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<ead audience="external">
	<eadheader audience="internal" countryencoding="iso3166-1" dateencoding="iso8601"
		langencoding="iso639-2" repositoryencoding="iso15511">
		<eadid countrycode="us" mainagencycode="MnHi">00353a.xml</eadid>
		<filedesc>
			<titlestmt>
				<titleproper>ERNEST C. OBERHOLTZER: </titleproper>
				<subtitle>An Inventory of Oral History Interviews at the Minnesota
					Historical Society</subtitle>
				<author>Finding aid prepared by Lydia Lucas</author>
			</titlestmt>
			<publicationstmt>
				<publisher encodinganalog="Publisher">Minnesota Historical Society</publisher>
				<address> 
			 <addressline>St. Paul, MN.</addressline> 
		  </address>
			</publicationstmt>
		             <seriesstmt><p>Oral History Collection</p></seriesstmt>         </filedesc>
		<profiledesc>
			<creation>Finding aid encoded by Monica Manny Ralston<date>October 10, 2008</date>
			</creation>
			<langusage>Finding aid written in <language langcode="eng">English</language>
			</langusage>
		</profiledesc>
		<revisiondesc>
			<change>
				<date>September 4, 2009</date>
				<item>Revisions by Jennifer Huebscher</item>
			</change>
		</revisiondesc>
	</eadheader>
	<archdesc level="collection" type="inventory" relatedencoding="MARC">
		<did id="a1">
			<head>OVERVIEW</head>
			<unitid countrycode="US" repositorycode="MnHi"> </unitid>
			<repository label="Repository:">Minnesota Historical Society</repository>

			<origination label="Creator:" encodinganalog="100/110/111">
				<persname role="creator" encodinganalog="100/110/111">Oberholtzer, Ernest C. (Ernest
					Carl), 1884-1977, interviewee.</persname>
			</origination>
			<unittitle label="Title:" encodinganalog="245$a">Oral history interviews with Ernest C.
				Oberholtzer.</unittitle>
			<unitdate label="Date:" encodinganalog="245$f" normal="1963/1964" type="inclusive"
				>1948-1964.</unitdate>
			<langmaterial label="Language of Materials">Materials in <language langcode="eng"
					>English</language>
			</langmaterial>
			<abstract label="Abstract:">Transcripts and recordings of fifteen oral history interviews with
				conservationist Ernest C. Oberholtzer, focusing on conservation issues in the
				Quetico-Superior area of northern Minnesota and Canada.</abstract>
			<physdesc label="Quantity:" encodinganalog="300">402 pages. </physdesc>
			<physloc label="Location:">OH 81: See <ref target="a9">Detailed Description</ref>
				section for shelf location.</physloc>
		</did>
		<bioghist encodinganalog="545">
			<head altrender="biography" id="a2">BIOGRAPHICAL NOTE</head>
			<p><extptr actuate="onload" show="embed" altrender="right"
						title="Ernest Oberholtzer" href="oh81/images/pf047694_226x336.jpg"/>
				Ernest C. Oberholtzer was born in 1884 in Davenport, Iowa, and died in 1977
				in International Falls, Minnesota. He is known as an explorer, conservationist, and
				writer. Educated at Harvard University, Oberholtzer took a B.A. in landscape
				architecture in 1907, and remained at Harvard to do some graduate work. In 1908 he
				traveled to England and Scotland with his college friend Conrad Aiken.</p>
			<p>In 1909 Oberholtzer first explored the border lakes in the Rainy Lake watershed area
				in northern Minnesota and southern Canada. By agreement with Oberholtzer, the
				Canadian Northern Railroad bought his notes and pictures documenting canoe routes in
				the area.</p>
			<p>Oberholtzer worked for a short time as a newspaper editor and in 1910 went again to
				Europe, this time with his friend Harry French. Oberholtzer briefly served as vice
				consul in Hanover, Germany, before returning to northern Minnesota in 1912.</p>
			<p>In 1912 Oberholtzer traveled to Hudson's Bay with an Ojibwe Indian companion, Billy
				Magee of Mine Centre, Ontario. The same year Oberholtzer moved to Rainy Lake,
				spending summers on an island, "The Mallard," and winters on a houseboat at Ranier.
				He often traveled the area with Indian companions, particularly Billy Magee, and was
				not only a friend of many American Indians in the area, but also a teller of their stories
				and legends. </p>
			<p>Oberholtzer is best known throughout the United States and Canada for his ceaseless
				efforts to preserve the Quetico-Superior wilderness. He was instrumental in the
				founding of the Quetico-Superior Council and the Wilderness Society; worked for the
				establishment of the Boundary Waters Canoe Area and Voyageurs National Park; and
				received many honors for his role in conservation work.</p>
		</bioghist>
		<scopecontent encodinganalog="520">
			<head id="a3">SCOPE AND CONTENTS</head>
			<p>A series of fifteen oral history interviews with Oberholtzer was conducted in
				1963-1964, primarily by Lucile Kane of the Minnesota Historical Society; Russell
				Fridley, Pete Heffelfinger, and Evan Hart also participated in some of the
				interviews. Oberholtzer reminisces about all facets of his life and career; his
				explorations in northern Minnesota; his opposition to lumbering and damming
				operations in the Rainy Lakes area by Edward W. Backus and others; the
				Quetico-Superior program; the Shipstead-Newton-Nolan Bill passed by the U.S.
				Congress in 1930, which set aside public lands in the present Superior National
				Forest; other aspects of conservation in northern Minnesota and elsewhere; Ojibwe
				Indian culture and stories; and many related topics.</p>
			<p>Transcripts of some of these interviews, totaling 402 pages, are available at the Minnesota
				Historical Society, as well as on the World Wide Web as searchable pdf files. The
				detailed description, below, provides links to these files.</p>
			<p>These transcripts are drafts, made from the tape recordings and given preliminary
				editing, but never completed. Most were sent to Oberholtzer for his editing and
				approval, but due to his declining health he was unable to complete the task. Some
				of the transcripts incorporate editorial changes and clarifications by Oberholtzer
				and the interviewers; others do not. Due to the various editorial annotations, the
				transcripts are not an exact rendering of the original tape recordings closely,
				although they follow the content and usually the style fairly closely. The paper
				copies are considered "rough drafts" and show editing by Lucile Kane. The pdf copies
				are considered "second copies" and are clean, retyped versions of the edited rough
				draft. In some cases, there are duplicates of the "second copies" that are further
				edited by Oberholtzer. Both sets of "second copies" are filed with the Ernest C.
				Oberholtzer papers in the manuscript collection.</p>
		</scopecontent>
		<descgrp type="admininfo">
			<head id="a8">ADMINISTRATIVE INFORMATION</head>
			
