During the year, the Museum has received from Dr. Haddon a gift of the first importance in the shape of his collection of several thousands of anthropological photographs, accumulated by him over a very long period and from every part of the world. In honour of Dr. Haddon's eightieth birthday these photographs had been put in order, prints made from the negatives, and the whole collection catalogued, uniformly mounted, and arranged in a cabinet specially made for them. .. The large number of photographs already in the Museum have now been incorporated in the collection, many hundreds have been added, chiefly by friends of Dr. Haddon, and it is hoped that the collection, which will be called the Haddon Photographic Collection, will steadily increase. It is already one of the most comprehensive in existence. 2 This paper starts inside a drawer. One of a series of custom-built wooden units, the solid drawer was initially made in 1935 to mark the eightieth birthday of Alfred Cort Haddon (1855-1940), an ethnologist who worked closely with what is now the Cambridge University Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology (CUMAA) from 1892 to 1926. Whilst the Haddon Photographic Collection has continued to grow over the years, the form of Haddon's original Acknowledgments: The research for this paper was funded by the Getty Grant Project at the Cambridge University Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology. I particularly thank Anita Herle for opening the photo archive doors and providing stimulating and knowledgeable discussion, guidance, and for her unwavering professional and personal support. I would like to thank the Museum for kind permission to reproduce the images from their collection here. Additional support during research was given by an Economic and Social Research Council postdoctoral fellowship and a CUMAA Crowther Beynon collections grant.