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George Way Harley

George Way Harley (8 August 1894 – 7 November 1966) was an American Methodist medical missionary. He spent 35 years in Ganta, Liberia, where he established Ganta Hospital, a school and a church. He was known for his research into the local culture, and received many honors from the Liberian government and from American and British institutions. Major collections of ceremonial masks purchased by Harley in Liberia are held in the Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology at Harvard University and the Anthropology Department of the College of William & Mary.

George Way Harley
Born(1894-08-08)8 August 1894
Died7 November 1966(1966-11-07) (aged 72)
NationalityAmerican
Occupation(s)Medical Doctor, Missionary
Known forGanta, Liberia mission

Early years edit

George Way Harley was born in Asheville, North Carolina on 8 August 1894 to George Gamewell Harley (1862–1925), a Methodist minister, and Lillie Way Harley.[1] Harley wanted to become a missionary from an early age.[2] He was raised in Brevard, Bessemer City, Norwood and Concord. He attended Trinity College (now Duke University) in Durham, North Carolina, and graduated with a B.A. in 1916. He was a high school teacher for a year in New Bern, North Carolina and then the head of a carpenter gang at Camp Jackson, South Carolina.[1]

Harley enlisted in the Medical Corps in June 1918 and was assigned to the Chemical Warfare Unit in the Brady Laboratory of the Yale School of Medicine. He studied pathological museum techniques and embalming at McGill University before entering Yale University, where he obtained an M.D. in 1923. He then spent a year as an intern at the Municipal Hospital in Hartford, Connecticut.[1] Harley married Winifred Jewell of Merrimac, Massachusetts on 4 August 1923. She had graduated from Bates College and taught high school before attending Yale University, where she met Harley.[2] They had three sons.[1]

In 1924, Harley applied successfully for a position at the Methodist Episcopal church mission in Ganta, Liberia. He spent the summer at Wilfred Grenfell's Harrington Hospital in Labrador, then from September 1924 to February 1925 studied at the Kennedy School of Missions of the Hartford Seminary. At the same time he took a course in metalworking at the local high school in Hartford. He attended the London School of Tropical Medicine from May to September 1925, took a map-making course at the Royal Geographical Society and studied under a craftsman potter for a month.[1]

Medical missionary edit

 
 
Ganta
class=notpageimage|
Location of Ganta in Liberia

The Liberian government, based at Monrovia on the western coast, began to establish some level of military control over the interior in the early 20th century. This made it possible to establish a mission in the late 1920s in the densely forested and sparsely populated northeast interior region.[3] The Poro societies, the secret men's societies, had been outlawed and were under growing pressure to dissolve.[4] In the 1920s the government introduced a hut tax, a considerable hardship in regions that did not have a money-based economy, which may have helped Harley buy ceremonial masks for cash.[5]

The Firestone Tire and Rubber Company was allowed to establish large rubber plantations in south-central Liberia, employing as many as 10,000 laborers, and private rubber plantations mostly owned by the government elite employed forced labor. Mandingo traders were granted land and encouraged to establish markets, selling imported goods in exchange for local produce such as kola and latex. The missionary schools opened up new opportunities to village children. All these changes combined to cause huge disruption, breaking down traditional social structures.[5]

Harley left for Ganta, Liberia in October 1925, and remained in Liberia for 35 years apart from vacations.[1] The Harleys spent four months in preparation in Monrovia before leaving for Ganta, where the government had given them permission to build a mission on 250 acres (100 ha) of land.[6] Ganta is 150 miles (240 km) inland, and is the main village of the Mano people, who numbered 600,000 at the time. With local help the Harleys built the mission compound with several huts for use as a home, a medical dispensary and a chapel.[7] Later they built a school and shops, a leper village and two "sick villages".[1] Much later a hospital was built at Ganta, one of the best in Liberia.[7]

Harley had not been ordained, but served as pastor of the church until 1948.[1] His skill as a doctor quickly became well-known, and sometimes he had to treat 160 people in one day. However, at first the Harleys made little progress in converting the Mano to Christianity.[7] Winifred gave birth to a son shortly after they reached Ganta, but he died of a tropical fever at the age of four.[8] Harley recalled that his open grief when he buried his son came as a revelation to the villagers. The Harleys had decided to return to America after their son's death, but the whole village came to hear the next Sunday service. The Harleys began to make converts now that they had shown their humanity.[9]