			<prefercite encodinganalog="524">
				<head>Preferred Citation:</head>
				<p><emph render="italic">[Indicate the cited item and/or series here]</emph>. Oral
					history interviews with Ernest C. Oberholtzer. Minnesota Historical Society.</p>
				<p>
					<emph render="italic">See the Chicago Manual of Style for additional
						examples.</emph>
				</p>
			</prefercite>
			<acqinfo>
				<head>Accession Information:</head>
				<p>Accession number: AV2000.27.</p>
			</acqinfo>
		</descgrp>
		<relatedmaterial encodinganalog="544">
			<head id="a5">RELATED MATERIALS</head>			
			<p>The Minnesota Historical Society also holds Oberholtzer's personal papers. They
				comprise 20 cubic feet of letters, diaries, articles, field notes, reports, and
				related materials, and are available for public use on 52 reels of microfilm. A
				detailed <extref show="new" actuate="onrequest" href="00353.xml">inventory of the
					Oberholtzer papers</extref> is also available.</p>
		</relatedmaterial>
		<controlaccess>
			<head id="a7">CATALOG HEADINGS</head>
			<p>This collection is indexed under the following headings in the catalog of the
				Minnesota Historical Society. Researchers desiring materials about related topics,
				persons or places should <extref linktype="simple" show="new"
					href="http://mnhs.mnpals.net"> search the catalog</extref> using these
				headings.</p>
			<controlaccess>
				<head>Topics:</head>
				<subject encodinganalog="650">Conservation of natural resources-Minnesota.</subject>
				<subject encodinganalog="650">Conservation of natural resources-Ontario.</subject>
				<subject encodinganalog="650">Conservationists-Minnesota.
					Environmentalists-Minnesota.</subject>
				<subject encodinganalog="650">Forest conservation-Minnesota. Wilderness
					areas-Minnesota. </subject>
			</controlaccess>
			<controlaccess>
				<head>Places:</head>
				<geogname encodinganalog="651">Boundary Waters Canoe Area (Minn.).</geogname>
				<geogname encodinganalog="651">Quetico-Superior Area (Ont.-Minn.).</geogname>
				<geogname encodinganalog="651">Voyageurs National Park (Minn.). </geogname>
			</controlaccess>
			<controlaccess>
				<head>Persons:</head>
				<persname encodinganalog="600"> Backus, E. W. (Edward Wellington), 1860-1934. </persname>
				<persname encodinganalog="600">Hart, Evan A., 1913-1964, interviewer. </persname>
				<persname encodinganalog="600">Heffelfinger, Pete, interviewer. </persname>
				<persname encodinganalog="600">Kane, Lucile M., interviewer. </persname>
				<persname encodinganalog="600">Magee, Billy. </persname>
			</controlaccess>
			<controlaccess>
				<head>Organizations:</head>
				<corpname encodinganalog="610"> Quetico-Superior Council. </corpname>
				<corpname encodinganalog="610">Wilderness Society. </corpname>
			</controlaccess>
			<controlaccess>
				<head>Types of Documents:</head>
				<genreform encodinganalog="655">Interviews.</genreform>
				<genreform encodinganalog="655">Oral histories.</genreform>
			</controlaccess>
		</controlaccess>
		<dsc type="combined">
			<head id="a9">DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE COLLECTION</head>

