On the cutting edge of technology, this 1960s-era multi-purpose stationary camera Is used for taking micro and macro photographs using then-revolutionary Polaroid film.
Retired La Verne College Equipment
ULV-JAEGR-2014-82
Lepidoptera of India. One of many specimens collected during the mid-20th century, this case highlights 59 specimens that are visible under glass viewing panes.
Location: near Landour, U.P., India.
Collected by Larry Cunningham, June 1950.
ULV-JAEGR-2014-627
Collected globally during the years 1955 to 1958, these mullosca shells are part of a vast collection of seashells donated to the school’s research museum, now the Cultural & Natural History Collections.
Collected by Mrs. Martha B. Bowman
ULV-JAEGR-2014-7294.25/32.2
Collected in Sanibel and Marco Island during the mid-1950s, these shells are part of a vast collection of seashells housed at the Cultural & Natural History Collections.
Collected by Mrs. Martha B. Bowman
ULV-JAEGR-2014-7294.261/314
Representative Guatemalan Indian Textiles and Design. Hand made. Linen covered binding. Hand-tinted photographs included.
Guatemala Field School, Graduate Work, Summer 1934.
Donated by Esther Funk
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Representative Guatemalan Indian Textiles and Design.
Hand made. Linen covered binding. Hand-tinted photographs included.
Guatemala Field School, Graduate Work, Summer 1934.
Donated by Esther Funk
ULV-JAEGR-2014-7012
Wired for headset/microphone, this P-4A helmet would have been worn with an oxygen mask and sun visor. This helmet style was used by the Air Force 1956-64. Manufactured by General Textile Mills, Inc., Carbondale, PA.; the Sierracin gold-coated visor was manufactured Nov. 1962.
Donated by Robert T. Neher
ULV-JAEGR-2014-6545; 2749
This late 19th century Cantonese-style lotus shoe was considered the height of fashion. An adult woman also wore it. Once considered a show of sophistication, the feet of young girls were broken and deformed into the shape of a lotus flower. “Lotus feet” were viewed as a sign of beauty and status. Wood heel, with blue, purple and pink silk, floral appliqué and multi-colored embroidery.
3.75 inches in length.
Collected by Claude and Marie Rupel, 1936-40.
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A gemstone mosaic of silver and turquoise inlay needlepoint, 1940s.
Donated by Edna P. Sutton
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Used in tribal ceremonies, it is said that the chief never travels without his seat of government. This chair symbolizes court when the chief travels to rural villages. Handmade of wood, copper, iron, and twine.
Collected by Claude and Marie Rupel, 1936-40.
ULV-JAEGR-2014-651
Former currency of the African peoples of Sierra Leone, Liberia, and Guinea-Conakry. Kissi Pennies consist of a long, twisted iron rod with a a flattened blade (“kodo” or “foot”) and a sharpened “T”-like structure at one end (“nling” or “ear”) at the other.
Collected by Claude and Marie Rupel, 1936-40.
ULV-JAEGR-2014-5953.1-5953.8
Made of goat leather and grass fibers, this amulet from Liberia is worn around the neck and sometimes on the arm for protection as parts of Mohammed Qur’an are bound inside.
Collected by Claude and Marie Rupel, 1936-40.
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Using palm fibers and vegetable dyes, this handwoven by the Queen Mother of Sanoyea. It was used for carrying eggs and/or rice flour.
Collected by Claude and Marie Rupel, 1936-40.
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Often it is possible to identify the village from which a person comes from just by the type of hat she wears. A Quechuan in the Cuzco Altiplano of Peru wore this montera. The hat is secured with delicately woven sanq’apa straps.
Materials: Felt, silk, Wool, cotton.
Collected by Esther Funk
ULV-JAEGR-2014-7431
This Oklahoma coyote lived a long life after taking an arrow to the eye.
Location: Major County, Oklahoma.
Collected by: N. Werner. Sept. 1991.
Donated by Jeff Burkhart
ULV-JAEGR-2015-7751
Tightly coiled Jicarilla Apache [?] basketry bowl woven on a three small willow rods foundation. For many reasons, fine even work as seen in this basket has for the most part ended with the Great Depression of the 1930’s.
