Thursday, February 14, 2008

SHI Historical Photograph Collections Go Online


These past few weeks, in conjunction with our posting of the W. A. Soboleff papers online, we have been processing many of our photograph collections and are now beginning the task of putting some of our historical photograph collections online, which can be viewed here. (featured picture is a stereoview image of a Whale Totem at Wrangell, circa 1900.) Our aim is to have all or at least a good portion of our images online someday, but that is a large project and one that will take a great deal of time. That said, I have begun this process and will be adding photographs to our online Picasa Web Album roughly each week. What I have accomplished so far serves to let On occasion I will solicit for information to identify places and people in various pictures, and I welcome your comments on images. First off, the below photograph of this band, can anyone identify the people or from which city this band came from? This image has been held by SCRC for some time, but we have no information about it and it contains no label. I would welcome any information about this photograph.

Lastly, SHI Special Collections is looking to collect original photographs (and postcards) that document all aspects of Tlingit, Haida, and Tsimshian culture. Our photograph collections are open to the public and copies can be generated for researchers. We have had two great photograph donations recently, PO014 Linn A. Forrest Photograph Collection and PO019 Harold Wheaton Photograph, and we hope to continue this momentum. If you have any historic photographs that you would like to donate please contact me, the archivist. Thanks.

Tuesday, February 5, 2008

Press Release: Walter A. Soboleff Papers now on the web

Papers document 76 years of Alaska Native Brotherhood, land claims struggle

SHI Special Collections Research Center has posted online more than 1,000 historical papers donated by Dr. Walter Soboleff, a widely known Tlingit Elder and chair of the institute’s board of trustees.

The papers, some of them hand written, mostly document activities of the Alaska Native Brotherhood (ANB) from 1929 to 1995. The collection includes issues of the ANB periodical “The Voice of Brotherhood,” ANB meeting minutes, correspondence, working files, camp files and papers that show how the ANB fought to improve the lives of Alaska Native people and to secure Native lands prior to the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act.

The collection is important because it shows Native people were trying to resolve the issues they faced in the context of an unfamiliar western system, said SHI President Rosita Worl, noting historical and anthropological studies very often portray Native people as passive recipients of cultural change.

“It provides documentation that portrays the Native point of view, and you don’t always get that in publications,” Worl said. “I’m hopeful we’re going to have researchers who come and look at this collection and begin to write the history as Native people were perceiving it, as they were living that historical period.”

Soboleff for decades was an active member of ANB, a nonprofit fraternal organization founded in 1912. He currently serves as Grand President Emeritus. He considered donating the collection to several universities, including the University of Dubuque in Iowa, his alma mater, but ultimately he decided it should be closer to home.

“Papers of that nature are to be as near possible to the people of whom the articles have been written,” Soboleff said. “They have been very interesting articles -- even hand-written letters telling of historic events of the people. Those are among them.”

The institute digitized the collection through a two-year federal grant received in 2005 from the Institute of Museum and Library Services. It is posted online at www.sealaskaheritage.org/collection/index.htm.

Sealaska Heritage encourages anyone with materials or objects of historical or cultural importance to donate them to SHI’s Special Collections Research Center, and they should contact SHI's archivist.

SHI is a Native nonprofit established in 1980 to administer educational and cultural programs for Sealaska, a regional Native corporation formed under the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act. The institute’s mission is to perpetuate and enhance Tlingit, Haida and Tsimshian cultures.

The Juneau Empire featured this topic on the front page of their paper and is slighltly different than the above. It can be viewed at this link.