Displaying Wild Furs - 2
Item
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Identifier
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WFA_152
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Alternative Identifier
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p. 79
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Description
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A rare animal trapper has spread out his catch on the lawn of a missionary household on the WCUU campus (probably the Grahams'). Dryden Phelps (left) holds one side of a giant panda skin, while the trapper holds the other. Constance Walmsley and a young girl (possibly Enid Walmsley) hold up a leopard skin. There is a row of skins behind Dryden and a pile of skeletons in front of him.
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Commentary
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Indigenous hunters in the mountains west of Chengdu had begun selling furs during the 1930s inspired by both foreign hunting expeditions and poverty brought about by warfare, banditry, droughts and floods. By 1939, the Sichuan government had begun to regulate the slaughter of wild animals. Today, many of these species are endangered. Place and date are determined in comparison with "Graham Daughters with Snow-Covered Pavilion."
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Date Created
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1938
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Original Format
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Photographic Print
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Source
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Jill Willmott
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Publisher
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SIUE
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Record Date
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2026-02-17
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Contributor
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Cory Willmott
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Type
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Still Image
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Subject
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https://id.worldcat.org/fast/942479
- Resource class
- Image