Donated by Mr. and Mrs. Philip R. Bunnelle
ULV-JAEGR-2014-6220
Figures like this represent the spirits that teach and guide the Hopi throughout life.
Carved from cottonwood root and intricately painted with poster paint. This Katsina was given as a gift to its donor by a Hopi girl named Helen, c. 1944. Unsigned.
Donated by Edna Sutton
ULV-JAEGR-2014-5873
Figures like this represent the spirits that teach and guide the Hopi throughout life.
Carved from cottonwood root and intricately painted with poster paint. This Katsina was given as a gift to its donor by Mary Ella Humetewa, c. 1944. Approx 10.5″ tall. Unsigned.
Donated by Edna Sutton
ULV-JAEGR-2014-5873
In 1922-23 La Verne College students claimed male remains from the “unclaimed” morgue at the Los Angeles Hospital to use for anatomy lessons.
ULV-JAEGR-2014-33
The “Evesthes jordani” is a primitive species of the Pleuronectidae family discovered by famed zoologist J.Z. Gilbert in Lompoc, California.
Collected: James Z. Gilbert, October 21, 1910
ULV-JAEGR-2014-1214
These pre-Columbian Olmec clay figurine carvings provide clues about Olmec life and religion. Collected near La Venta, Tabasco, Mexico, the Olmec are known for their unique art style.
Donated by Stanley Gephart Wissler, 1957
ULV-JAEGR-2014-2718-2718.10
Woven seed beater used to knock seeds loose from their stalks.
Donated by Louisa Williamson Hutchison
ULV-JAEGR-2014-6211
Roadrunners and rainclouds are prominently featured on this olla which is signed by Zia potter “Geronima [Gachupin] Medina” (1892-1972).
Collected at Zia Pueblo, c. 1952
Donated by Edna Sutton
ULV-JAEGR-2014-5817
Analine dyed porcupine quills are sewn into birch bark to create this storage box with lid.
Donated by Louisa Williamson Hutchison
ULV-JAEGR-2014-221.1/.2
The University of La Verne’s Jaeger House contains one of the most eclectic cultural and natural history collections in the world.
A row of cabinets dominating the eastern wall showcases exquisite Native American weaving, carved figurines, and African tribal weaponry.
Boxes containing dire wolf and giant sloth bones rest gently on top.
There is an enormous stuffed golden eagle, an Ethiopian tapestry, and a saber-toothed cat skull nearby – all in a space with the same square footage as a mid-size bungalow.
The house, known formally as the Cultural & Natural History Collections, is the brainchild of professor of anthropology Felicia Beardsley and the result of meticulously cataloging materials donated to the University of La Verne during the past 125 years.
Beardsley likens it to a miniature West Coast Wellcome Collection, and hopes its new location will lead to renewed appreciation for both cultural and natural history.
“Nobody knows we have this,” she says. “Nobody knows this amazing collection exists.”
That may be due, in part, to the circuitous path the collection has taken during the past century.
Initiated by a gift from J.Z. Gilbert, a naturalist who helped transform the La Brea Tar Pits into a world-renowned paleontology site, the collection features one of the first five ever fully-articulated saber-tooth cat skeletons (on display in the Campus Center) and 25,000 fossils excavated from the pits.
The collection also serves as a teaching tool. Students have handled and worked with the materials for their education. Gilbert’s donation was soon bolstered by other noted academics like anthropologist Esther Funk and Harvey Nininger, father of modern-day meteoritics.
The university’s connections with the Church of the Brethren also assured a steady influx of artifacts and specimens shared by missionaries in the field over the years.
“We have so much here I think people would go crazy over,” says curator Anne Collier ’12, curator.
So where has it been hiding? In an old biology lab.
While the original collection had a dedicated space in the old Lordsburg Hotel and Founders Hall, the growing student body saw it moved to the lab in the 1970s.
Beardsley liberated it in 2014 and was able to secure its current space in 2015.
The task of documenting everything in the collection is almost complete and grants are being written to help fund efforts to digitize everything.
For now, the Jaeger House is open by appointment only. If you are on campus and interested in looking at amazing things, contact Beardsley at fbeardsley@laverne.edu.
Edit on December 5, 2019 – Saber-tooth cat was incorrectly spelled as Sabre-tooth.