![]() Additional materials include books and book chapters journal copies and journal excerpts magazine, newspaper, and article clippings and excerpts museum and gallery catalogues, brochures, and guides pamphlets and reprints. Materials in this collection include artifact and burial records correspondence drawings and illustrations essays interviews and oral histories inventories and catalogues manuscripts and drafts, and fragments of drafts maps memoranda and meeting minutes notes, notebooks, and data analysis obituaries and memorials photographic prints, slides, and negatives, including personal photographs and portraits proposals and plans for museum exhibits reports resumes and bibliographies reviews and sound recordings on CD-Rs and audio cassettes. ![]() The collection also documents Carpenter's correspondence with fellow scholars, ethnographers, filmmakers, and colleagues his published writings and elements of his personal life, such as obituaries and personal photographs. Specific research projects and interests documented are: his 1950s fieldwork among the Aivilik Inuit in the Canadian Arctic as well as his studies into Inuit concepts of space, time, and geography his partnership and collaboration with media theorist Marshall McLuhan and his ethnographic studies of Papua New Guinean tribal communities his early-career archaeological digs at Haudenosaunee (Iroquois) burial mounds in Sugar Run, Pennsylvania, as well as later archaeological interest in Arctic peoples, Siberia, and the Norwegian artifact dubbed the "Norse Penny" his reflections on the disciplines of anthropology and media studies his editing and completion of the work of art historian Carl Schuster at the Museum der Kulturen (Museum of Ethnology) in Basel, Switzerland his editing of The Story of Comock the Eskimo, as told to Robert Flaherty and his museum exhibitions compiled on the topics of surrealist and tribal art. Online condolences, messages and tributes may be made by visiting papers of Edmund Carpenter, 1940-2011, document the research interests and projects undertaken by Carpenter in the fields of cultural anthropology, ethnographic filmmaking, media theory, archaeology, and indigenous art. In lieu of flowers, donations can be made to a charity of your choice. A reception following the burial will be at the First Christian Church, 200 Washington St, Monte Vista. Burial will follow at the San Luis Valley cemetery. Viewing will be available from noon to 12:55 P.M. Grandson Paul Clark, of Alamosa, CO.Ī memorial service to celebrate his life will be at Rogers Family Mortuary, 404 Morris Ave, Monte Vista on Saturday, February 10, 2018. ![]() His son Casey Carpenter, of Alamosa, CO, daughter Kim Clark (Phil) of Page, AZ and daughter Kelly Johnson (Jeff) of Monte Vista, CO. His brother Len (Jan) Carpenter of Fort Collins, CO. He is survived by his wife Tess of the family home near Mosca. Tad will be remembered for his practical jokes and his sense of humor. As anyone who knew him will attest he could tell stories of all his cow camps and wild cow stories. They celebrated 60 years of marriage this past May.Ī long time cowboy, he was always happiest on horseback working with livestock. For the last 35 years he, Tess and Casey lived on the Five Mile Lane near Mosca.ĭuring the time he was living at the Baca Grant with the matchmaking help of his mother, Truda, he started dating and later married Tess King in May 1957. He lived all over the San Luis Valley including the Kansas City Camp on the Baca Grant near Hooper, the Baca Grant near Crestone, and the Medano and Zapata Ranch working cattle and managing the cattle operation. ![]() Leon and Truda rode horseback to the Carpenter Homestead with Tad being carried inside Leon’s coat. When Tad and Truda were released from the hospital they took the train from Alamosa to Tres Piadres, NM, where they were met by Leon. He was born in Alamosa, CO, November 6, 1935, the first child to Leon Carpenter and Truda Scroggins Carpenter. Tad Carpenter passed away peacefully early Wednesday morning, Februafter a long struggle with cancer. Updated: 5 years ago / Posted Feb 8, 2018 ![]()
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