-40%

1882 Aleut Inuit InupiatNative American bracelet Point Barrow Alaska expedition

$ 792

Availability: 100 in stock
  • Refund will be given as: Money Back
  • Return shipping will be paid by: Buyer
  • All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
  • Condition: Antique with no restoration.
  • Item must be returned within: 30 Days
  • Restocking Fee: No

    Description

    Beautiful c.1882 dentalium shell Inuit bracelet. Shell, string, brass and leather. Note indicates that materials are bear tooth, but this is clearly not the case. Measures 6.5 inches long (7 inches with leather strap); 1.25 inches wide. Condition: excellent. Bracelet is tied down to black velvet and set in a presentaion box behind glass. It measures 9.5 x 7 inches. Provenance: Roberts family; Patrick Henry Ray (1842-1911). The piece was certainly given to or traded by Ray with the tribes of the Point Barrow region.
    The 1879 meeting of the International Polar Conference proposed a number of observation stations around the northern polar area to gather scientific information, especially "to elucidate the phenomena of the weather and the magnetic needle." Newly appointed Chief Signal Officer Brig. Gen. William Babcock Hazen decided to use Signal Corps funds for an expedition to Point Barrow, Alaska. A station there would fill the gap between a Russian outpost at the mouth of the Lena River and a Danish station on the west coast of Greenland. The expedition, plus another to an island off Greenland, formed the United States contribution to the International Polar Year of 1881. The orders establishing the stations included requirements for record keeping; instructions for magnetic, meteorological, and tidal observations; and proposed subjects for photographs, sketches, and topographical maps.
    First Lieutenant Patrick Henry Ray of the 8th Infantry received command of the Point Barrow expedition which began its work on 16 September 1881 and for the following two years contributed to the scientific knowledge of the frozen north. In addition to fulfilling the general instructions, the expedition made an attempt to correlate the Aurora Borealis with electrical currents on the surface of the earth. The men gathered many specimens of both flora and fauna, some never before observed. Ethnological research produced a wealth of information on the Point Barrow Eskimos. Although without special training Ray became especially interested in the Eskimos and completed an "ethnographic sketch" of merit. He made two trips exclusively in the company of Eskimos. The first was ostensibly to obtain fresh meat; however, Ray really wanted to see if her could "travel with safety alone with these natives."