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Culture:
Takelma includes: Rogue River
Date:1977
Contributor:Kendall, Daythal
Subject:Linguistics | Oregon--History
Type:Text
Genre:Dissertations
Extent:147 pages
Description: "A Syntactic Analysis of Takelma Texts," regarding decoding and generation of sentences (both simple and complex) and of Text; morphology. Doctoral dissertation in linguistics, University of Pennsylvania.
Collection:A syntactic analysis of Takelma texts, 1972 (Mss.497.3.K34)
Culture:
Tututni includes: Rogue River
Takelma includes: Rogue River
Chasta Costa includes: Shasta Costa, Chastacosta, Rogue River
Language:Chinook Jargon | English | Shasta | Takelma | Tututni
Date:1903-1904; 1906
Contributor:Johnson, Frances | Sapir, Edward, 1884-1939 | St. Clair, H. H. (Harry Hull)
Subject:Language families | Linguistics | Medicine | Music | Oregon--History | Penutian languages
Type:Text
Genre:Grammars | Musical scores | Songs | Vocabularies
Extent:5 notebooks (approximately 120 pages each), 6 pages (sheet music), 36 loose pages
Description: The Takelma material in the ACLS consist primarily of materials found in the "Takelma" section of the finding aid, item Pn1.1. The bulk of this material is that recorded by Edward Sapir in 1903-1904, consisting of 5 field notebooks with texts with English translations and medicine formulas (published in 1909) as well as paradigms and other grammatical notes. This material also contains sheet music with transcriptions of four Takelma songs and one each for Chasta Costa, Shasta, and Chinook Jargon. Remaining leaves are vocabulary notes made by H. H. St. Clair. In the "Penutian" section, there are also two sets of "Coos-Takelma-Penutian comparisons" (item P1.2 and P1.3).
Collection:ACLS Collection (American Council of Learned Societies Committee on Native American Languages, American Philosophical Society) (Mss.497.3.B63c)
Date:1977-2008
Contributor:Kendall, Daythal | Barnhardt, W. H. | Sapir, Edward, 1884-1939 | Harrington, J. P. (John P.), 1865-1939 | Riggs, Clara | Castle, Grace | Kentta, Verna | Kentta, Carl | Kendall, Carolyn
Subject:Linguistics | Coyote tales | Ethnopoetics | Poetry | Oregon--History
Type:Text | Still Image | Sound recording
Genre:Photographs | Correspondence | Drafts | Vocabularies | Grammars
Extent:3 linear feet; 6 hours (audio)
Description: The majority of Daythal Kendall's linguistic and ethnographic research was on Takelma, and so Takelma materials can be found throughout his collection. He built a large corpus of Takelma lexical items from sources including Edward Sapir's Takelma grammar (of which he hand-annotated many copies) and other works by W. H. Barnhardt, J. P. Harrington and others, some results of which were lexical slip files, in Series 8. From his dissertation in 1977 until the 2000s he worked on Takelma grammar and poetry, including many Coyote stories. There is a dedicated subseries to his research file for Takelma that reflects these. Extensive comparisons with other hypothesized Penutian languages can be found throughout, including in the correspondence Series 1. He also photographed Takelma baskets and the traditional Takelma landscape in several visits to the Takelma community, which can be found in Series 9. Series 11 contains audiocassette recordings of interviews with Verna Kentta, Carl Kentta, Grace Castle, and Clara Riggs.
Collection:Daythal L. Kendall Papers (Mss.Ms.Coll.148)
Culture:
Date:1890, 1900, 1935
Subject:Folklore | Linguistics | Oregon--History
Type:Text
Genre:Notes | Stories | Vocabularies | Field notes
Extent:163 pages, and 2 notebooks
Description: The Tillamook materials in the ACLS collection consist of 3 items in the "Tillamook" section of the finding aid and one in the "Chinook" section. Material in the "Tillamook" section includes materials collected in 1890 by Franz Boas (items S4.2 and S4.3), consisting of texts with interlinear translation, pencil corrections, mixed in with materials on Siletz and Nehelim, and material from May Edel (item S4.4), collected in 1935, consisting of a combined vocabulary containing words that she recorded, combined with those recorded earlier by Boas and Melville Jacobs. Material in the "Chinook" section consists of 2 notebooks (item S4.1), partially in shorthand, by Boas from 1890, with vocabularies and texts with interlinear translation, ethnographic notes in shorthand. A table of contents is included with notebooks, which also have Nehelim, Siletz, Chinookan, Wasco-Wishram, Klackamas, Clatsop, and Chinook information, along with physical notes on Songhees skulls from an earlier field work trip.
