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Woolly Dog: Pelt

Media Photo/Video

December 14, 2023

Photograph of tan dog pelt against black background.
download Download b1_-_usnm4762_201808_002.jpg

By the mid-19th century, the once thriving Coast Salish dog wool-weaving tradition was in decline. In the late 1850s, naturalist and ethnographer George Gibbs cared for a woolly dog named Mutton. When Mutton died in 1859, Gibbs sent his pelt to the nascent Smithsonian Institution, where the fleece has resided ever since.

Mutton’s genetics could tell the researchers little about what caused these dogs to decline. Traditionally, scholars have speculated that the arrival of machine-made blankets to the region in the early 19th century made woolly dogs expendable. But insights from Coast Salish community members and experts revealed that it was improbable that such a central part of Coast Salish society could be replaced.

Woolly dogs were likely doomed by numerous factors impacting the Coast Salish tribal nations after European settlers arrived. Due to disease and colonial policies of cultural genocide, displacement and forced assimilation, it likely became increasingly difficult or forbidden for Coast Salish communities to maintain their woolly dogs.

 

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Related Media

Computer generated rendering of medium-sized dog with white, fluffy coat.

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Woolly Dog: Reconstruction with Arctic dogs and spitz breeds

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Woolly Dog: Mutton reconstruction and blanket

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Photo of underside of tan dog pelt against black background.

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Woolly Dog: Pelt, underside

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Woolly Dog: Coast Salish blanket

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Image of a old blanket with only parts of the left and top border intact.

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Woolly Dog: Coast Salish blanket fragment

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Related Content

  • Computer generated rendering of medium-sized dog with white, fluffy coat.

    Researchers, Coast Salish People Analyze 160-Year-Old Indigenous Dog Pelt in the Smithsonian’s Collection

    Researchers from the Smithsonian’s National Museum of Natural History led a new analysis that sheds light on the ancestry and genetics of woolly dogs, a

    • December 14, 2023
    • News Release
    • Natural History Museum
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