			<c01 level="series">
				<did>

					<unittitle>1912 Hudson Bay trip; Billy Magee; Quetico-Superior area
						explorations; 1910-1912 trip to Europe, </unittitle>
					<unitdate>1963.</unitdate>
				</did>
				<scopecontent>
					<p><emph render="bold">Scope and Content:</emph> Subjects discussed include
						Oberholtzer's Hudson Bay trip into the barren lands in 1912; Pat Cyr,
						brother-in-law of Louis Riel, and the Rainy Lake district; Billy Magee, an
						Ojibwe Indian and Oberholtzer's companion on many expeditions; Exploration
						around the Quetico-Superior Forest in Ontario and Superior National Forest
						in Minnesota in 1910, which prepared Oberholtzer for the Hudson Bay trip as
						well as readings in the British Museum in London; Trip to Europe with Harry
						French, a Harvard friend; Oberholtzer's stay in London and his service as
						vice consul in Hanover, Germany, and return to the United States in 1912;
						Canadian Northern Railroad sponsorship of Oberholtzer's Hudson Bay trip in
						return for his notes and pictures of canoe routes; Billy Magee's black
						sturgeon story; Atikokan area and the iron mines; Steep Rock Lake in
						Quetico-Superior and the highway issue. </p>
					<p>This transcript incorporates some of Oberholtzer's editorial annotations,
						transcribed from a second, incomplete draft. They were added when they
						amended or enhanced the initial meaning of a passage. </p>
				</scopecontent>
				<scopecontent>
					<p><emph render="bold">Interviewed by:</emph> Lucile Kane, Russell Fridley, and
						Pete Heffelfinger.</p>
				</scopecontent>
				<userestrict>
					<p><emph render="bold">Use Restrictions:</emph> None.</p>
				</userestrict>

				<c02>
					<did>
						<physloc>OH81</physloc>
						<container type="transcript">1</container>
						<physdesc>65 pages.</physdesc>
					</did>
					<altformavail>
						<p>A typed and edited version of the transcript is available in <extref
								href="oh81/pdf/ober07.pdf" actuate="onrequest" show="new">pdf
								format</extref>.</p>
					</altformavail>
				</c02>
				<c02>
					<did>
						<physloc>OH81</physloc>
						<container type="audio">1</container>
						<physdesc>1 master reel (2 hrs. and 40 min.): 1 7/8 in. per second and 2
							submaster cassettes (90 min. ea.) and 3 user cassettes (90 min.
							ea.)</physdesc>
					</did>
				</c02>
			</c01>
			<c01 level="series">
				<did>
					<unittitle>Comments on slides of 1912 Hudson Bay trip, </unittitle>
					<unitdate>ca. 1963.</unitdate>
				</did>
				<scopecontent>
					<p><emph render="bold">Scope and Content:</emph> Oberholtzer’s narration to
						accompany lantern slides he took on his 1912 trip to Hudson Bay. (The slides
						remain part of the unsettled Oberholtzer estate as of July 1980.) The trip
						covered 3,000 miles through western Ontario, Manitoba, and the Northwest
						Territories of Canada up to Nueltin Lake and Hudson Bay and took six months. </p>
					<p>This carbon copy is the only copy that was present in the files as of
						1998.</p>
				</scopecontent>

				<userestrict>
					<p><emph render="bold">Use Restrictions:</emph> None.</p>
				</userestrict>

				<c02>
					<did>
						<physloc>OH 81</physloc>
						<container type="transcript">2</container>
						<physdesc>19 pages.</physdesc>
					</did>
					<altformavail>
						<p>A typed and edited version of the transcript is available in <extref
								href="oh81/pdf/ober08.pdf" actuate="onrequest" show="new">pdf
								format</extref>.</p>
					</altformavail>
				</c02>
				<c02>
					<did>
						<physloc>OH 81</physloc>
						<container type="audio">2</container>
						<physdesc>1 master reel (45 min.): 1 7/8 in. per second and 2 submaster
							cassettes (120 min. ea.) and 2 user cassettes (90 min. ea.)</physdesc>
					</did>
				</c02>
			</c01>