Harley took a scientific and practical approach to problem-solving. He tested wood samples for use in buildings to determine their resistance to insects, and he tested local remedies to find whether they were effective.[3] He took great interest in teaching the local people and giving them industrial training.[10] The novelist Graham Greene and his cousin Barbara Greene visited the Harleys at Ganta for three days in 1935. Greene was struck by the huge amount of work Harley undertook each day, leaving him too exhausted for conversation in the evening.[11] Harley was made a member of the Guild of Blacksmiths in Liberia, uniquely for a white man. He received many honors from the government of Liberia.[1] He helped the Liberian government with development projects, and acted as an adviser on a wide range of issues to the United States Public Health Service, the Peace Corps, the World Health Organization and other organizations.[6]

Anthropologist edit

 
Mano mask from the early 20th century, The mask, made of wood, Formica, metal and seeds was collected by Harley between 1933 and 1937 and is now held by the Cleveland Museum of Art.[12] Harley's handwritten label identifies the mask as "Dunuma, Chief Devil of the Poro, Mano ... owned by the late Se Gola of the half Mano, half Kpelle town of Gbotai, in the Lao section, near the St. John River."[13]

In 1928 the Harleys were visited by George Schwab and his wife, a missionary couple involved in anthropological research. Schwab helped introduce Harley to the anthropologist Earnest Hooton of Harvard, the start of a long professional relationship. Harley studied anthropology and tropical medicine as a graduate student at Harvard in his first furlough from Liberia (1930–31), and was appointed a field associate for Harvard. He held this position for the rest of his missionary career. He spent his subsequent furloughs in 1938, 1944, 1948 and 1952 at the Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology at Harvard where he worked with the displays of artifacts, wrote and studied.[6] He was also a fellow of the Royal Geographical Society, the Royal Anthropological Institute and the Royal School of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene.[1]

Harley studied local medicine and wrote a thesis on the subject that earned him a PhD in 1938 from the Kennedy School of Missions.[1] His thesis on Native African Medicine was published by Harvard University Press in 1941.[2] He also published articles on medicine, geography and anthropology in various journals.[1] Harley's wife Winifred was a full participant in the mission and looked after the finances.[2] Winifred was a trained botanist, and collected botanical specimens. She published six articles on the plants she found.[6] She cared for the sick, taught and helped study the Mano people and their use of medicinal plants, while raising her three sons.[2]

Between 1930 and 1948 Harley purchased and cataloged 391 wooden face masks for the Peabody museum, mostly from Mano- and Dan-speaking peoples. He wrote two essays on the masks, Notes on the Poro in Liberia (1941) and Masks as Agents of Social Control in Northeast Liberia (1950) which described the function of the masks in secret societies and by local leaders. These essays became very influential from the late 1950s onward, and art dealers and publications took to labeling all masks from northeast Liberia as Poro masks.[14] Harley also bought masks for himself, and sold them to help fund his sons' college educations, and for income in his retirement. The manufacture and sales of masks helped fund the leper colony at Ganta.[15] Harley's approach to collecting and documenting reflected the anthropological theories of the time, and included an effort to classify the masks by type and relate the classification to social functions.[4]

Harley bought the masks from vendors, usually Dan-speakers, who brought them to Harley's house at night. He asked the vendor where the mask came from and what purpose the mask had, and recorded this information on a label attached to the mask.[16] The supply of masks grew to a peak in 1939, perhaps due to social changes that made them less valuable, then began to dry up with prices rising as American and European collectors entered the market.[17] At first Harley was discriminating, looking for masks to represent the different types that he had identified. Later he tended to buy all that was offered, in the hope that a vendor of a low-value mask would later return with one of more interest.[18] As Winifred Harley explained,

Some of the younger Mano men had masks, charms or fetishes in their possession which they may have inherited from a father or an uncle, to their own embarrassment ... The young men feared these things even though they did not entirely believe in them. When they knew that my husband bought "old things" they were tempted by the chance to shift the responsibility, get the troublesome things off their hands, and come into a sum of money as well.[19]

Harley became intrigued by the men's secret societies, which he called "Poro" after other ethnographies, and which conducted elaborate initiation ceremonies for boys. The masked officials of the societies had supernatural powers derived from ancestral spirits, and exercised broad authority that extended beyond village boundaries.[11] The Harleys were handicapped by never learning more than rudimentary Mano, so had to rely on translators. They did not and perhaps could not attend masking ceremonies in person.[3] Harley contributed to George Schwab's Tribes of the Liberian Hinterland (1947), which he edited and which was largely based on material that had been collected by Harley. The book covered material culture, subsistence, technology and the economy, and gave some information on social organization and religion.[20] A 1949 reviewer said the book was excellent in providing factual information, but was weak in anthropological analysis and showed strong ethnocentric bias. Thus natives are said to have no moral sense since they do not know of "sinning against God." The book was weak or misleading in its interpretation of local religion and social structures.[21]

