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REMEMBERING KAGUYAK
Several tidal waves struck Kaguyak that evening, measuring between thirty and fifty feet high. In between waves, village men attempted to salvage supplies from ALASKA PACKERS ASSOCIATION MUSEUM IN BLAINE, WASHINGTON Last month the Alaska Packers Association Museum in Blaine, Washington, held an opening for its new exhibit on Bristol Bay salmon fishing. Tim Troll, Alaska fisheries historian, curator of the exhibit, and author of Sailing for Salmon: The Early Years of Commercial Fishing in Alaska’s Bristol Bay, 1884-1951, spoke about the many historic photos that comprise the exhibit and screened a film PARK’S CANNERY, UYAK BAY In 1934, Herbert Dominici built a one-line cannery on Kodiak Island, across from Amook Island in Uyak Bay. His was the newest cannery in a neighborhood relatively flush with canning operations. ALITAK CANNERY: LOOKING FORWARD TOWARDS 100 YEARS OF Alitak is located near the Alutiiq village of Akhiok, on the south end of Kodiak Island. The Alitak Packing Company was established in 1917,encroaching on what
OF GOLD AND GRAVEL
OF GOLD AND GRAVEL A Pictorial History of Mining Operations at Coal Creek and Woodchopper Creek, 1934–1938 Yukon-Charley Rivers NationalPreserve
THE SEWARD SHAME POLE: COUNTERING ALASKA’S The gold rush boomtown of Nome on the Seward Peninsula, 1900. Courtesy of U.S. Geological Survey Photographic Library.GOLD RUSH BICYCLING
Gold Rush Bicycling. By Terrence Cole. Soon after the snow retreats from Alaskan roads, bicyclists in sleek, colorful, body-hugging outfits begin zipping along with cars, pickups, and the earliest of what will become the summer profusion of motorhomes. HOONAH | ALASKA HISTORICAL SOCIETY PAF’s purchase of the Haines cannery—the company’s first venture into Alaska ’s fisheries—seems to have been untimely, because that year there was a great shortage of sockeye salmon in Lynn Canal.Of the five species of Alaska salmon, sockeye were by far the most desired by canners. The Canal’s principal sockeye streams, the Chilkat and Chilkoot rivers, had been, in the words of a HOME | ALASKA HISTORICAL SOCIETYABOUT AHSADVOCACYPUBLICATIONSFOR RESEARCHERSMEMBERSHIP & GIVINGBLOG The Alaska Historical Society (AHS) is a non-profit, volunteer-based organization dedicated to the promotion of Alaska history by the exchange of ideas and information, the preservation and interpretation of resources, and the education of Alaskans about their heritage. MUKTUK MARSTON’S FIVE-POINT PLAN The gold rush boomtown of Nome on the Seward Peninsula, 1900. Courtesy of U.S. Geological Survey Photographic Library.REMEMBERING KAGUYAK
Several tidal waves struck Kaguyak that evening, measuring between thirty and fifty feet high. In between waves, village men attempted to salvage supplies from ALASKA PACKERS ASSOCIATION MUSEUM IN BLAINE, WASHINGTON Last month the Alaska Packers Association Museum in Blaine, Washington, held an opening for its new exhibit on Bristol Bay salmon fishing. Tim Troll, Alaska fisheries historian, curator of the exhibit, and author of Sailing for Salmon: The Early Years of Commercial Fishing in Alaska’s Bristol Bay, 1884-1951, spoke about the many historic photos that comprise the exhibit and screened a film PARK’S CANNERY, UYAK BAY In 1934, Herbert Dominici built a one-line cannery on Kodiak Island, across from Amook Island in Uyak Bay. His was the newest cannery in a neighborhood relatively flush with canning operations. ALITAK CANNERY: LOOKING FORWARD TOWARDS 100 YEARS OF Alitak is located near the Alutiiq village of Akhiok, on the south end of Kodiak Island. The Alitak Packing Company was established in 1917,encroaching on what
OF GOLD AND GRAVEL
OF GOLD AND GRAVEL A Pictorial History of Mining Operations at Coal Creek and Woodchopper Creek, 1934–1938 Yukon-Charley Rivers NationalPreserve
THE SEWARD SHAME POLE: COUNTERING ALASKA’S The gold rush boomtown of Nome on the Seward Peninsula, 1900. Courtesy of U.S. Geological Survey Photographic Library.GOLD RUSH BICYCLING
Gold Rush Bicycling. By Terrence Cole. Soon after the snow retreats from Alaskan roads, bicyclists in sleek, colorful, body-hugging outfits begin zipping along with cars, pickups, and the earliest of what will become the summer profusion of motorhomes. HOONAH | ALASKA HISTORICAL SOCIETY PAF’s purchase of the Haines cannery—the company’s first venture into Alaska ’s fisheries—seems to have been untimely, because that year there was a great shortage of sockeye salmon in Lynn Canal.Of the five species of Alaska salmon, sockeye were by far the most desired by canners. The Canal’s principal sockeye streams, the Chilkat and Chilkoot rivers, had been, in the words of a THE TREATY OF CESSION & ALASKA NATIVE RIGHTS The 150th Anniversary of the Treaty of Cession with Russia provides an opportunity to examine what the purchase of Alaska meant for AlaskaNatives.