			<c01 level="series">
				<did>

					<unittitle>Quetico-Superior Council; efforts to establish national forest; E. W.
						Backus; Shipstead-Newton-Nolan Bill, </unittitle>
					<unitdate>October 21, 1963.</unitdate>

				</did>
				<scopecontent>
					<p><emph render="bold">Scope and Content:</emph> Subjects discussed include the
						beginnings of efforts to establish Quetico Superior National Forest ca.
						1925; Major opposition to the national forest was E. W. Backus, a timber
						industrialist and owner of the Backus Wholesale Lumber Company of
						International Falls, who had planned use of the timber and water resources
						of the Rainy Lake watershed, including building dams, flooding, and re
						routing rivers; Organization of support for the Quetico Superior Council and
						preservation of the wilderness. Important organizers were lawyers Sewell
						Tyng and Fred Winston; The Shipstead Newton Nolan Bill passed by the US
						Congress in 1930 which provided for (1) withdrawal from use of public lands
						in the Superior National Forest and Rainy Lake country, (2) restriction of
						logging of shorelines of federal lands, and (3) no further settlement of the
						area. </p>
					<p>This transcript is a photocopy, made for preservation purposes, of a poor
						quality Dennison copy. Page 32 is blurred. The location of the original
						typescript is unknown; it is believed to have been sent to Oberholtzer for
						editing and never returned. A rough draft of this transcript, annotated by
						Lucile Kane and at least one other person, probably the typist is also
						available. </p>
				</scopecontent>
				<scopecontent>
					<p><emph render="bold">Interviewed by:</emph> Lucile Kane and Russell
						Fridley.</p>
				</scopecontent>
				<userestrict>
					<p><emph render="bold">Use Restrictions:</emph> None.</p>
				</userestrict>

				<c02>
					<did>
						<physloc>OH 81</physloc>
						<container type="transcript">3</container>
						<physdesc>57 pages.</physdesc>
					</did>
					<altformavail>
						<p>A typed and edited version of the transcript is available in <extref
								href="oh81/pdf/ober04.pdf" actuate="onrequest" show="new">pdf
								format</extref>.</p>
					</altformavail>
				</c02>
				<c02>
					<did>
						<physloc>OH 81</physloc>
						<container type="audio">3</container>
						<physdesc>1 master reel (3 hrs.): 1 7/8 in. per second and 2 submaster
							cassettes (120 min. ea.) and 2 user cassettes (90 min. ea.)</physdesc>
					</did>
				</c02>
			</c01>
			<c01 level="series">
				<did>

					<unittitle>Shipstead-Newton-Nolan bill; Backus' death; support and setbacks for
						Quetico-Superior program, </unittitle>
					<unitdate>October 21-22, 1963.</unitdate>

				</did>
				<scopecontent>
					<p><emph render="bold">Scope and Content:</emph> Subjects discussed include the
						adoption in 1933 of the Shipstead Newton Nolan Bill for the state meant
						protection against Backus's plans for "public works"; Financial downfall and
						bankruptcy of Backus ca.1929 and 1930, and his death in 1934; Lukewarm
						reaction to the Quetico Superior program from governors Theodore
						Christianson and Floyd B. Olson, and their eventual support; Minnesota
						Conservation Commission's opposition to purchase of lands for consolidation
						of the Superior National Forest; the change of membership under Governor
						Olson and the gaining of support for the Superior National Forest; Setbacks
						for the Quetico Superior program under Governor Stassen, and his refusal to
						approve purchase of lands on the Kabetogama Peninsula for the Superior
						National Forest; Gaining support for Superior National Forest by Dr. Karl
						Compton of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and General Dwight
						Eisenhower, and President Truman's creation of an airspace reservation over
						roadless areas; Passage of the Thye Blatnik bill for purchase of private
						properties threatening the airspace reservation; Oberholtzer as executive
						secretary for the Quetico Superior Council. </p>
					<p>This transcript incorporates some of Oberholtzer's editorial annotations,
						transcribed from a second, incomplete carbon copy. They were added when they
						amended or enhanced the initial meaning of a passage. The annotated copy
						(pages 1-42) is also available.</p>
				</scopecontent>
				<scopecontent>
					<p><emph render="bold">Interviewed by:</emph> Lucile Kane and Russell
						Fridley.</p>
				</scopecontent>
				<userestrict>
					<p><emph render="bold">Use Restrictions:</emph> None.</p>
				</userestrict>