Collection:ACLS Collection (American Council of Learned Societies Committee on Native American Languages, American Philosophical Society) (Mss.497.3.B63c)
Culture:
Tillamook includes: Nehalem, Nehelim, Nekelim
Date:1890-1939
Contributor:Edel, May M. (May Mandelbaum), 1909-1964
Subject:Linguistics | Salishan languages | Folklore | Fieldwork | Ethnography | Anthropology | Ethnology | Oregon--History
Type:Text
Genre:Microfilms | Notes | Vocabularies | Notebooks | Field notes
Extent:4 reels
Description: These materials include notes and vocabularies of Salish languages and dialects, manuscripts concerning the Tillamook language and folk tales, and notebooks containing information from various interviews. From originals in the University of Washington Libraries.
Collection:Mary M. Edel microfilm collection (Mss.Film.1275)
Culture:
Language:English | Chinook, Upper | Wasco-Wishram
Date:circa 1905-1909
Contributor:McGuff, Peter
Subject:Anthropology | Ethnography | Folklore | Linguistics | Penutian languages | Oregon--History | Fieldwork
Type:Text
Genre:Stories | Transcriptions
Extent:27 pages
Description: This item consists of handwritten texts on historic and mythic topics written in Wasco-Wishram with English translation on lined loose-leaf paper. The stories were apparently gathered by Peter McGuff; there are also a few personal notes and ethnographic observations sprinkled throughout. The seven stories are designated by teller and by subject as follows: "This story told by an old lady how they went short of provisions some seventy years ago, at the Cascades" (2 pages); "This is parts of the sk!uliyE story that Louie [Simpson] missed, Given by Yaryarone (Wicxam [Wishram])...." (5 pages); "From Sophia Klickitate (age 64) What happened at Cascades before any white person known of in that part of the country...." (2 pages); "From Jane Meachum Age 80 years (Wicxam [Wishram])" (2 pages); "Raccoon, Pheasant, Coyote, and Crow" (7 pages); "Racoon Continued" (3 pages--at the bottom of the third page is a personal note from Pete to Ed asking for feedback on the quality of the work and noting that he can't make a living from it unless Ed makes a guarantee of steady work); and "from anEwikus age 65" (6 pages). Louis "Louie" Simpson and Peter "Pete" McGuff were both Wishram language consultants who worked with Edward Sapir; Sapir described them in Sapir (1909), and Michael Silverstein discussed them both in Natural Histories of Discourse (1996), a volume co-edited by Silverstein and Greg Urban.
Collection:Transcriptions of Wishram texts (Mss.497.3.M17t)
Culture:
Language:English | Wasco-Wishram
Date:1906-1956
Contributor:Dyk, Walter | Haas, Mary R. (Mary Rosamond), 1910-1996 | Hymes, Dell H. | Sapir, Edward, 1884-1939 | McGuff, Peter | Voegelin, C. F. (Charles Frederick), 1906-1986 | Wolf, J. G. | Kahclamet, Philip
Subject:Linguistics | Penutian languages | Folklore | Anthropology | Ethnography | Oregon--History | Fishing | Washington (State)--History
Type:Text
Genre:Field notes | Dictionaries | Notes | Abstracts | Correspondence | Grammars | Theses | Essays | Dissertations | Notebooks
Extent:0.5 linear feet
Description: The Walter Dyk Collection consists of 16 folders relating to Dyk's dissertation research on Wishram, 1930-1933, donated to the APS by Dell Hymes in the 1980s (with additions transferred from the Dell H. Hymes Papers in 2019). It includes copies of his masters thesis (Chicago, 1931) and dissertation (Yale, 1933), papers and notes sent to Dell Hymes in the mid-1950s when Hymes was working on the language, including two field notebooks, Hymes' plans for use of these and other materials, and a small but important set of correspondence. The correspondence includes letters to Dyk from Philip Kahclamet, who was Dyk's primary consultant for "Kikct" (which Kahclamet identifies as a broad term for several related varieties), and who later worked with Hymes; from Edward Sapir to Dyk, including a very long and detailed letter commenting on phonology in Dyk's dissertation; and a series of letters to Sapir from Peter McGuff, Sapir's Wishram consultant at Fort Simcoe, Washington, 1906-1908. Sapir described him in Sapir (1909), and Michael Silverstein discussed him in Natural Histories of Discourse (1996), a volume co-edited by Silverstein and Greg Urban. See finding aid for related material and an itemized list of contents.