ALASKA PACKERS ASSOCIATION The company identified “trouble makers,” probably shorthand for union activists, and noted detentions and fines for insubordination. Other problems were listed:CANNED NN CANNERY
Work began in the spring of 1902, with the steamship Yukon bringing supplies to the site on March 7 . Barron purchased the 53’ steam tug Kodat, and contracted with the Juneau Iron Works to do repairs .On May 7 Barron took the Kodat to Funter where it was beached for further modifications into a cannery tender . This vessel was later renamed the Buster, a nickname of both J.T. and PARK’S CANNERY, UYAK BAY In 1934, Herbert Dominici built a one-line cannery on Kodiak Island, across from Amook Island in Uyak Bay. His was the newest cannery in a neighborhood relatively flush with canning operations. ALITAK | ALASKA HISTORICAL SOCIETY The novelties at the Alitak cannery break the monotony of a job that can be exhausting and painfully routine. When fishing is at its peak, cannery workers stand 16 hours a “HELPING HAND” MILITARY RESPONSE TO GOOD FRIDAY EARTHQUAKE The military helped fill the void. Within two minutes of the earthquake, the Alaskan NORAD Command Center in the Alaskan Command headquarters building on Elmendorf AFB became the focal center for damage assessment, response, and subsequent recovery efforts. SALTING SALMON IN TAKU INLET The Taku River that flows into the inlet of the same name sustains a run of salmon. Charles Brown came there in 1882 to salt fish, financed by his partner Peter Eussard, the discoverer of the Treadwell Paris mine. We learn from Brown’s 1884 mortgage that the saltery consisted of houses, sheds, fish tanks and fishing boats. SEIKI KAYAMORI AND HIS PLACE IN ALASKA HISTORY In September 1903, however, Kayamori boarded the steamer Iyo Maru for a voyage from Yokohama to Seattle. He arrived with $87.10 and a steamer ticket for San Francisco, according to the ship’s manifest, which lists his last residence as Tokyo and his occupation as “laborer and farmer”. SALMON | ALASKA HISTORICAL SOCIETY compiled by James Mackovjak. Here are some excellent shorts on seining in Alaska (complete with references) from the 1890s through the 1930s. 1890s: “In 1893, when our company started fishing, we found it very difficult to conduct successful seining operations at Karluk Spit due to large numbers of rocks and boulders in the fishing area which continually snagged the seines. FILIPINO | ALASKA HISTORICAL SOCIETY We all know that salmon have fueled Alaska ’s commercial fishing industry for over 100 years. So, if salmon fed Alaska ’s numerous salmon canneries, what fed Alaska ’s numerous cannery workers? Believe it or not, the answer is not salmon! Although salmon was eaten on occasion, it was not the primary source of nutrition fueling the industry’s workers. HOME | ALASKA HISTORICAL SOCIETYABOUT AHSADVOCACYPUBLICATIONSFOR RESEARCHERSMEMBERSHIP & GIVINGBLOG The Alaska Historical Society (AHS) is a non-profit, volunteer-based organization dedicated to the promotion of Alaska history by the exchange of ideas and information, the preservation and interpretation of resources, and the education of Alaskans about their heritage. Governed by a 15-member board, the Society provides a forum and avehicle
LOCAL HISTORICAL SOCIETIES Central, Alaska 99730. Phone: 907-520-1893. Cook Inlet Historical Society. 625 C Street. Anchorage, Alaska 99501. Phone: 907-929-9200 or 907-346-2755. Email: cihs@anchoragemuseum.org. Cooper Landing Historical Society and Museum. PO Box 711. MUKTUK MARSTON’S FIVE-POINT PLAN Muktuk Marston’s Five-Point Plan. Even in a state whose history is populated with so many unique characters, Marvin “Muktuk” Marston stands out as one of the most incredible Alaskans of the twentieth century. In addition to organizing the Alaska Territorial Guard during WWII, a service that brought Alaska Natives into the political sphere ALITAK CANNERY: LOOKING FORWARD TOWARDS 100 YEARS OF Alitak is located near the Alutiiq village of Akhiok, on the south end of Kodiak Island. The Alitak Packing Company was established in 1917, encroaching on what had previously been Alaska Packers Association fishing territory. In 1928, Pacific American Fisheries purchased the Alitak facility, adding a crab processing facility to the plant in1959.
