[BCMA] "Franz Boas, James Teit and Early Twentieth Century Salish Ethnography (Franz Boas Papers, Volume 2)" / Friends of British Columbia's Archives / hybrid event Sunday March 15th 2 pm
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Thu Mar 12 16:17:38 PDT 2026
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Dear Colleagues,
Please join FBCA on-line or in person for this upcoming event.
Sincerely,
Lara
Lara Wilson (she/her)
Director, Special Collections & University Archivist
University of Victoria Libraries
I acknowledge and respect the Lək̓ʷəŋən (Songhees and Xʷsepsəm/Esquimalt) Peoples, living and ancestors, on whose territory the university stands, and the Lək̓ʷəŋən and W̱SÁNEĆ Peoples who have been custodians of the land, air, and waters since time immemorial.
Friends of British Columbia’s Archives
Speaker series event Sunday March 15th online and in person
Franz Boas, James Teit and Early Twentieth Century Salish Ethnography (Franz Boas Papers, Volume 2)
Andrea Laforet, Angie Bain, Andie Palmer, John Haugen and Sarah Moritz
Sunday, March 15 2026 | 2:00pm – 3:00pm
In Person at Royal BC Museum Conference Hall & Online via Zoom
Zoom Link Registration https://us06web.zoom.us/meeting/register/oqBsK_t7QCWKdLKXqR4kpg
Franz Boas, James Teit and Early Twentieth Century Salish Ethnography, the second volume in the Franz Boas Papers series co-sponsored by the American Philosophical Society, the University of Western Ontario, and the University of Nebraska Press, traces the career of James Teit through the letters he exchanged with the anthropologist Franz Boas, from their meeting in Spences Bridge in 1894 until Teit’s death in 1922. Through letters drawn from the archives of the American Philosophical Society, the American Museum of Natural History and the Canadian Museum of History, the book chronicles Teit’s research among the Nlaka’pamux, St’at’imc, and Secwepemc in BC and related Interior Salish peoples in Washington and Montana, work which has left an enduring record in publications, audio recordings, photographs, and notes.
The entire co-editorial team of Andrea Laforet, Angie Bain, Andie Palmer, John Haugen, and Sarah Moritz will be presenting on their own work. Together, the team has multi-disciplined experience in anthropology, museology, research, Indigenous laws, governance, oral history, and scholarship.
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