Death and legacy edit

In 1960 the Harleys retired to Merry Point, Lancaster County, Virginia where he suffered a fatal heart attack on 7 November 1966 at age 72 .[2] His ashes were flown to Liberia and buried near the Ganta Church.[1] Liberia declared a national day of mourning on his death. [citation needed] President William Tubman publicly praised Harley's long service on behalf of the people of Liberia.[10] His wife moved back to New England, where she wrote a book about her life's work titled A Third of a Century with George Way Harley in Liberia (1973). She died on 31 December 1979.[2] Harley was an old-school missionary who felt for the local people but did not mix with them. He judged himself and others severely, was devoted to duty, quick tempered and dour in nature.[22]

When Harley retired from Liberia in 1960 there were over 26 buildings at the mission including a school, woodworking shop, blacksmith's shop, leper colony, hospital, dormitories, and hotel.[6] During the Second Liberian Civil War, in 2003 the mission was damaged by rebel missiles, but it was rebuilt.[7] A collection of 274 objects that the Harleys had collected while at Ganta was purchased in 1965 by Professor Nathan Altshuler, one of the founders of the Anthropology Department at the College of William & Mary, and presented to the college as a teaching resource.[23] His cataloged collection of 391 wooden face masks in the Peabody museum is justly famous for its size and variety, and the many excellent examples of Mano and Dan masks.[14]

Publications edit

  • Harley, George Way (1941). Notes on the Poro in Liberia.
  • Harley, George Way (1941). Native African Medicine with Special Reference to its Practice in the Mano Tribe of Liberia. Ph.D. dissertation for the Hartford Seminary Foundation.
  • Schwab, George (1947). Harley, George Way (ed.). Tribes of the Liberian Hinterland.
  • Harley, George Way (1950). Masks as Agents of Social Control in Northeast Liberia.

References edit

Sources edit

  • Adams, Monni (2009-03-23). "Both Sides of the Collecting Encounter: The George W. Harley Collection at the Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology, Harvard University". Museum Anthropology. 32 (1): 17–32. doi:10.1111/j.1548-1379.2009.01018.x.
  • "African Objects from the Ganta Mission, Liberia". The College of William & Mary. 2014. Retrieved 2014-11-09.
  • "George W. Harley Collection". College of William & Mary. Retrieved 2014-11-09.
  • "Guide to the George Way Harley Papers, 1911-1975". Duke University. Retrieved 2014-11-08.
  • Herzog, George (1949). "Tribes of the Liberian Hinterland by George Schwab; George W. Harley". American Anthropologist. 51 (2): 304–306. doi:10.1525/aa.1949.51.2.02a00140. JSTOR 664116.
  • Kervick, Patricia H. (2011). "Harley, George W., 1894-1966 and Winifred J. Harley, 1895-1979, Letters, 1922-1980, inclusive: A Finding Aid". Peabody Museum Archives, Harvard University. Retrieved 2014-11-08.
  • Levy, Suzanne S. (1988-10-28). "Harley, George Way". Dictionary of North Carolina Biography: Vol. 3, H-K. Univ of North Carolina Press. ISBN 978-0-8078-6713-6. Retrieved 2014-11-08.
  • Mark, Joan (1998-12-01). The King of the World in the Land of the Pygmies. U of Nebraska Press. ISBN 978-0-8032-8250-6. Retrieved 2014-11-09.
  • Petridis, Constantine (Spring 2012). "A "Harley Mask" at the Cleveland Museum of Art". African Arts. 45: 16–31. doi:10.1162/afar.2012.45.1.16. S2CID 57563281.
  • Seamands, Stephen (2012-03-08). Give Them Christ: Preaching His Incarnation, Crucifixion, Resurrection, Ascension and Return. InterVarsity Press. ISBN 978-0-8308-6983-1. Retrieved 2014-11-09.
  • "The Collectors: George Way and Winifred J. Harley". The College of William & Mary. 2014. Retrieved 2014-11-09.