				<c02>
					<did>
						<physloc>OH 81</physloc>
						<container type="transcript">4</container>
						<physdesc>67 pages.</physdesc>
					</did>
					<altformavail>
						<p>A typed and edited version of the transcript is available in <extref
								href="oh81/pdf/ober05.pdf" actuate="onrequest" show="new">pdf
								format</extref>.</p>
					</altformavail>
				</c02>
				<c02>
					<did>
						<physloc>OH 81</physloc>
						<container type="audio">4</container>
						<physdesc>1 master reel (3 hrs.): 1 7/8 in. per second and 2 submaster
							cassettes (90 min. and 120 min.) and 2 user cassettes (90 min.
							ea.)</physdesc>
					</did>
				</c02>
			</c01>
			<c01 level="series">
				<did>

					<unittitle>Quetico-Superior Council; Sigurd Olson; conflicts over establishing
						Quetico-Superior Forest; flowage rights; Oberholtzer's Harvard University
						days and 1908 trip to Europe, </unittitle>
					<unitdate>December 6, 1963.</unitdate>

				</did>
				<scopecontent>
					<p><emph render="bold">Scope and Content:</emph> Subjects discussed include the
						President's Committee for the Quetico Superior Council; committee membership
						and problems it faced such as land acquisition, building of dams, airspace
						reservation, and destruction of wilderness by "civilization"; Sigurd Olson,
						conservationist; Opposition of the Minnesota Conservation Commission to
						consolidation of The Superior National Forest prior to Governor Olson's term
						in office; M&amp;O Railroad and the Kabetogama Peninsula and the
						question of flowage rights and easement; Conflict between the federal forest
						service and state forest service in establishing Quetico Superior Forest;
						Oberholtzer's Harvard University days, and his major in landscape
						architecture and discouragement by graduate studies; Oberholtzer's Harvard
						friendship with Conrad Aiken and their trip to England and Scotland
						(transcript ends at this point); Setting up the President's committee on the
						Quetico Superior and work with Sewell Tyng; Opposition of the Arrowhead
						Association of northern Minnesota to the Quetico Superior program; Shipstead
						Newton Newton Bill; Tax revenue paid to counties for land acquired for
						Quetico Superior; The International Joint Commission and its territorial
						jurisdiction over the United States Canadian border; Problem of ownership of
						flowage rights on property; Quetico Superior Council and the Isaac Walton
						League; Airspace reservations over the Quetico Superior. </p>
					<p>This transcript is a photocopy, made for preservation purposes, of a poor
						quality Dennison copy. The location of the original typescript is unknown.
						Only one side of the original reel is transcribed here.</p>
				</scopecontent>
				<scopecontent>
					<p><emph render="bold">Interviewed by:</emph> Lucile Kane and Russell
						Fridley.</p>
				</scopecontent>
				<userestrict>
					<p><emph render="bold">Use Restrictions:</emph> None.</p>
				</userestrict>

				<c02>
					<did>
						<physloc>OH 81</physloc>
						<container type="transcript">5</container>
						<physdesc>45 pages.</physdesc>
					</did>
					<altformavail>
						<p>A typed and edited version of the transcript is available in <extref
								href="oh81/pdf/ober06.pdf" actuate="onrequest" show="new">pdf
								format</extref>.</p>
					</altformavail>
				</c02>
				<c02>
					<did>
						<physloc>OH 81</physloc>
						<container type="audio">5</container>
						<physdesc>1 master reel (5 hrs.): 1 7/8 in. per second and 3 submaster
							cassettes (120 min. ea.) and 2 user cassettes (90 min. ea.)</physdesc>
					</did>
				</c02>
			</c01>
			<c01 level="series">
				<did>

					<unittitle>Fred Winston and Sewell Tyng; Ojibwe stories; 1909-1912
						Quetico-Superior area explorations; 1910 trip to England, </unittitle>
					<unitdate>February 19, 1964.</unitdate>

