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Elizabeth (Betsy) Crowe (c.1839-c.1910)

Basket ( 1860

Birch, porcupine quill | 11.0 x 16.0 x 8.0 cm (whole object) | RCIN 84334

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  • Birch-bark basket and lid with plaited quill handle, decorated with a quill design of flowers on the lid and side of basket; contains a length of twine and an inscribed bark label. Made by either Elizabeth (Betsy) Crowe or 'Lizzie' Crowe (née Eliza Nagon or Naughon, who was 25 in 1860 and married to Henry Crowe, a hunter.

    This basket is one of more than a dozen birchbark containers presented as gifts to Albert Edward, Prince of Wales (later King Edward VII) in September 1860 by Michi Saagiig women. The prince visited the community at Rice Lake Village (now Hiawatha First Nation), Ontario, during a landmark two-month tour of Canada – the first royal tour of these territories.

     The baskets are known as ‘makaks’ in Anishnaabemowin, an Indigenous language spoken by the Mississauga First Nation community. Most are decorated with porcupine quillwork using a combination of Indigenous geometric and European-inspired floral designs. Unusually, the names of the women who made the makaks are preserved, on handwritten paper labels or quilled birchbark tags.

     The meeting at Rice Lake was an important opportunity for community members to acknowledge and renew their special relationship with the Crown. Gimaa (Chief) Paudash made a speech expressing their identity as sovereign nations allied to the Crown – a bond which stretched back hundreds of years. The presentation of the makaks and other gifts signified the renewal of these allegiances and obligations.

     After the prince’s return to Britain, the makaks were displayed in the Swiss Cottage Museum at Osborne House, Isle of Wight.

    Provenance

    Presented to Prince Albert Edward (future King Edward VII) by Elizabeth Crow at Rice Lake, Ontario, August 1860

  • Medium and techniques

    Birch, porcupine quill

    Measurements

    11.0 x 16.0 x 8.0 cm (whole object)

  • Place of Production

    Rice Lake [Ontario]