Nova Scotia Museum
Mi'kmaq Portraits Collection

IMAGE CITATION


Date: 1837

Subject:

Orignal Work:

Place: Nova Scotia

Source: Library and Archives Canada

Reference Number: C-30966


Please contact Library and Archives Canada for use of this image.

IMAGE INFORMATION


The artist served in Canada 1834-1838, as an Ensign in the 85th Regiment. He kept a diary from 27 December 1837 to 11 February 1838, during a march of the regiment from New Brunswick to Québec. Three of his sketches, of the fourteen found with this diary, are dated 1837, and many were done in Nova Scotia, apparently on a moose-hunting trip. Jack Glode, the Mi'kmaq hunter shown here, is wearing a cap with side flaps turned up and appears to be blind in one eye, with an eye-patch. This is the oldest known Mi'kmaq portrait where the subject is identified by name. In pencil on the reverse is "Jack Glode/A sketch from nature of an Indian chief/ October 1837." In October, according to other sketches in the same diary, Butler was traveling on the Liverpool Road, running from Annapolis Royal to Liverpool, N.S.

KEYWORDS


men; chiefs; Glode, Jack; caps, men's; hunting; guiding; Nova Scotia


Keyword Search

Keywords Only This Site
Back To Top Browse The Complete Collection