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From Arlis Feser Hutchinson I agree with Matt McMillan and Doug Hanneman’s comment in their editorial (Sunday, May 15 Leader) that we should all applaud the Hutchinson Public Arts Commission&… ...
A totem pole that has played a colorful role in University of Northern Colorado history since 1914 will return to its Alaska home this fall. The Tlingit Indians crafted the Brown Bear Totem, which UNC ...
EVERETT — A piece of Everett some 650 years in the making will soon make its way to Alaska. In January, local Tlingit artist Fred Fulmer began carving an 11-foot, 400-pound totem pole at his ...
For Haida artist Robert Davidson, the idea of carving a totem pole was his grand, loving gesture to his grandparents' generation to allow them to celebrate in the old ways they knew one more time ...
Fred Fulmer Sr. is a Tlingit artist whose latest totem pole will be displayed in a new state-of-the-art museum owned by the Huna Tlingit tribe in Alaska.
Totem Pole Taken 94 Years Ago Begins 4,000-Mile Journey Home The 36-foot tall memorial pole has spent almost a century in a Scottish museum. Now it will be returned to the Nisga’a Nation in Canada.
The totem pole went missing in the late 1800s after members of the Nuxalk Nation moved from where they were living to avoid a smallpox outbreak. It was later found in the Royal B.C. Museum.
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