The Western Arctic Historical Citation Project

A Detailed Guide to the Rev. Isaac Stringer’s 1890s Diaries and Related Archival Documents

Authors

  • Walter Vanast McGill University Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/rsth.31631

Keywords:

Isaac Stringer, Mackenzie Delta, Herschel Island, Kittigazuit, Tununiak, Fort McPherson, belugas, caribou, bowhead, Anglican mission, Oblates of Mary Immaculate, Hudson’s Bay Company, culture-contact, disease and death, Inuvialuit, Kukpugmiut, Nunatagmiut, Gwich’in, whalers, Klondike miners

Abstract

So rich are late nineteenth century Mackenzie Delta culture-contact archives as to preclude any one scholar from fully locating data by ethnic group (Kukpugmiut, Nunatagmiut, other Beaufort Sea Inuit, Gwich’in, whalers, would-be gold miners traversing the region, fur trade staff, adventurers, clerics), passage (the three main channels and their connections), site (Fort McPherson, Tununiak, Iglogzyooit, Singigizyooak, Kuwachuk, Kittigazuit, Tuktoyaktuk, Eskimo Lakes, Baillie Islands, Yukon Coast, Okpooyetchiuk, Shingle Point, Herschel Island), fauna (beluga, bowhead, caribou, fish, etc.), flora, natural phenomena (ice formation, spring breakup), or human process (migration, inter-tribal relations, power structures, family dynamics, women’s roles, violence, hunting methods, traditional beliefs, infanticide, sickness and death, trade, modernization, missionization, and so on). The Western Arctic Historical Citation Project (WAHCP) facilitates the effort by posting on Academia.edu documents transcribed by this author and the syntheses they inspired.

Published

2016-08-19

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

Vanast, W. (2016). The Western Arctic Historical Citation Project: A Detailed Guide to the Rev. Isaac Stringer’s 1890s Diaries and Related Archival Documents. Religious Studies and Theology, 35(1), 5-35. https://doi.org/10.1558/rsth.31631