Furness, Harrison and Hiller Expedition records
PU-Mu. 1060
- Creator(s)
-
Furness, William H., III
Harrison, Alfred Craven, Jr.
Hiller, Hiram Milliken
Hiller, Hiram Milliken
- Date(s)
-
[inclusive] 1895-1904
- Call Number
- PU-Mu. 1060
- Physical Description
- Extent: 4.4 Linear Feet
- Language(s)
-
eng
Between 1895 and 1901, William Furness, III., Alfred C. Harrison, Jr., and Hiram M. Hiller made a series of extended trips to Oceania, South and Southeast Asia, and East Asia. Furness, Harrison, and Hiller all donated or sold substantial collections of ethnographic, archaeological, and skeletal material acquired on the voyages to the Penn Museum. The Furness, Harrison, and Hiller collections, particularly those from Oceania, are extensive and reasonably well-documented for their time.
Between 1895 and 1901, William Furness, III., Alfred C. Harrison, Jr., and Hiram M. Hiller made a series of extended trips to Oceania, South and Southeast Asia, and East Asia. Furness, Harrison, and Hiller all received degrees from the University of Pennsylvania and donated or sold to the University Museum substantial collections of ethnographic, archaeological, and skeletal material acquired on the voyages. The Furness, Harrison, and Hiller collections, particularly those from Oceania, are extensive and reasonably well-documented for their time.
During the four voyages, Furness, Harrison, and Hiller traveled to China, Japan, India, Sri Lanka, Egypt, Burma, Thailand, Pakistan, Indonesia, and Malaysia. No complete single chronicle of all four voyages exists, but a rough itinerary can be pieced together from the journals (chiefly Hiller's) and from notes made by all three travelers. Voyage I (1895-1896) and Voyage II (1897-1898) are the most completely documented since nearly all of Hiller's and some of Furness' journals are present in the collection. Voyage III (1899-1900) and Voyage IV (1901) are more sketchily documented. Long stretches of these voyages are recorded only in the form of rough notes scribbled in small notebooks by Hiller and Harrison. Furness, Harrison, and Hiller did not always travel together, further complicating the difficulties of compiling complete and accurate itineraries. Chronologies for each of the four voyages have been developed based on available material and these chronologies are appended to this Note. The chronologies are most reliable for the early voyages and least reliable for Voyage IV.
Despite the incomplete and occasionally illegible condition of the notes and journals, they do contain considerable ethnographic and technological detail for the groups visited during the voyages. Perhaps the greatest attention is devoted to groups living in Sarawak and Kalimantan, Indonesia. Numerous ethnographic details are recorded and several ethnographic maps of groups living along various rivers in these regions are present in the collections. Furness, Harrison, and Hiller apparently spoke at least serviceable Japanese and Malay and made an attempt to learn local dialects in Sarawak. Linguistic details and comparisons were recorded in the journals from time to time. A number of observations on social organization and social customs are also recorded in the journals, as are observations on the impact of colonial administration and administrators, and foreign economic concerns on local groups.
In addition to studying groups in Sarawak and Kalimantan, Furness, Harrison, and Hiller also studied hill people in western India and in the Naga Hills, and spent some time among Veddah groups in Sri Lanka. Hiller accompanied Jenichiro Oyabe, a Japanese ethnographer studying the Ainu, on several trips to study this group. Observations on more frequently visited areas such as large cities in East Asia, South and Southeast Asia, and Oceania are also recorded. A number of very complete descriptions of technology are to be found in the journals and a number of competently executed drawings of boats, agricultural and fishing equipment, weapons, looms, tofu presses, and clothing are interspersed with the journal text. Considerable attention is devoted to variations in the shape and execution of tattoo patterns throughout Asia and Oceania. Over 500 photographs, some attributed to Alfred C. Harrison, are also available, illustrating many of the areas described in the journals and publications. These photographs have been placed in the general photographic collection for each country visited.
