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he
ability to make traditional wood frame and hide-laced
snowshoes
is an endangered tradition. Passed on for thousands
of years by mothers and grandmothers to daughters
and from fathers and grandfathers to sons, snowshoemaking
has been undermined by the introduction of new technologies
and goods and the encroachment of non-native settlements
on traditional hunting territories. Despite these
changes in traditional culture, a few elders still
carry on traditions learned in their youth. In Maine,
Larry Roubichaud, Maliseet, seeks to revive snowshoemaking
and in sub-Arctic Canada, Innu, Mistassini Cree, Montagnais,
Naskapi and Attikamek elders continue to make snowshoes
and pass this tradition on to the next generation.
No longer learned in the bush, snowshoemaking is often
taught as part of school curricula. Most of the contemporary
pairs exhibited here will never touch the snow. Made
in traditional ways with traditional materials, they
are valued for their artistry and for their ties to
the past when snowshoes were indespensable to life
in the Northeast.
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For
details about a snowshoe, click on its name below:
1.
Mistassini Cree Classic Beavertail Snowshoes
Loaned by Bill Mackowski, 2002
2. Ojibwe Bush Snowshoes
Loaned by Bill Mackowski
3. Mushu Innu Bearpaw Snowshoes
Loaned by Bill Mackowski
4. Musquara Run Innu Elbow Shoes
Loaned by Bill Mackowski
5. Misstassini Cree Hunting Snowshoes
Loaned by Bill Mackowski
6. Montaignais Swallowtail Snowshoes
Loaned by Bill Mackowski
7. Cree Snowshoes
Loaned by Bill Mackowski |