george, harley, other, people, named, george, harley, george, harley, disambiguation, august, 1894, november, 1966, american, methodist, medical, missionary, spent, years, ganta, liberia, where, established, ganta, hospital, school, church, known, research, in. For other people named George Harley see George Harley disambiguation George Way Harley 8 August 1894 7 November 1966 was an American Methodist medical missionary He spent 35 years in Ganta Liberia where he established Ganta Hospital a school and a church He was known for his research into the local culture and received many honors from the Liberian government and from American and British institutions Major collections of ceremonial masks purchased by Harley in Liberia are held in the Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology at Harvard University and the Anthropology Department of the College of William amp Mary George Way HarleyBorn 1894 08 08 8 August 1894Asheville North Carolina USDied7 November 1966 1966 11 07 aged 72 Merry Point Lancaster County Virginia USNationalityAmericanOccupation s Medical Doctor MissionaryKnown forGanta Liberia mission Contents 1 Early years 2 Medical missionary 3 Anthropologist 4 Death and legacy 5 Publications 6 References 7 SourcesEarly years editGeorge Way Harley was born in Asheville North Carolina on 8 August 1894 to George Gamewell Harley 1862 1925 a Methodist minister and Lillie Way Harley 1 Harley wanted to become a missionary from an early age 2 He was raised in Brevard Bessemer City Norwood and Concord He attended Trinity College now Duke University in Durham North Carolina and graduated with a B A in 1916 He was a high school teacher for a year in New Bern North Carolina and then the head of a carpenter gang at Camp Jackson South Carolina 1 Harley enlisted in the Medical Corps in June 1918 and was assigned to the Chemical Warfare Unit in the Brady Laboratory of the Yale School of Medicine He studied pathological museum techniques and embalming at McGill University before entering Yale University where he obtained an M D in 1923 He then spent a year as an intern at the Municipal Hospital in Hartford Connecticut 1 Harley married Winifred Jewell of Merrimac Massachusetts on 4 August 1923 She had graduated from Bates College and taught high school before attending Yale University where she met Harley 2 They had three sons 1 In 1924 Harley applied successfully for a position at the Methodist Episcopal church mission in Ganta Liberia He spent the summer at Wilfred Grenfell s Harrington Hospital in Labrador then from September 1924 to February 1925 studied at the Kennedy School of Missions of the Hartford Seminary At the same time he took a course in metalworking at the local high school in Hartford He attended the London School of Tropical Medicine from May to September 1925 took a map making course at the Royal Geographical Society and studied under a craftsman potter for a month 1 Medical missionary edit nbsp nbsp Gantaclass notpageimage Location of Ganta in Liberia The Liberian government based at Monrovia on the western coast began to establish some level of military control over the interior in the early 20th century This made it possible to establish a mission in the late 1920s in the densely forested and sparsely populated northeast interior region 3 The Poro societies the secret men s societies had been outlawed and were under growing pressure to dissolve 4 In the 1920s the government introduced a hut tax a considerable hardship in regions that did not have a money based economy which may have helped Harley buy ceremonial masks for cash 5 The Firestone Tire and Rubber Company was allowed to establish large rubber plantations in south central Liberia employing as many as 10 000 laborers and private rubber plantations mostly owned by the government elite employed forced labor Mandingo traders were granted land and encouraged to establish markets selling imported goods in exchange for local produce such as kola and latex The missionary schools opened up new opportunities to village children All these changes combined to cause huge disruption breaking down traditional social structures 5 Harley left for Ganta Liberia in October 1925 and remained in Liberia for 35 years apart from vacations 1 The Harleys spent four months in preparation in Monrovia before leaving for Ganta where the government had given them permission to build a mission on 250 acres 100 ha of land 6 Ganta is 150 miles 240 km inland and is the main village of the Mano people who numbered 600 000 at the time With local help the Harleys built the mission compound with several huts for use as a home a medical dispensary and a chapel 7 Later they built a school and shops a leper village and two sick villages 1 Much later a hospital was built at Ganta one of the best in Liberia 7 Harley had not been ordained but served as pastor of the church until 1948 1 His skill as a doctor quickly became well known and sometimes he had to treat 160 people in one day However at first the Harleys made little progress in converting the Mano to Christianity 7 Winifred gave birth to a son shortly after they reached Ganta but he died of a tropical fever at the age of four 8 Harley recalled that his open grief when he buried his son came as a revelation to