William H. Furness III (1867-1920) was the son of Shakespearean scholar Horace Howard Furness and nephew of architect Frank Furness. He received his M.D. from the University of Pennsylvania in 1891. He was Curator of the Museum's Section of General Ethnology 1903-05 and Secretary of the Board of Managers 1904-05. Devoted years to research work among anthropoids, a part of the work being the attempt to teach articulate language to chimpanzees.
Alfred Craven Harrison, Jr.(1869-1925) was nephew of Charles Custis Harrison, Provost of the University of Pennsylvania, 1894-1911, and President of the Museum's Board of Managers, 1917-1929. His father, Alfred C. Harrison, was a prosperous sugar manufacturer who donated funds for the construction of the Free Museum of Science and Art in 1899 (now the University of Pennsylvania Museum), the repository for his son's collections. Harrison received an Honorary B.S. in 1899 from the University of Pennsylvania. In addition to his travels with William Henry Furness and Hiram Hiller to the Far East, he was a member of an expedition to the Maya ruins of Copan in Honduras. In 1902 he entered his father's business. Little is known of his later years, although he was involved in research work during the last ten years of his life.
Hiram Milliken Hiller(1867-1921) received his M.D. from the University of Pennsylvania in 1891, and served as resident physician at the University of Pennsylvania Hospital and at nearby Blockley Hospital.
Itinerary of Furness, Harrison and Hiller Expeditions - Voyage I | |
---|---|
15 October 1895 | Chicago |
20 October 1895 | San Francisco |
22 October 1895 | Sailed for Honolulu aboard the "China" |
28 October 1895 | Honolulu |
10 November 1895 | Yokohama, Japan |
8 December 1895 | Nagoya, Kyoto, Japan |
1 January 1986 | Yokohama, Japan |
14 January 1896 | First departure for Oshima, Luchu Islands aboard the "Retriever" |
29 January 1896 | Return to Yokohama for repairs |
11 February 1896 | Second departure for Oshima |
22 February 1896 | Naze, Oshima |
13 March 1896 | Naha, Shuri, Okinawa, Luchu Islands |
26 March 1896 | Sailed for Hong Kong |
26 April 1896 | Sailed for Singapore aboard Pacific and Orient steamer |
1 May 1896 | Sailed for Sarawak (Malaysia) aboard the "Rajah Brooke" |
6 May 1896 | Kuching, Sarawak |
20 May 1896 | Sailed for Baram River, Sarawak aboard the "Abeh" |
22 May 1896 | Claudetown, Sarawak |
23 May 1896 | Upper Baram River |
4 June 1896 | Upper Baram River |
3 July 1896 | Kuching, Sarawak |
6 July 1896 | Furness sailed for Sadong River |
7 July 1896 | Hiller in Santubong |
11 July 1896 | Kuching |
21 July 1896 | Furness returns |
24 July 1896 | Hiller and Wilder sailed to Rejang aboard the "Lorna Doone" |
25 July 1896 | Sibu, Sarawak |
30 July 1896 | Kapit, Sarawak |
3 August 1896 | Upper Rejang River |
12 August 1896 | Kapit |
18 August 1896 | Sibu |
21 August 1896 | Kuching, Sarawak |
29 August 1896 | Baram |
13 September 1896 | Sailed aboard the "Sri Patri" |
16 September 1896 | Labuan Island, Sarawak |
24 September 1896 | Sailed for Singapore aboard the "Ranee" |
27 September 1896 | Singapore |
4 October 1896 | Sailed for Saigon/Hong Kong aboard the "Melbourne" |
7 October 1896 | Saigon, Viet Nam |
9 October 1896 | Sailed for Hong Kong aboard the "Melbourne" |
12 October 1896 | Hong Kong |
