Hat
Sugpiaq (Alutiiq)
Western Arctic
Arctic
mid-19th century
Cotton cloth, leather, gut (sea mammal inner membrane [intestine, throat, etc.]), sinew, cotton thread, ground spectacular hematite, and red and black pigment
Overall: 4 15/16 × 9 1/8 in. (12.5 × 23.2 cm)
Hood Museum of Art, Dartmouth: Gift of Captain Worthen Hall and Polly D. Lovewell Hall
13.1.586
Geography
Place Made: Aleutian Islands, United States, North America
Period
19th century
Object Name
Clothing: Headwear
Research Area
Native American
Native American: Arctic-Western Arctic
Not on view
Course History
NAS 10, ANTH 4, Peoples and Cultures of Native North America, Sergei Kan, Winter 2013
ANTH 12.11, NAS 30, Arctic Crossroads: Its Peoples, Cultures, and History, William Fitzhugh, Winter 2015
NAS 10, ANTH 4, Peoples and Cultures of Native North America, Sergei Kan, Winter 2015
NAS 10, ANTH 4, Peoples and Cultures of Native North America, Sergei Kan, Winter 2015
Provenance
Source unknown, in the Dartmouth College Museum collection by the late 19th century; probably collected by the Whaling Captain Worthen Hall (1802-1887), Croydon, New Hampshire [who sailed with his wife Polly D. Lovewell Hall (1807-1886) and his daughter], in the northwest Pacific between 1848-1855; given to his daughter, Mary Elizabeth Hall Hubbard (1849-about 1889), Croydon, New Hampshire [to be credited as a gift from her parents]; bequeathed to present collection, 1889; catalogued, 1913.
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