A group of young northern Indigenous (Dogrib) boys sitting and standing in front of a wooden building [Hudson's Bay Company trading post] at Great Slave Lake.
An image of an Indigenous man packing goods on his back; he is on a path through bushy terrain.
A group of Indigenous men and traders landing the Hudson's Bay Company fur boats at the foot of the rapid on the Athabasca River in preparation for portaging.
A group of Indigenous individuals, including men, women and children, beaching their birch bark canoes and unloading supplies for trade at Fort Resolution on Great Slave Lake.
Indigenous individuals unloading supplies at Great Slave Lake that have been received from Fort Resolution. Includes sleds in the foreground and teepee in the background.
Same as EA-10-8
A view of a group of Indigenous men portaging a scow on the Slave River. An inscription on front of the photograph reads: "Goods and boats are portaged four times in 25 miles on account of the rapids on Slave River".
A view of Indigenous men running a boat through rapids on the Slave River. An inscription on the front of the photograph further explains: "The boats are run in the channels of the river thereby avoiding the heavier swells in the main part of the river, which is a mile wide and almost impossible to run a boat through".
A view of a group of Indigenous men trekking along the shore of the Athabasca River, tracking the progress of Hudson's Bay Company fur boats in the river. An inscription on the front of the photograph reads: "Indians tracking the H.B.Co's fur boats up the rapids on Athabasca River, from Fort McMurry [sic] to Grand Rapids, 87 miles is almost one continuous rapid".