Inuit women and children on board vessel (A.T. Gifford), Canadian Arctic

A group of Inuit women and children pose on the afterdeck of a vessel, probably the whaling schooner A.T. Gifford, Canadian Arctic, ca. 1907-1912. The women wear dresses made from trade cloth obtained from whalers, and the children are dressed in clothes also brought north by the Americans. Infrastr...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Comer, George (Creator)
Format: Still Image
Language:unknown
Published: Ownership Statement: Mystic Seaport 1907
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11134/70002:5545
Description
Summary:A group of Inuit women and children pose on the afterdeck of a vessel, probably the whaling schooner A.T. Gifford, Canadian Arctic, ca. 1907-1912. The women wear dresses made from trade cloth obtained from whalers, and the children are dressed in clothes also brought north by the Americans. Infrastructure Livelihood Title supplied by cataloger. Taken by Captain George Comer (1858-1937), a sealer and whaling captain from East Haddam. He went to sea while still in his teens and was later master of vessels from both New London and New Bedford. Comer participated in voyages involved in polar expeditions and was noted for his studies of Arctic peoples and their environment.