the villagers The Harleys had decided to return to America after their son s death but the whole village came to hear the next Sunday service The Harleys began to make converts now that they had shown their humanity 9 Harley took a scientific and practical approach to problem solving He tested wood samples for use in buildings to determine their resistance to insects and he tested local remedies to find whether they were effective 3 He took great interest in teaching the local people and giving them industrial training 10 The novelist Graham Greene and his cousin Barbara Greene visited the Harleys at Ganta for three days in 1935 Greene was struck by the huge amount of work Harley undertook each day leaving him too exhausted for conversation in the evening 11 Harley was made a member of the Guild of Blacksmiths in Liberia uniquely for a white man He received many honors from the government of Liberia 1 He helped the Liberian government with development projects and acted as an adviser on a wide range of issues to the United States Public Health Service the Peace Corps the World Health Organization and other organizations 6 Anthropologist edit nbsp Mano mask from the early 20th century The mask made of wood Formica metal and seeds was collected by Harley between 1933 and 1937 and is now held by the Cleveland Museum of Art 12 Harley s handwritten label identifies the mask as Dunuma Chief Devil of the Poro Mano owned by the late Se Gola of the half Mano half Kpelle town of Gbotai in the Lao section near the St John River 13 In 1928 the Harleys were visited by George Schwab and his wife a missionary couple involved in anthropological research Schwab helped introduce Harley to the anthropologist Earnest Hooton of Harvard the start of a long professional relationship Harley studied anthropology and tropical medicine as a graduate student at Harvard in his first furlough from Liberia 1930 31 and was appointed a field associate for Harvard He held this position for the rest of his missionary career He spent his subsequent furloughs in 1938 1944 1948 and 1952 at the Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology at Harvard where he worked with the displays of artifacts wrote and studied 6 He was also a fellow of the Royal Geographical Society the Royal Anthropological Institute and the Royal School of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene 1 Harley studied local medicine and wrote a thesis on the subject that earned him a PhD in 1938 from the Kennedy School of Missions 1 His thesis on Native African Medicine was published by Harvard University Press in 1941 2 He also published articles on medicine geography and anthropology in various journals 1 Harley s wife Winifred was a full participant in the mission and looked after the finances 2 Winifred was a trained botanist and collected botanical specimens She published six articles on the plants she found 6 She cared for the sick taught and helped study the Mano people and their use of medicinal plants while raising her three sons 2 Between 1930 and 1948 Harley purchased and cataloged 391 wooden face masks for the Peabody museum mostly from Mano and Dan speaking peoples He wrote two essays on the masks Notes on the Poro in Liberia 1941 and Masks as Agents of Social Control in Northeast Liberia 1950 which described the function of the masks in secret societies and by local leaders These essays became very influential from the late 1950s onward and art dealers and publications took to labeling all masks from northeast Liberia as Poro masks 14 Harley also bought masks for himself and sold them to help fund his sons college educations and for income in his retirement The manufacture and sales of masks helped fund the leper colony at Ganta 15 Harley s approach to collecting and documenting reflected the anthropological theories of the time and included an effort to classify the masks by type and relate the classification to social functions 4 Harley bought the masks from vendors usually Dan speakers who brought them to Harley s house at night He asked the vendor where the mask came from and what purpose the mask had and recorded this information on a label attached to the mask 16 The supply of masks grew to a peak in 1939 perhaps due to social changes that made them less valuable then began to dry up with prices rising as American and European collectors entered the market 17 At first Harley was discriminating looking for masks to represent the different types that he had identified Later he tended to buy all that was offered in the hope that a vendor of a low value mask would later return with one of more interest 18 As Winifred Harley explained Some of the younger Mano men had masks charms or fetishes in their possession which they may have inherited from a father or an uncle to their own embarrassment The young men feared these things even though they did not entirely believe in them When they knew that my husband bought old things they were tempted by the chance to shift the responsibility get the troublesome things off their hands and come into a sum of money as well 19 Harley became intrigued by the men s secret societies which he called Poro after other ethnographies and which conducted elaborate initiation ceremonies for boys The masked officials