				</did>
				<scopecontent>
					<p><emph render="bold">Scope and Content:</emph> Subjects discussed include
						Frederick S. Winston of Minneapolis and Sewell Tyng, and their help in
						conservation of the Quetico Superior area wilderness; Ojibwe Indians:
						Frances Densmore's limited approach to collecting; Naribojou stories, flood
						stories, and winter lodge stories; Oberholtzer called "Atisokan," i.e.
						story; the Widewiwin society; personal songs; dream vision sought at
						puberty; curing; grandparents instructing young with stories; games; the
						Windigo (cannibal); Mrs. Notawey, Billy Magee's oldest sister, a very good
						storyteller; Oberholtzer s tape recording Johnny Whitefish, cousin to Mrs.
						Notawey, arid the attempt to tape Mrs. Notawey; The naming of Billy Magee,
						Tay rah pah sway we tong, by his mother at his birth. Name means "far
						distant echo"; Billy Magee and trips in 1909 and 1910 through Quetico
						Superior Provincial Forest Reserve; Moose; Origin of Superior National
						Forest, now (1968) Quetico Park: 1909 offer by the publicity agent of the
						Canadian Northern Railroad to buy Oberholtzer's notes about canoe routes in
						the Rainy Lake watershed area; Oberholtzer's stay in England during the
						European trip with Harry French in 1910 (French's name is not mentioned in
						the recording); Trip to the barrenlands and Hudson Bay in 1912; and
						exploration of Nueltin Lake and return to the lake many years later. </p>
					<p>This transcript incorporates some of Oberholtzer's editorial annotations,
						transcribed from a second copy of this draft. They were added when they
						amended or enhanced the initial meaning of a passage. The pdf copy also
						includes some annotations (mainly corrections to Indian names or concepts)
						done by an unknown person, probably whoever initially reviewed the
						transcripts. </p>
				</scopecontent>
				<scopecontent>
					<p><emph render="bold">Interviewed by:</emph> Lucile Kane, Russell Fridley, and
						Evan Hart.</p>
				</scopecontent>
				<userestrict>
					<p><emph render="bold">Use Restrictions:</emph> None.</p>
				</userestrict>
				<c02>
					<did>
						<physloc>OH 81</physloc>
						<container type="transcript">6</container>
						<physdesc>77 pages.</physdesc>
					</did>
					<altformavail>
						<p>A typed and edited version of the transcript is available in <extref
								href="oh81/pdf/ober01.pdf" actuate="onrequest" show="new">pdf
								format</extref>.</p>
					</altformavail>
				</c02>
				<c02>
					<did>
						<physloc>OH 81</physloc>
						<container type="audio">6</container>
						<physdesc>1 master reel (5 1/2 hrs.): 1 7/8 in. per second and 2 submaster
							cassettes (120 min. ea.) and 3 user cassettes (90 min. ea.)</physdesc>
					</did>
				</c02>
			</c01>
			<c01 level="series">
				<did>

					<unittitle>European trips; Samuel E. Morison; Fred Winston; E. W. Backus;
						Quetico-Superior Council, </unittitle>
					<unitdate>March 13, 1964.</unitdate>
				</did>
				<scopecontent>
					<p><emph render="bold">Scope and Content:</emph> Subjects discussed include
						Oberholtzer's job as vice consul in Hanover, Germany, ca. 1911;
						Oberholtzer's friendship with Conrad Aiken and their trip to England in
						1908; seeing Aiken later; Samuel E. Morison, a college friend and later a
						professor at Harvard University; Fred Winston and his contribution to the
						Quetico Superior project; Struggle against E.W. Backus for land for Quetico
						Superior forest; Mrs. Martin, secretary for the Minneapolis office of the
						Quetico Superior Council. </p>
				</scopecontent>

				<userestrict>
					<p><emph render="bold">Use Restrictions:</emph> None.</p>
				</userestrict>

				<c02>
					<did>
						<physloc>OH 81</physloc>
						<container type="transcript">7</container>
						<physdesc>31 pages.</physdesc>
					</did>
					<altformavail>
						<p>A typed and edited version of the transcript is available in <extref
								href="oh81/pdf/ober02.pdf" actuate="onrequest" show="new">pdf
								format</extref>.</p>
					</altformavail>
				</c02>
			</c01>
			<c01 level="series">
				<did>

					<unittitle>Sewell Tyng; life on "The Mallard"; Harvard University; Indian
						companions, </unittitle>
					<unitdate>March 17, 1964.</unitdate>
				</did>
				<scopecontent>
					<p><emph render="bold">Scope and Content:</emph> Subjects discussed include
						Sewell Tyng, and his book on military history; Oberholtzer's mother, Rosa
						Carl Oberholtzer, and life on the island in Rainy lake, 1918; Dr. Mary
						Chapman Ghostley, a physician in northern Minnesota; Harvard University days
						with Samuel Morison; Young Indian companions of Oberholtzer on his trips in
						the wilderness: Bob Nanmayok, Pinay, and Douglas Head. </p>

				</scopecontent>
				<scopecontent>
					<p><emph render="bold">Interviewed by:</emph> Lucile Kane.</p>
				</scopecontent>
				<userestrict>
					<p><emph render="bold">Use Restrictions:</emph> None.</p>
				</userestrict>