16 October 1896 | Shanghai, China |
19 October 1896 | Kobe, Japan |
21 October 1896 | Yokohama, Japan |
7 November 1896 | Sailed for Honolulu aboard the "Pekin" |
16 November 1896 | Honolulu, Hawaii |
18 November 1896 | Sailed for San Francisco aboard the "Pekin" |
23 November 1896 | San Francisco |
4 December 1896 | Kahoka, Missouri (Hiller) |
Itinerary of Furness, Harrison and Hiller Expeditions - Voyage II | |
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15 May 1897 | San Francisco to Japan |
17 June 1897 | Kyoto, Japan |
18 June 1897 | Yokohama, Japan |
3 August 1897 | Sailed for Hong Kong aboard the "City of Peking" |
4 August 1897 | Kobe, Japan |
6 August 1897 | Nagasaki, Japan |
8 August 1897 | Shanghai, China |
13 August 1897 | Hong Kong |
15 August 1897 | Sailed for Canton aboard the "Pow-an" |
21 August 1897 | Saigon, Viet Nam |
24 August 1897 | Singapore |
10 September 1897 | Hiller and Harrison sailed for Tanjong Priok, Kalimantan (Indonesia) aboard the "Godaway" |
12 September 1897 | Tanjong Priok |
13 September 1897 | Buitenzorg, Java, Indonesia |
15 September 1897 | Batavia (Djakarta), Java, Indonesia |
18 September 1897 | Tanjong Priok, sailed for Singapore aboard the "Godaway" |
25 September 1897 | Singapore |
27 September 1897 | Sailed for Kapuas River, Kalimantan aboard the "Sri Pontianak" |
29 September 1897 | Pontianak, Kalimantan |
1 October 1897 | Up Kapuan River aboard the "Tong Kong" |
7 October 1897 | Kayuntunoh, Kalimantan |
10 October 1897 | Siutang, Indonesia |
13 October 1897 | Furness and Etzel sailed for Baram, Indonesia on "Ranu"; went to Labuan, Sarawak (Malaysia); up Balait River to Pagalaian, up Tinjar River on "Sri Putri" |
2 November 1897 | Up Kapuas River, Kalimantan |
9 November 1897 | Bunut, Kalimantan |
12 November 1897 | Putus Sibau, Kalimantan |
8 January 1898 | Up Sibau River, Kalimantan |
19 Jan 1898 | Overland across mountains |
23 January 1898 | Rajang River, Sarawak |
30 January 1898 | Kapit, Sarawak |
17 February 1898 | Rajang River, Sarawak |
21 February 1898 | Kuching, Sarawak |
27 February 1898 | Sailed aboard the "Vorwards" |
1 March 1898 | Singapore |
13 March 1898 | Furness and Etzel arrived in Singapore |
19 March 1898 | Sailed for Bangkok, Thailand aboard the "Charon" |
24 March 1898 | Bangkok |
31 March 1898 | Sailed for Singapore aboard the "Centaur" |
7 April 1898 | Signapore/Johor Malaysia |
23 April 1898 | Sailed for Kotei aboard the "Van der Lyn" |
26 April 1898 | Banjermassin, Kalimantan |
29 April 1898 | Surabaya, Java, Indonesia |
2 May 1898 | Samarinda, Kalimantan, Indonesia |
5 May 1898 | Up Mahakam River |
7 May 1898 | Upriver |
24 May 1898 | Samarinda |
29 May 1898 | Dongala, Celebes |
31 May 1898 | Bulangan Islands, Malaysia |
1 June 1898 | Traveled upriver |
4 June 1898 | Dampelas/Dongala |
7 June 1898 | Mora Jawa (Kotei River) |
10 June 1898 | Bangermassin, Kalimantan |
14 June 1898 | Singapore |
22 June 1898 | Sailed aboard the "Abeh" |
25 June 1898 | Kapit, Baram River, Sarawak |
1 July 1898 | Sailed for Kuching, Sarawak |
5 July 1898 | Kuching |
9 July 1898 | Sailed for Tambak aboard the "Young Henry" |
15 July 1898 | Sailed for Singapore |
18 July 1898 | Singapore |
26 July 1898 | Sailed aboard the "Salazei" |
28 July 1898 | Saigon |
2 August 1898 | Hong Kong |
