ABORIGINAL AMERICAN BASKETRY. 541 



\.MERiCAN MusEUAr OF NATURAL HisTdRY OF New York. The best assemblages of 

 American basketry are the Emmons collection from Alaska; the Teit from the 

 Chilcotin and the Thompson Indians (Jesup expedition); the Farrand from the 

 Quinaielt (Jesup expedition); the Farrand from the Klikitat and Oregon (gift of 

 Mr. Henry Yillard); the Dixon from northern California (Huntingdon expedi- 

 tion); the Briggs collection from California (gift of Mr. George Foster Peabody); 

 tlie Apache collection (gift of Mr. Andrew E. Douglass); the Pepper, of cere- 

 monial baskets of the ancient cliff dwellers (Hyde expedition); baskets from 

 the Chukchi Peninsula collected by Messrs. Jochelson and Bogoras (Jesu]) 

 expedition). If we should include birch-bark baskets, one might also mention 

 the Stone collection from Mackenzie Basin; and the Berthold Laufer collection 

 from the Amur Eiver (Jesup expedition). The basketry collection has l)een 

 brought together for decoration, not for tet'hnic. 



A-iVKEXY, Mrs. Levi, Walla AValla, Washington. Salish basketry. 



Barrett, S. A., Ukiah, California. All Porno. Ab(jut 150 pieces. 



Bexham, J. W., Phoenix, Arizona. Large and rich c'ollection of Apache ollas, rare 

 Pimas, and other basketry from the Southwest. 



Benjamin, Mrs. Carolyn G., Washington City. (Tcneral collection. Good in Clieti- 

 maehas. 



Bingham, Mrs. J. E., 338 Katharine street, Walla Walla, Washington. 



Bi.sHoi*, Mrs. Thomas T., 2309 Washington street, San Francisco, California. Miscel- 

 laneous. 



Boggs, Mrs. A. G., Kedding, California. Principally Hat Creeks, of Shasta ('dunty, 

 and Pit Rivers, of Modoc County. Some 200. 



Bradford, ]\Irs. Sidney, Avery Island, Louisiana. Fine did Clietinuichas. 



Briggs, C. F., San Francisco, California. Miscellaneous. \'cry clioice examples. 

 Northwest coast, Pomos, Mari})osan, and few fine INIission. 



Brittin, L. H., Edgewater, New Jersey. Old Tlinkit l)askets. 



Brizari), Brousse, Areata, California. Large Hupa material with illustrated cata- 

 logue. 



Buchan, Charles Milton, Tulalip Agency, Tulalip, Washington. 



BuGBEE, Mrs. Sumner W., Pasadena, California. iMiscellaneor.s. 



Burdick, T. W., Albany, New York. Rare Tulares. 



Burgess, John D., Tucson, Arizona. Pima, ]\laricopa, and Apache examjiles. 



Carpenter, Mrs. Helen M., Ukiah, California. Pomos. 



Carroll, Andrew AY. de la Cceur, Ardglass, Ireland. Good California types. 



Chicago University. Especially Mexican. See Frederick Starr. 



Cincinnati Museum of Fine Art. General collection. 



CoHN, A., charming specimens of Washoe baskets, Nevada. 



Cole, Mrs., Pasadena, California. General collection. 



Cook, Mrs. J. B., Yosemite Valley, California. About 75 examj^les of Mono, Washoe, 

 and ]\Iariposan tribes. 



Covert, Frank M., New York. Good in Arizona basketry. 



CoviLLE, Frederick V. Fine collection from the west coast to illustrate the plants 

 used. 



Cross, Mrs. Edward, Salem, Oregon. 



Curtis, AVilliam Conway, Norwalk, Connecticut. The Klikitat and other l)asketry 

 of AA^ashington. 



Daggett, John, Black Bear, Siskiyou County, California. Fine collection of Yurok 

 and Karok material. Klamath and Salmon rivers, northern California. At 

 present on deposit in the Memorial ^Museum, Golden Gate Park, San Francisco, 

 California. 



Davenport Academy Museum, Iowa. Miscellaneous collection. 



Deisher, H. K., 50 Noble street, Kutztown, Pennsylvania. Pomos and Wintung, 

 and a few good Maidus. 



