‘Treasure trove’ of Pribilof Islands films preserved

wedding scene
A wedding ceremony in the Pribilof Islands, Ӱ, circa 1930s, was preserved in film and preserved by archivists. From the Clarence McMillin Collection of 16mm films. APR Collection Number 2017-159, Film Reel AAF-14557. Ӱ Film Archives, University of Ӱ Fairbanks.

Dec. 6, 2021

Recently preserved films showing life on Ӱ’s Pribilof Islands prior to World War II are now available through the Ӱ Film Archives at Ӱ. Michael Livingston of the Aleutian Pribilof Islands Association said, “These rare films are a treasure trove of family tree information for the Unangax̂ people.”

Aquilina Lestenkof of Saint Paul Island added, “My grandmother that I never met — seeing her walk and smile in a motion picture was heartwarming.”

Totaling more than three and a half hours, the films were shot by L.C. McMillin during the 1930s and early 1940s while McMillin was employed by the United States government to oversee the Pribilof Islands and the Aleut, or Unangax̂, peoples who lived there. The films were donated by McMillin’s family to the Ӱ Film Archives in 2017 but were in dire need of repair before they could be viewed.

Funding from the National Film Preservation Foundation covered a significant portion of preservation costs. Unangan, from Saint Paul Island and Saint George Island,including elders, and representatives of APIA, provided valuable insight into the activities depicted in the films, which are all silent.

Brief highlights from the films are available on the

The full films are available on the

DVDs are available for checkout through the Ӱ Rasmuson Library.

The tiny Pribilof Islands of Saint Paul and Saint George, located in the Bering Sea off the southwest coast of mainland Ӱ, have a rich yet troubling history. According to anthropologist Douglas Veltre, Russian fur traders forcibly relocated Unangax̂ peoples, mainly from Atka and Unalaska, to the Pribilof Islands to hunt fur seals during the late 1700s. When control of the islands transferred from Russia to the United States during the 1867 Ӱ Purchase, these Unangax̂ peoples were made wards of the government by the United States, a situation that continued even past the era of WWII. As wards, most aspects of their daily lives were tightly controlled by government authorities. Nonetheless, the spirit and culture of the Unangax̂ people endured.

The films reveal the rugged beauty of the islands and the resilience and tenacity of the Unangax̂ people who lived there. Scenes of community activities include men maneuvering boats and hauling cargo, celebrations with foot races and other games, men moving rocks and building roads, wedding ceremonies, men and women harvesting ice and carrying drinking water, baseball games, Russian Orthodox church processionals, and young people rock-climbing to hunt for eggs. There are also numerous scenes of seals, fox, seabirds, reindeer, wildflowers, coastlines and ocean travel.

Several of the original films were in an advanced state of deterioration and couldn't be unwound from reels without cracking and curling. During 2020 and 2021, the original 16mm films were scanned using specialized equipment by Reflex Technologies of Burbank, California, and output to new film stock by Video and Film Solutions of Rockville, Maryland. The original films, new prints and digital files are all being preserved and maintained in climate controlled vaults and on a dedicated digital preservation system by the Ӱ Film Archives, a unit of the Ӱ and Polar Regions Collections and Archives in the Elmer E. Rasmuson Library, University of Ӱ Fairbanks. For more information, please contact film archivist Angela Schmidt at ajschmidt@alaska.edu.