Collection:Walter Dyk Collection (Mss.497.3.H998m)
Culture:
Language:English | Wasco-Wishram
Date:1890, 1905-1954, 1930
Contributor:Dyk, Walter | Hymes, Dell H. | Sapir, Edward, 1884-1939 | Silverstein, Michael, 1945-2020
Subject:Linguistics | Oregon--History | Place names | Washington (State)--History
Type:Text
Genre:Correspondence | Vocabularies
Extent:2 notebooks, 49 loose pages, and approximately 22,000 slips
Description: The Wasco-Wishram materials in the ACLS collection are in multiple sections of the finding aid. The largest single item is a multi-part lexical file of over 22,000 cards including vocabulary, paradigms, and other linguistic data, assembled from the work of Sapir, Dyk, and Hymes, in the "Wasco" section (item Pn4a.10). These appear to be copied from originals, the location of which is not known. The "Wishram" section contains several short files including on Wishram place names, Wishram directional elements, grammatical notes, and ethnographic notes. In the "Chinook" section, see Boas' "Field notes on Chinookan and Salishan languages and Gitamat, Molala, and Masset" (item Pn4b.5), notebooks 1 and 2 of which include Wasco texts and vocabulary recorded in 1890. "Field notes on Tillamook and Chinookan dialects" (item S4.1) also includes additional vocabularies and texts. The "Chinook" section may contain additional Wasco-Wishram materials not presently distinguished from other Chinookan language materials.
Collection:ACLS Collection (American Council of Learned Societies Committee on Native American Languages, American Philosophical Society) (Mss.497.3.B63c)
Culture:
Language:English | Wasco-Wishram
Date:1967-1968, 1972, 1984-1985
Contributor:Hymes, Dell H. | Moore, Robert E. | Silverstein, Michael, 1945-2020
Subject:Folklore | Linguistics | Oregon--History | Washington (State)--History
Type:Text
Genre:Correspondence | Reports | Stories | Transcriptions | Vocabularies
Extent:204 pages
Description: The Wasco-Wishram materials in the Phillips Fund collection consist of 3 items. Materials in this collection are listed alphabetically by last name of author. See materials listed under Hymes, Moore, and Silverstein.
Collection:Phillips Fund for Native American Research Collection (Mss.497.3.Am4)
Culture:
Yakama includes: Yakima
Language:Yakama | Wasco-Wishram | English | Chinook
Date:1976-2007
Contributor:Kono, Nariyo | Silverstein, Michael, 1945-2020 | Kendall, Daythal | Rigsby, Bruce
Subject:Linguistics | Oregon--History | Washington (State)--History
Type:Text | Cartographic
Genre:Correspondence | Drafts | Maps
Extent:1 linear foot
Description: Daythal Kendall participated in the 1994-1995 Penutian Workshops, collecting a wide range of material from before and after that conference that sought to solidify some of the various Penutian phylum hypotheses, including of two languages spoken at Yakama Reservation: Yakama Sahaptin and Wasco-Wishram Chinook. This material is extensive and can be found mostly in Series VII. Conferences, under "Penutian Workshops", with related correspondence in Series I. Correspondence.
Collection:Daythal L. Kendall Papers (Mss.Ms.Coll.148)