Picture of author.

Tappan Adney (1868–1950)

Author of The Bark Canoes and Skin Boats of North America

5+ Works 169 Members 5 Reviews

About the Author

Includes the names: Adney E, Edwin Adney, Edwin Tappan Adney

Image credit: By Tappan Adney - "Tappan Adney and the Klondike Stampede", Western New York Public Broadcasting, Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=37828095

Works by Tappan Adney

Associated Works

The Survival of the Bark Canoe (1975) — Illustrator — 507 copies, 6 reviews
Bark Canoes: The Art and Obsession of Tappan Adney (2004) — Model canoe builder and Contributor — 35 copies, 1 review

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Legal name
Adney, Edwin Tappan
Other names
Adney, E. Tappan
Birthdate
1868-07-13
Date of death
1950-10-10
Gender
male
Education
University of North Carolina
Art Students League of New York
Occupations
illustrator
Birthplace
Athens, Ohio, USA
Places of residence
Woodstock, New Brunswick, Canada
Place of death
Woodstock, New Brunswick, Canada
Burial location
Upper Woodstock Cemetery, Woodstock, New Brunswick, Canada
Associated Place (for map)
Woodstock, New Brunswick, Canada

Members

Reviews

6 reviews
I admire that someone thought to publish these regional writings of Tappan Adney, but they do not really seem bookworthy. The unrelated excerpts are uneven and all over the place, and they really are not marked by any particular passion on Adney's part. He was young and his deep interest in the Maliseet and the birch bark canoe were not yet fully formed (see Bark Canoes: The Art and Obsession of Tappan Adney). And anyone seeking a Tent Dwellers type of literary experience in the reading of show more this book will be disappointed. There are some highlights though: his illustrations for instance, and the canoe race in Woodstock is fun. And it is interesting to get a sense of how different a place New Brunswick was then: the dependence on river travel, the prevalence of caribou in the province, and logs - it seems there were logs everywhere. show less
If you have any interest in the gold rush to the Yukon in the 1890s then this is a great book to read. It was written by a newspaper man sent to document the Klondike stampede and he has a definite journalistic bent. It is full of interesting anecdotes and lots of hard facts, including lots of data on the amount of gold discovered and its value. If you want to read some history from someone who was there, this is a great choice, and since it is in the public domain, free copies are readily show more available at Google Books and elsewhere. show less
"A life of freedom and adventure has a fascination which grows rather than diminishes...." The best book I've read on the 'Stampede'. It did a good job of reminding me what it was like when I went across the Chilkoot Trail.
Howard Chapelle gathered up Adney's notes and organized them into a book on kayaks. He then appended two chapters on skin boats to make this the definitive book on portable native watercraft. I say portable because the book does not deal with dugouts which ranged from Florida all the way up to Alaska.
Since this book was published, a lot more books about kayaks have come out and so this is no longer the definitive work on kayaks that it once was, but it definitely belongs in every kayak show more builder's library.
And then there is of course all the material on bark canoes which comprises the bulk of this book. As far as I know, Adney's research on canoes is still the definitive word on the subject.
Kayaks and canoes documented in this book are no longer being built and specimens in museums are poorly preserved so that in the end further contributions to the topic are likely to be marginal. So we thank the people who compiled the data.
show less

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Statistics

Works
5
Also by
2
Members
169
Popularity
#126,056
Rating
4.0
Reviews
5
ISBNs
21

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