Henry Usher Hall (1876–1944) was an American anthropologist. He was Assistant Curator and Curator of the General Ethnology Section of the University of Pennsylvania Museum from 1915 to 1935.[1] He was instrumental in guiding the Museum's African collection in its early years.[2]
He accompanied Polish anthropologist Maria Antonina Czaplicka (1886-1921) on an expedition down the Yenisei River in Siberia to the Kara Sea in 1914, together with Maud Doria Haviland (1889-1941), ornithologist, and Dora Curtis, artist.[3]
He conducted excavations in the Dordogne in 1923, and in 1936-37 he led an expedition to Sierra Leone, where he investigated the Sherbro people.[4] On his return from Sierra Leone, he published The Sherbro of Sierra Leone (1938), which included an account of the secret Poro society of the Sherbro men.[2]
References
- ↑ Collins, David (ed.) (1999). Collected Works of M.A. Czaplicka: Vol. 1, Collected Articles and Letters, p. 81 Routledge. ISBN 0-7007-1001-9.
- 1 2 Winegard, Dilys Pegler (1993). Through Time, Across Continents: A Hundred Years of Archaeology and Anthropology at the University Museum, pp. 190-91. Philadelphia: The University Museum, University of Pennsylvania. ISBN 0-924171-16-2.
- ↑ Collins (1999), pp. 62-64.
- ↑ Collins (1999), p. 81.
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