Dainty beads that appear to closely match those on the "Traded for Slaves" sample card (see below) |
Various colors of blue, comparing Pacific Northwest beads with strands from Africa. With the exception of the lowermost steely blue strand of beads, the African beads display a layered structure, with translucent glass overlaying a bright opal or opaque blue commonly called "Dutch" blue. The Northwest Coast beads are often 7-sided, the African beads are smaller in diameter and usually have 6 sides (but not always - the two dark sapphire strands upper middle are strung on African raffia and have 7 sides). The darker blue Pacific Northwest beads are a uniform color, but the lighter blue beads display a core of "Dutch" blue. 6-sided beads with multiple layers, as well as monochrome beads, have also been recovered at the Fort Vancouver fur trade post archaeological site in Portland, Oregon and elsewhere along the Pacific Northwest coast. (see PDF) |
BeadsTraded for Slaves vs Traded for Furs
Those interested in extensive pictures of the varieties of these "Russian" beads can find an awesome online exhibit at the Picard Museum.
UPDATE: Found an online version of the British Museum Levin cards at ezakwantu.com. I've circled the beads resembling those discussed above. As the Picards note in their online exhibit of beads on pre-1900 cards, with respect to the Levin cards in the British Museum, "there is no real evidence that these sample cards of beads traded for gold, ivory, palm oil and slaves are really accurate as to what they were traded for, and therefore are not to be taken literally."
[Open image in another tab if you wish to magnify it]
UPDATE: The Smithsonian's National Museum of the American Indian has an example of the type of bead collected by the Tlingit in Sitka, Alaska (site of the Russian-American Company).
"Collection history unknown; formerly in the collection of Frederick W. Skiff (1868-1947, a Portland, Oregon, accountant and antiquarian); purchased by MAI from Frederick Skiff in 1925."
https://americanindian.si.edu/collections-search/objects/NMAI_148302
More Pacific Northwest beads:
UPDATE MARCH 2024
Posted with the permission of the photographer, an extraordinary Tlingit vest composed of Russian trade beads, in the collection of the Smithsonian's National Museum of the American Indian.
Thank you for sharing your work!
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You're welome! Always gratifying to learn that someone is actually reading these posts...
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