of the societies had supernatural powers derived from ancestral spirits and exercised broad authority that extended beyond village boundaries 11 The Harleys were handicapped by never learning more than rudimentary Mano so had to rely on translators They did not and perhaps could not attend masking ceremonies in person 3 Harley contributed to George Schwab s Tribes of the Liberian Hinterland 1947 which he edited and which was largely based on material that had been collected by Harley The book covered material culture subsistence technology and the economy and gave some information on social organization and religion 20 A 1949 reviewer said the book was excellent in providing factual information but was weak in anthropological analysis and showed strong ethnocentric bias Thus natives are said to have no moral sense since they do not know of sinning against God The book was weak or misleading in its interpretation of local religion and social structures 21 Death and legacy editIn 1960 the Harleys retired to Merry Point Lancaster County Virginia where he suffered a fatal heart attack on 7 November 1966 at age 72 2 His ashes were flown to Liberia and buried near the Ganta Church 1 Liberia declared a national day of mourning on his death citation needed President William Tubman publicly praised Harley s long service on behalf of the people of Liberia 10 His wife moved back to New England where she wrote a book about her life s work titled A Third of a Century with George Way Harley in Liberia 1973 She died on 31 December 1979 2 Harley was an old school missionary who felt for the local people but did not mix with them He judged himself and others severely was devoted to duty quick tempered and dour in nature 22 When Harley retired from Liberia in 1960 there were over 26 buildings at the mission including a school woodworking shop blacksmith s shop leper colony hospital dormitories and hotel 6 During the Second Liberian Civil War in 2003 the mission was damaged by rebel missiles but it was rebuilt 7 A collection of 274 objects that the Harleys had collected while at Ganta was purchased in 1965 by Professor Nathan Altshuler one of the founders of the Anthropology Department at the College of William amp Mary and presented to the college as a teaching resource 23 His cataloged collection of 391 wooden face masks in the Peabody museum is justly famous for its size and variety and the many excellent examples of Mano and Dan masks 14 Publications editHarley George Way 1941 Notes on the Poro in Liberia Harley George Way 1941 Native African Medicine with Special Reference to its Practice in the Mano Tribe of Liberia Ph D dissertation for the Hartford Seminary Foundation Schwab George 1947 Harley George Way ed Tribes of the Liberian Hinterland Harley George Way 1950 Masks as Agents of Social Control in Northeast Liberia References edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m Levy 1988 p 35 a b c d e f g Kervick 2011 a b c Adams 2009 p 18 a b African Objects from the Ganta Mission William amp Mary a b Adams 2009 p 23 a b c d e The Collectors College of William amp Mary a b c d Seamands 2012 p 38 Seamands 2012 p 39 Seamands 2012 p 40 a b Guide to the George Way Harley Papers Duke a b Adams 2009 p 19 Petridis 2012 p 17 Petridis 2012 p 19 a b Adams 2009 p 17 Adams 2009 p 28 Adams 2009 p 20 Adams 2009 p 27 Adams 2009 p 21 Adams 2009 p 24 Herzog 1949 p 304 Herzog 1949 p 305 Mark 1998 p 116 George W Harley Collection William amp Mary Sources editAdams Monni 2009 03 23 Both Sides of the Collecting Encounter The George W Harley Collection at the Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology Harvard University Museum Anthropology 32 1 17 32 doi 10 1111 j 1548 1379 2009 01018 x African Objects from the Ganta Mission Liberia The College of William amp Mary 2014 Retrieved 2014 11 09 George W Harley Collection College of William amp Mary Retrieved 2014 11 09 Guide to the George Way Harley Papers 1911 1975 Duke University Retrieved 2014 11 08 Herzog George 1949 Tribes of the Liberian Hinterland by George Schwab George W Harley American Anthropologist 51 2 304 306 doi 10 1525 aa 1949 51 2 02a00140 JSTOR 664116 Kervick Patricia H 2011 Harley George W 1894 1966 and Winifred J Harley 1895 1979 Letters 1922 1980 inclusive A Finding Aid Peabody Museum Archives Harvard University Retrieved 2014 11 08 Levy Suzanne S 1988 10 28 Harley George Way Dictionary of North Carolina Biography Vol 3 H K Univ of North Carolina Press ISBN 978 0 8078 6713 6 Retrieved 2014 11 08 Mark Joan 1998 12 01 The King of the World in the Land of the Pygmies U of Nebraska Press ISBN 978 0 8032 8250 6 Retrieved 2014 11 09 Petridis Constantine Spring 2012 A Harley Mask at the Cleveland Museum of Art African Arts 45 16 31 doi 10 1162 afar 2012 45 1 16 S2CID 57563281 Seamands Stephen 2012 03 08 Give Them Christ Preaching His Incarnation Crucifixion Resurrection Ascension and Return InterVarsity Press ISBN 978 0 8308 6983 1 Retrieved 2014 11 09 The Collectors George Way and Winifred J Harley The College of William amp Mary 2014 Retrieved 2014 11 09 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title George Way Harley amp oldid 1170968363, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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