				<c02>
					<did>
						<physloc>OH 81</physloc>
						<container type="transcript">8</container>
						<physdesc>41 pages.</physdesc>
					</did>
					<altformavail>
						<p>A typed and edited version of the transcript is available in <extref
								href="oh81/pdf/ober03.pdf" actuate="onrequest" show="new">pdf
								format</extref>.</p>
					</altformavail>
				</c02>
				<c02>
					<did>
						<physloc>OH 81</physloc>
						<container type="audio">8</container>
						<physdesc>1 master reel (2 1/4 hrs.): 1 7/8 in. per second and 1 submaster
							cassette (120 min.) and 1 user cassette (90 min.)</physdesc>
					</did>
				</c02>
			</c01>
			<c01 level="series">
				<did>

					<unittitle>Interview with Ernest Oberholtzer, </unittitle>
					<unitdate>Spring 1948.</unitdate>
				</did>
				<scopecontent>
					<p><emph render="bold">Scope and Content: </emph>Subjects discussed include
						Oberholtzer's trip to record Johnny Whitefish, a cousin of Billy Magee; Mrs.
						Notawey (Minta Boya), Billy Magee's older sister; Maggie Jackpot; Johnny
						Whitefish's remembrances of Billy Magee's version of the trip to Hudson Bay
						with Oberholtzer in 1912; and Oberholtzer's story of the failure to record
						Mrs. Notawey and her dramatic story-telling.</p>
					<p>This reel is a re-recording of tapes that Oberholtzer made with some of his
						Ojibwe friends in 1948. In 1960 Oberholtzer re-recorded the 1948 tapes with
						Ray Anderson of Rainier, Minnesota. Tapes are in English and Ojibwe.</p>
				</scopecontent>

				<userestrict>
					<p><emph render="bold">Use Restrictions:</emph> None.</p>
				</userestrict>
				<c02>
					<did>
						<physloc>OH 81</physloc>
						<container type="audio">9</container>
						<physdesc>1 master reel and 1 submaster cassette (120 min.) and 1 user
							cassette (90 min.)</physdesc>
					</did>
				</c02>
			</c01>
			<c01 level="series">
				<did>

					<unittitle>Interview with Ernest Oberholtzer, </unittitle>
					<unitdate>Spring 1948.</unitdate>
				</did>
				<scopecontent>
					<p><emph render="bold">Scope and Content: </emph>Includes songs by Johnny
						Whitefish and narration by Whitefish and Maggie Jackpot. </p>
					<p>This reel is a re-recording of tapes that Oberholtzer made with some of his
						Ojibwe friends in 1948. In 1960 Oberholtzer re-recorded the 1948 tapes with
						Ray Anderson of Rainier, Minnesota. Tapes are in English and Ojibwe.</p>
				</scopecontent>
				<userestrict>
					<p><emph render="bold">Use Restrictions:</emph> None.</p>
				</userestrict>
				<c02>
					<did>
						<physloc>OH 81</physloc>
						<container type="audio">10</container>
						<physdesc>1 master reel and 1 submaster cassette (120 min.) and 1 user
							cassette (90 min.)</physdesc>
					</did>
				</c02>
			</c01>
			<c01 level="series">
				<did>

					<unittitle>Interview with Ernest Oberholtzer, </unittitle>
					<unitdate>Spring 1948.</unitdate>
				</did>
				<scopecontent>
					<p><emph render="bold">Scope and Content:</emph> Oberholtzer questions Mrs.
						Notawey about her life and relatives, and Whitefish and Jackpot speak again.
						(It is not clear, when one considers Oberholtzer's story of how he failed to
						record Mrs. Notawey, just when and how he did tape her.) </p>
					<p>This reel is a re-recording of tapes that Oberholtzer made with some of his
						Ojibwe friends in 1948. In 1960 Oberholtzer re-recorded the 1948 tapes with
						Ray Anderson of Rainier, Minnesota. Tapes are in English and Ojibwe.</p>
				</scopecontent>
				<userestrict>
					<p><emph render="bold">Use Restrictions:</emph> None.</p>
				</userestrict>
				<c02>
					<did>
						<physloc>OH 81</physloc>
						<container type="audio">11</container>
						<physdesc>1 master reel and 2 submaster cassettes (120 min. and 30 min.) and
							1 user cassette (90 min.)</physdesc>
					</did>
				</c02>
			</c01>
			<c01 level="series">
				<did>

					<unittitle>Interview with Ernest Oberholtzer, </unittitle>
					<unitdate>1960.</unitdate>

