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James Teit Photos
James Alexander Teit (1864-1922) took thousands of photographs
portraying the Interior Salish of British Columbia in the early years
of the 20th century. As early as 1894, Teit helped anthropologist
Franz Boas take pictures at Spences Bridge, the small town in British
Columbia where Teit lived. By 1911, when Teit was hired by Edward
Sapir of the Geological Survey of Canada, now the Canadian Museum of
Civilization, photography was an accepted part of fieldwork, and Teit
set out to develop an ethnographic album of Interior Salish images.
This page provides a link between the photographs taken by Teit during
his years employed by the Geological Survey, 1911-1918, and the artifacts
he collected. Click on an image to see a close-up view of some of the
objects in the photograph that are now part of the Museum's ethnology
collection. The photographic work of James Teit can also be seen in the
Canadian Museum of Civilization Mercury Publication The Interior Salish
Tribes of British Columbia: A Photographic Collection (1987) edited by
Leslie Tepper.
To view the rest of the Teit photographic collection click here.
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