Mexico City 
 Abstract:  The Boas collections include seven diaries that Franz Boas maintained between 1883-1912. These diaries will interest German-reading researchers interested Boas's work with the Baffinland Inuit and his lecture tour in Mexico. Non-German speakers may also browse these diaries for his personal sketches. These diaries ought to interest researchers exploring Boas's career and the history of anthropology, ethnography, and linguistics. 
    
Five diaries traverse 1883-84: the Baffinland Diary & Notebook, 1883
 
Baffinland Diary, July 1883-January 1884
 
Wilhelm Weike Diary, June 1883-September 1884
 
Baffinland Diary, 1883
 
and Baffinland Diary, 1884.
 
The American Philosophical Society also possesses two diaries maintained as loose pages: seven pages from an 1888 diary, also available electronically (http://diglib.amphilsoc.org/islandora/object/text:19253#page/2/mode/1up) and 24 pages related to his 1911-12 lectures in Mexico.
 
    
The Boas collections include seven diaries that Franz Boas maintained between 1883-1912. These diaries will interest German-reading researchers interested Boas's work with the Baffinland Inuit and his lecture tour in Mexico. Non-German speakers may also browse these diaries for his personal sketches. These diaries ought to interest researchers exploring Boas's career and the history of anthropology, ethnography, and linguistics.
 
Five diaries traverse 1883-84: the Baffinland Diary & Notebook, 1883
 
Baffinland Diary, July 1883-January 1884
 
Wilhelm Weike Diary, June 1883-September 1884
 
Baffinland Diary, 1883
 
and Baffinland Diary, 1884.
 
The American Philosophical Society also possesses two diaries maintained as loose pages: seven pages from an 1888 diary, also available electronically (http://diglib.amphilsoc.org/islandora/object/text:19253#page/2/mode/1up) and 24 pages related to his 1911-12 lectures in Mexico.
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 Subjects:  Anthropology--Fieldwork. | Anthropology. | Diaries. | Ethnology--North America. | Indians of North America--Languages. | Indians of North America--Northwest, Pacific. | Indigenous people. | Inuit. | Jewish scientists. | Northwest Coast of North America. | Race relations. 
 Collection:  Franz Boas Papers  (Mss.B.B61)  
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2.Title:  Meriwether Lewis and William Clark Journals (1804-1806)
 Dates:  1804 - 1806 
 Extent:  30 volumes  
 Locations:  Arrow Rock | Browning | Cahokia | Cape Disappointment State Park | Cascade | Chinook | Cut Bank | Dillon | Fort Calhoun | Fort Osage | Lemhi Pass | Lewis and Clark National Historical Park | Lolo | Nez Perce National Historical Park | Pompey's Pillar | Portage | Rocheport | Rulo | Saint Albans | Saint Louis | Sioux City | Spalding | Spirit Mound Township | Stanton | Weippe Prairie | Williston 
 Abstract:  The Lewis and Clark Journals are among the most treasured and well-known collections at the American Philosophical Society. These 30 manuscript journals provide a detail record of the travels of Lewis and Clark to the source of the Missouri River and across the continent to the Pacific Ocean, including interlineations by Nicholas Biddle, who later published the narrative "History of the Expedition of Captains Lewis and Clark" (1814). Interested researchers may refer to the Finding Aid for a detailed account of the collection. Scholars researching the Lewis and Clark Expedition and western exploration in the early national period may choose to complement these volumes by paging the Meriwether Lewis Journal (Mss.917.3.L58), which provides an early account of the river trip from Pittsburgh to the winter camp of the expedition (1803), and the William Clark Diary (Mss.917.3.L58c), which details Clark's diplomatic expedition into the Missouri Territory after the expedition (1808). 
    
 
    
The Lewis and Clark Journals are among the most treasured and well-known collections at the American Philosophical Society. These 30 manuscript journals provide a detail record of the travels of Lewis and Clark to the source of the Missouri River and across the continent to the Pacific Ocean, including interlineations by Nicholas Biddle, who later published the narrative "History of the Expedition of Captains Lewis and Clark" (1814). Interested researchers may refer to the Finding Aid for a detailed account of the collection. Scholars researching the Lewis and Clark Expedition and western exploration in the early national period may choose to complement these volumes by paging the Meriwether Lewis Journal (Mss.917.3.L58), which provides an early account of the river trip from Pittsburgh to the winter camp of the expedition (1803), and the William Clark Diary (Mss.917.3.L58c), which details Clark's diplomatic expedition into the Missouri Territory after the expedition (1808).
 
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 Subjects:  Chinook Indians. | Diaries. | Diplomacy. | Expedition | Exploration & encounters | Indians of North America--Missouri. | Indians of North America--Montana. | Indians of North America--North Dakota | Indians of North America--Oregon | Louisiana Purchase. | Lewis and Clark Expedition (1804-1806) | Mandan Indians | Missouri Indians. | Native America | Natural history. | Northwest Coast of North America. | Oto Indians. | Salish Indians. | Shoshoni Indians. | Sihasapa Indians. | Travel. | United States--Civilization--1783-1865. 
 Collection:  Lewis and Clark Journals  (Mss.917.3.L58)  
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