6 August 1898 | Sailed for Shanghai aboard the "Chusan" |
Itinerary of Furness, Harrison and Hiller Expeditions - Voyage III | |
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14 June 1899 | Sailed for England aboard the "Saint Louis" |
21 June 1899 | London |
30 June 1899 | Paris |
1 July 1899 | Marseilles |
2 July 1899 | Sailed for Colombo, Sri Lanka aboard the "Ernest Simon" |
7 July 1899 | Port Said, Egypt |
9 July 1899 | Suez Canal, Egypt |
11 July 1899 | Djibouti |
18 July 1899 | Colombo |
23 July 1899 | Left for Kandy and trip to Veddahs |
30 July 1899 | Back in Kandy |
12 August 1899 | Madras, India |
17 August 1899 | Calcutta, India |
22 August 1899 | Darjeeling, India |
August 1899 | Agra, India |
1 September 1899 | Calcutta |
September 1899 | Mokameh Junction |
5 September 1899 | Agra |
10 September 1899 | Rawalpindi, Pakistan |
13 September 1899 | On river |
September 1899 | Lake Srinigar and Kashmir, India |
16 September 1899 | Singapore |
20 October 1899 | Rawalpindi |
6 November 1899 | Jaypore |
11 November 1899 | Islamabad, Pakistan |
15 November 1899 | Benawar |
2 December 1899 | Rawalpindi |
4 December 1899 | Calcutta |
6 January 1900 | Mokuk Chung |
31 January 1900 | Kohima, India |
1 February 1900 | Rangoon, Burma |
23 February 1900 | Tamir, Burma |
26 February 1900 | Sittang, Burma |
28 February 1900 | Kendat, Burma |
4 March 1900 | Kaleiwa, Burma |
6 March 1900 | Mandalay, Burma |
12 March 1900 | Rangoon |
27 March 1900 | Sailed for Australia |
10 April 1900 | Freemantle, Australia |
24 April 1900 | Sydney, Australia |
16 May 1900 | Hawaii |
17 May 1900 | Vancouver, British Columbia |
Itinerary of Furness, Harrison and Hiller Expeditions - Voyage IV | |
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19 February 1901 | Philadelphia |
1 March 1901 | New Orleans |
5 March 1901 | San Francisco |
7 March 1901 | Sailed for Yokohama aboard the "Sir Coptic" |
12 March 1901 | Honolulu |
26 March 1901 | Yokohama, Japan |
19 April 1901 | Ashinoyu, Japan |
4 May 1901 | Hakodata, Japan |
8 May 1901 | Horobito, Japan Moruwan, Japan |
9 May 1901 | Shiravi, Japan |
10 May 1901 | Numonohata, Japan |
11 May 1901 | Nuikawa, Japan |
12 May 1901 | Piratori, Japan |
13 May 1901 | Mukawa, Japan |
14 May 1901 | Rubishebe, Japan |
15 August 1901 | Buitenzorg, Java, Indonesia |
The Furness, Harrison, and Hiller collection also contains published and unpublished manuscripts, rough notes for intended publications, drawings, maps, both purchased and hand-drawn, and correspondence relating to the voyages. A distinction has been drawn between typical business and personal correspondence and correspondence intended to provide a chronicle of the voyage, usually in the form of extended letters to family members. These letters have been included in the journal series rather than in the correspondence series. Some documentation of collections donated to the Museum by Furness, Harrison, and Hiller is also present. Original titles of folders, envelopes or boxes have been preserved wherever possible, but a small percentage of the material lacked provenience other than its proximity to other items in the collections. The journals have been organized by voyage rather than by author. Wherever journals are available for more than one participant these have been grouped together within the same voyage.
