Showing 35 results

Archival Description
Iqaluit (Nunavut) Inuit people and culture
Print preview View:

33 results with digital objects Show results with digital objects

Photograph of children and a dog

Item is a photographic slide depicting two children playing next to a white dog. There are people unloading boxes from a boat in the background.

Photograph of several children in a hall

Item is a photographic slide of several children facing away from the camera, perhaps watching a event. The children are in a room with buntings hanging from the ceiling. The photograph is dark.

Photographs from Frobisher Bay, Northwest Territories and other unidentified locations

File contains five photographs taken during a trip to the eastern Arctic taken by Barbara Hinds and Rosemary Gilliat in 1960. The photographs show Barbara hinds on a scooter, a sign that says "Ice Cap Inn," Hinds with two dogs, a man holding some leather cord, and Hinds with a boy pouring water from a kettle. The photographs were taken in Frobisher Bay and other locations in the eastern Canadian Arctic. The photographs are reprints created at a later date.

Eaton, Rosemary C. (Gilliat)

Recording of an interview with Abraham Ogpik

Item is a recording of Barbara Hinds' interview with Abraham Ogpik in Frobisher Bay. Ogpik talks about Inuit people being taught to adapt to white people's lifestyle and the effects on Inuit culture.

Recording of an interview with Bryan Pearson

Item is a recording of Barbara Hinds' interview with Bryan Pearson, a general contractor in Frobisher Bay, Northwest Territories. Pearson talks about how he came to the north, employing Inuit people, his past jobs, and other topics.

Slides from Frobisher Bay, Northwest Territories

File contains 130 photographic slides taken by Rosemary Gilliat during a 1960 trip to the eastern Canadian Arctic with Barbara Hinds. The photographs in this file were taken in Frobisher Bay, Northwest Territories (now Iqaluit, Nunavut). The photographs residents of the area, ice floes in the bay, buildings in the town, the surrounding landscape, and Barbara Hinds herself. Some of the photographs were taken in Sylvia Grinell Territorial Park and the Inuit community of Apex.

Eaton, Rosemary C. (Gilliat)