				</did>
				<scopecontent>
					<p><emph render="bold">Scope and Content:</emph> Subjects discussed include the
						Black sturgeon story, as told to Oberholtzer by Billy Magee; summers of 1909
						and 1910 on Rainy Lake; Oberholtzer's trip to Europe with Harry French,
						describing France, Belgium, Switzerland, Austria, and especially Hungary; a
						winter stay in London, and reading in preparation for the Hudson Bay
						expedition; giving a popular lecture for the Liverpool Geographic Society;
						and an invitation for Oberholtzer to become vice consul in Hanover,
						Germany.</p>

				</scopecontent>
				<scopecontent>
					<p><emph render="bold">Interviewed by:</emph> George Monahan and Frances
						Andrews.</p>
				</scopecontent>				
				<c02>
					<did>
						<physloc>OH 81</physloc>
						<container type="transcript">12</container>
						<physdesc>19 pages.</physdesc>
					</did>
				</c02>
				<c02>
					<did>
						<physloc>OH 81</physloc>
						<container type="audio">12</container>
						<physdesc>1 master reel (2 hrs.): 1 7/8 in. per second and 2 submaster
							cassettes (120 min. and 60 min.) and 1 user cassette (90
							min.)</physdesc>
					</did>
				</c02>
			</c01>
			<c01 level="series">
				<did>

					<unittitle>Interview with Ernest Oberholtzer, </unittitle>
					<unitdate>ca. 1960.</unitdate>
				</did>
				<scopecontent>
					<p><emph render="bold">Scope and Content: </emph>Subjects discussed include
						Oberholtzer's visit with Harry French to the Carpathian Mountains in
						Hungary; experiences as vice consul in Hanover, Germany; Oberholtzer's study
						in London in preparation for the trip into the barren lands of Canada to
						Hudson bay; Oberholtzer's mother's visit and illness in England; and
						Oberholtzer's commentary on pictures or slides taken on the Hudson Bay trip
						in 1912, including images of the land, caribou and moose, and native
						people.</p>

				</scopecontent>
				<scopecontent>
					<p><emph render="bold">Interviewed by:</emph> George and Gene Monahan.</p>
				</scopecontent>
				<userestrict>
					<p><emph render="bold">Use Restrictions:</emph> None.</p>
				</userestrict>
				<c02>
					<did>
						<physloc>OH 81</physloc>
						<container type="audio">13</container>
						<physdesc>1 master reel (15 min.): 3 3/4 in. per second and 1 submaster
							cassette (90 min.) and 1 user cassette (60 min.)</physdesc>
					</did>
				</c02>
			</c01>
			<c01 level="series">
				<did>

					<unittitle>Interview with Ernest Oberholtzer, </unittitle>
					<unitdate>undated.</unitdate>
				</did>
				<scopecontent>
					<p><emph render="bold">Scope and Content: </emph>Oberholtzer narrates Billy
						Magee's black sturgeon story as told in 1912 on the trip to Hudson Bay.</p>

				</scopecontent>
				<userestrict>
					<p><emph render="bold">Use Restrictions:</emph> None.</p>
				</userestrict>
				<c02>
					<did>
						<physloc>OH 81</physloc>
						<container type="audio">14</container>
						<physdesc>1 master reel (15 min.): 3 3/4 in. per second and 1 submaster
							cassette (90 min.) and 1 user cassette (60 min.)</physdesc>
					</did>
				</c02>
			</c01>
			<c01 level="series">
				<did>

					<unittitle>Interview with Ernest Oberholtzer, </unittitle>
					<unitdate>August 1968.</unitdate>
				</did>
				<scopecontent>
					<p><emph render="bold">Scope and Content: </emph>Oberholtzer comments on and
						criticizes Eric Sevareid's book, <emph render="italic">Canoeing with the
							Cree</emph>, which describes an adventure some think similar to
						Oberholtzer's Hudson Bay trip in 1912.</p>

				</scopecontent>
				<scopecontent>
					<p><emph render="bold">Interviewed by:</emph> Mary Nagle and Lucile Kane.</p>
				</scopecontent>
				<userestrict>
					<p><emph render="bold">Use Restrictions:</emph> None.</p>
				</userestrict>
				<c02>
					<did>
						<physloc>OH 81</physloc>
						<container type="audio">15</container>
						<physdesc>1 master reel (1 hr.): 3 3/4 in. per second and 1 submaster
							cassette (90 min.) and 1 user cassette (90 min.)</physdesc>
					</did>
				</c02>
			</c01>
		</dsc>
	</archdesc>
</ead>