Publication Information: University of Pennsylvania: Penn Museum Archives,
Finding Aid Author:
Use Restrictions: Although many items from the archives are in the public domain, copyright may be retained by the authors of items in these papers, or their descendants, as stipulated by United States copyright law. The user is fully responsible for compliance with relevant copyright law.
Form(s)/Genre(s)
- travelog (performed works genre)
- Site plans
- Photographic prints
- Maps
- Manuscripts for publication
- Field notes
- Correspondence
Geographic Name(s)
- Naga Hills (Burma)
Personal Name(s)
- Culin, Stewart
- Furness, William H., III
- Harrison, Alfred Craven, Jr.
- Hiller, Hiram Milliken
Subject(s)
- Ethnology -- Indigenous peoples
- Ethnology
- Art history
- Anthropology
- Tattooing
- Ainu
- Decoration and ornament, Ainu
The standard size records (all documents, photographic prints, and drawings up to 11x17 inches) in this collection have been digitized and may be accessed via this finding aid. Each folder has been scanned as a multi-page PDF; the contents presented in the original order. The PDFs have been labeled with the collection number (PU-Mu. 1060), the box number, and the folder number (i.e. PUMu1060_01_01-001). Oversize plans and drawings, as well as photographic negatives, have not been scanned.
If you wish to publish an image, please contact archives@pennmuseum.org to obtain a publication-quality scan produced by the Penn Museum Photo Studio.
As a historical resource, some items within this collection may include language and imagery which is offensive, oppressive and may cause upset. The use of this language and imagery is not condoned by the Penn Museum, but we are committed to providing equal and open access to this material as well as preservation of the original context of the material. We recognize that we may not always make the right decision and welcome feedback from all sources so that we can learn and adjust our practices. Please contact archives@pennmuseum.org with any questions or concerns.
Collections Inventory
Journals (inclusive: 1895-1901)
Scope and Contents
Journals written by Furness, Harrison, and Hiller during voyages I, II, III, and IV (1895-1901) are included in this series. The journals contain descriptions of places visited as well as an abundance of technological, ethnographic and political detail. Letters written by W. H. Furness to his family recounting his travels are also included in this series.
4. [H. M. Hiller], [Voyage III, Rough notes] | |
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a. [H. M. Hiller], [Voyage III, Rough Notes #1] | box 5 |
b. [H. M. Hiller], [Voyage III, Rough Notes #2] | box 5 |
Maps, notes and drawings, information relating to collections
Scope and Contents
This series contains ethnographic maps of Borneo, drawn by Hiller(?), tourist maps and guidebooks, documents, notes, drawings, catalogues, and collections listings.
Published and unpublished manuscripts (inclusive: 1896-1904) 0.5 Linear Feet
Scope and Contents
This series includes manuscripts at all stages of preparation from rough notes to reprints of published articles, written by Hiller and Furness between 1896 and 1904. The manuscripts discuss groups in the Naga Hills, Borneo, Sarawak, Yap, the Luchus, and East Asia.
Correspondence (inclusive: 1895-1901)
Scope and Contents
Both personal and business letters written and received by Furness and Hiller between 1895 and 1901 are included in this series.
Photographs (inclusive: 1895-1896)
Scope and Contents
Photographs taken between 1895 and 1896 are included in this series. The following countries are represented: Egypt, Germany, Russia, China, Tibet, Mongolia, Japan, Siberia, Hawaii, Indonesia, Malaysia, Burma, India, Sri Lanka, and Thailand.
Oversize Visual Materials | |
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Oceanian – Furness/Harrison/Hiller maps | map-case M-9 |
Oceanian – Furness/Harrison/Hiller newspaper clippings | map-case M-9 |
Oceanian – Furness/Harrison/Hiller. 29 paintings of Oceanic objects, ca. 1900. (36.5x29) | map-case M-9 |
East Asia – Japan. Ainu - Jenichiro Oyabe. Over-size letters to H. M. Hiller, 1901-1902 | map-case M-9 |
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