WELCOME TO

ANNA TOBELUK

MEMORIAL SCHOOL

NUNAPITCHUK, ALASKA

Nunapitchuk is a Yup'ik Eskimo village located on the Johnson River in Western Alaska about 30 miles west of Bethel, Alaska on the Kuskokwim River Delta. There are 4 villages within site of Nunapitchuk in an area known as Akulmiut (a-gool-me-yoot). Below you will find a variety of information and photos, including maps, that we hope will be interesting and informative.

THIS IS OUR SCHOOL, THE LARGEST BUILDING IN THE VILLAGE. NOTICE THAT THERE ARE NO ROADS, BUT THERE ARE BOARD WALKS CONNECTING ALL THE HOUSES AND BUILDINGS.


-Check the links below for information about our village and school.-

About The Heart of Akulmiut Country (local info)

Article about Anna Tobeluk & how she changed education in Alaska

Building a dog sled (Instructions w/ photos)

Historical Time Line of Akulmiut

Winter Photos of Nunapitchuk

Summer Photos of Nunapitchuk

Details About Nunapitchuk (census info)

Home Tanning of Furs (Instructions)

School Schedule/ Classes Offered

Article on end of welfare for Nunapitchuk

Inside Our School (Photos)

Advice to New Teachers from Students

Photos of Cultural Week Activities (Apr 2003)

15 Things I Like About Living in Nunapitchuk

 

Anna Tobeluk Memorial School, P.O. Box 150, Nunapitchuk, Alaska 99641

Phone: 907-527-5325 Fax: 907-527-5610


CLICK ON IMAGE ABOVE FOR MORE MAPS


Click for Bethel, Alaska Forecast
Internet Links Around Alaska

Alaska Department of Community and Regional Affairs

Lower Kuskokwim School District (LKSD in Bethel)

Universities of Alaska (Anch.,Fairbanks,Southeast)

Delta Discovery (Bethel News Paper)

Anchorage Daily News

Fairbanks News Miner

Alaska Department of Fish and Game

Alaska White Pages

The Alaskan Web Ring

The Russian Orthodox Church in Nunapitchuk

I Love Alaska, Information on Alaskan Communities

School Access (Alaska Schools Web Sites)

Alaska State Government Web Pages

Alaska Public Radio Network

The Iditarod Dogsled Race

The Kuskokwim 300 Dogsled Race

The Kuskokwim Web Page (Southwest AK businesses)


The Alaskan Web Ring

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I have included an annotated bibliography of some of the cultural research that I have done below:


Bashful No Longer : An Alaskan Eskimo Ethnohistory, 1778-1988 (Civilization of the American Indian, Vol 199) by Wendell H. Oswalt. Hardcover (March 1990) Univ of Oklahoma Pr (Trd); ISBN: 0806122560

Traces the change of the Kuskokwim Eskimos of southwestern Alaska from an ethic of modesty and deference to one of self-assertion in response to the aggressive behavior of first Russian, and then American traders and settlers. Oswalt (anthropology, UCLA) augments his field work with Russian-American company records; writings of missionaries, traders, and explorers; and newspaper accounts. Annotation copyright Book News, Inc. Portland, Or.

I found this book to be facinating, but visually lacking. I mean much of what the author writes about is very difficult to imagine, but it is packed with interesting history of southwestern Alaska. It give a pretty objective picture of the difficulties that Yup'ik people are having and the complicated web of reasons leading to the problems.

Eskimo About Bering Strait by Edward William Nelson. ASIN: 087474671X

This book is out of print now, but used copies are available for around $30. It is an excellent study of the Eskimo peoples of western Alaska in the 1800's. Nelson traveled extensively and wrote about the people he met, their life styles, cultures, religions, and he includes many photo plates of the people, their homes, clothing, decorations, and the tools and weapons that they made and used. It gave me a very real sense of how much change the Eskimo have gone through in such a relatively short time.

Bethel; The First 100 Years by Mary Lenz and James H. Barker

Libraray of Congress Catalog Card Number 85-073911. I do not think this book is still in print and I have no idea where it can be purchased, but it is an excellent book about the history of Bethel and the lower Kuskokwim area including many historical photos. This is a "must have" for anyone interested in the history of the Yup'ik Eskimo and the lower Kuskokwim River area.

The Akulmiut: Territorial Dimensions Of A Yup'ik Eskimo Society by Elizabeth F. Andrews. Technical Paper No. 177, Alaska Department of Fish and Game, Division of Subsistence, Juneau, Alaska. May 1989.

This over 500 page research manual has just about everything there is to know about Nunapitchuk, the other Akulmiut villages of Kasigluk and Atmautluk including maps with Yup'ik place names on them. It is very dry reading, but at the same time very informative. The emphasis is on types, amounts, and locations of resources traditionally used for subsistence by the Akulmiut peoples. We have a copy in our library. I do not know where else a copy could be found or purchased.

I put this website together with help from students and many others. I hope you find it useful and informative. The last update to this website was made in March 2004.

I can be contacted at:: nunapitchuk@yahoo.com if you have questions or advice. Franklin A. Cook (Science Teacher).