![]() Ackerman, The Archeology of theGlacier Bay Region, Southeastern Alaska (Pullman, Washington, 1968),pp.85-86.ġ4 Robert F. See Swanton's "Tlingit Myths and Texts," inSmithsonian Institution, Bureau of Ethnology, Bulletin 39(Washington, 1909), pp.337-338.ġ3 Robert E. The ethnologist John R.Swanton recorded what appears to be a Kagwantan version of this legendin Wrangell in 1904. Chapman to Regional Director, June 29,1979, GLBA, administrative files, file A14. Haas,"Possessory Rights of the Natives of Southeastern Alaska," unpublishedfile report at SITK, 1946, Section D.ġ2 John F. The United States, Court of Claims, 1959, p.367.ġ0 Swanton, "Social Condition, Beliefs, andLinguistic Relationship of the Tlingit Indians," in Annual Report ofBureau of Ethnology, 1905, p.399 Frederica De Laguna, "Tlingit" in Handbook of North American Indians, vol. ![]() ![]() Swanton,"Social Condition, Beliefs, and Linguistic Relationship of the TlingitIndians," in Annual Report of Bureau of Ethnology (Washington,1908), p.398 Julia Averkieva, "The Tlingit Indians," in NorthAmerican Indians in Historical Perspective (New York, 1971), p.326.ĩ The Tlingit and Haida Indians of Alaska v. TheUnited States, Court of Claims (1959), p.367 John R. Smythe, "Tlingit and Haida TribalStatus: A Report of the Central Council of the Tlingit and Haida IndianTribes of Alaska," February 1989, p.9, National Park Service AlaskaRegional Office, (ARO), copy provided to author by Tim Cochrane.Ĩ The Tlingit and Haida Indians v. On Tlingit superstitions, Wolfe, ed., John of the Mountains,pp.272-273.Ħ Young, Alaska Days with John Muir, p.171.ħ Charles W. Haas,"Possessory Rights of the Natives of Southeastern Alaska," unpublishedfile report at Sitka National Historic Park (SITK), 1946, Section D,p.4.Ĥ Muir, Travels in Alaska, pp.146, 150 S.Hall Young, Alaska Days with John Muir (New York, 1915), p.99.ĥ Muir, Travels in Alaska, pp.142, 146, 263. ![]() Cohen, The PathlessWay: John Muir and American Wilderness (Madison, Wisconsin, 1984),pp.182-190.Ģ Wolfe, ed., John of the Mountains, p.315.ģ Walter R. Fort Wrangell was "squalid" and "boggy." Sitka had "a rusty, decaying look.cannon lying in the streets sinkinglike boulders in mud dirty Indians loafing about everybody of anycharacter away at the mines or out a-fishing." Linnie Marsh Wolfe, ed., John of the Mountains: The Unpublished Journals of John Muir(Boston, 1938), pp.257, 259. Muir juxtaposed this natural beauty with the dirtiness ofAlaska towns in his journal. 1 John Muir, Travels in Alaska (Boston,1915), p.152. ![]()
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