THE TREATY OF CESSION & ALASKA NATIVE RIGHTS The 150th Anniversary of the Treaty of Cession with Russia provides an opportunity to examine what the purchase of Alaska meant for Alaska Natives. The language of the treaty demonstrates how the United States and Russia thought about, classified, and legally established theconditions of
ALASKA PACKERS ASSOCIATION MUSEUM IN BLAINE, WASHINGTONALASKA PACKERS ASSOCIATION MUSEUMALASKA PACKERS ASSN V DOMENICOALASKA APAALASKACANNERY COMPANIES
Last month the Alaska Packers Association Museum in Blaine, Washington, held an opening for its new exhibit on Bristol Bay salmon fishing. Tim Troll, Alaska fisheries historian, curator of the exhibit, and author of Sailing for Salmon: The Early Years of Commercial Fishing in Alaska’s Bristol Bay, 1884-1951, spoke about the many historic photos that comprise the exhibit and screened a film SALTING SALMON IN TAKU INLET With two canneries to manage, Buschmann ceased salting at the end of 1901. This was the last operation that solely salted salmon from the Taku River. For a number of years the Taku Harbor cannery salted and mild cured the Inlet’s fish at that facility. Ron and Nan Schonenbach asked me about Taku Point that they currently own. “HELPING HAND” MILITARY RESPONSE TO GOOD FRIDAY EARTHQUAKE The Alaska Good Friday Earthquake began at 5:36 p.m., March 27, 1964, with a force that measured at the time of 8.3 to 8.6 on the Richter Scale, later upgraded to 9.2. It lasted approximately four minutes and affected an approximately 100,000 square-mile area of South Central Alaska with the epicenter over six miles inland from College Fiord.OF GOLD AND GRAVEL
OF GOLD AND GRAVEL A Pictorial History of Mining Operations at Coal Creek and Woodchopper Creek, 1934–1938 Yukon-Charley Rivers NationalPreserve
CANNED NN CANNERY
Work began in the spring of 1902, with the steamship Yukon bringing supplies to the site on March 7 . Barron purchased the 53’ steam tug Kodat, and contracted with the Juneau Iron Works to do repairs .On May 7 Barron took the Kodat to Funter where it was beached for further modifications into a cannery tender . This vessel was later renamed the Buster, a nickname of both J.T. and HOME | ALASKA HISTORICAL SOCIETYABOUT AHSADVOCACYPUBLICATIONSFOR RESEARCHERSMEMBERSHIP & GIVINGBLOG The Alaska Historical Society (AHS) is a non-profit, volunteer-based organization dedicated to the promotion of Alaska history by the exchange of ideas and information, the preservation and interpretation of resources, and the education of Alaskans about their heritage. Governed by a 15-member board, the Society provides a forum and avehicle
LOCAL HISTORICAL SOCIETIES Central, Alaska 99730. Phone: 907-520-1893. Cook Inlet Historical Society. 625 C Street. Anchorage, Alaska 99501. Phone: 907-929-9200 or 907-346-2755. Email: cihs@anchoragemuseum.org. Cooper Landing Historical Society and Museum. PO Box 711. MUKTUK MARSTON’S FIVE-POINT PLAN Muktuk Marston’s Five-Point Plan. Even in a state whose history is populated with so many unique characters, Marvin “Muktuk” Marston stands out as one of the most incredible Alaskans of the twentieth century. In addition to organizing the Alaska Territorial Guard during WWII, a service that brought Alaska Natives into the political sphere ALITAK CANNERY: LOOKING FORWARD TOWARDS 100 YEARS OF Alitak is located near the Alutiiq village of Akhiok, on the south end of Kodiak Island. The Alitak Packing Company was established in 1917, encroaching on what had previously been Alaska Packers Association fishing territory. In 1928, Pacific American Fisheries purchased the Alitak facility, adding a crab processing facility to the plant in1959.
THE TREATY OF CESSION & ALASKA NATIVE RIGHTS The 150th Anniversary of the Treaty of Cession with Russia provides an opportunity to examine what the purchase of Alaska meant for Alaska Natives. The language of the treaty demonstrates how the United States and Russia thought about, classified, and legally established theconditions of
ALASKA PACKERS ASSOCIATION MUSEUM IN BLAINE, WASHINGTONALASKA PACKERS ASSOCIATION MUSEUMALASKA PACKERS ASSN V DOMENICOALASKA APAALASKACANNERY COMPANIES
Last month the Alaska Packers Association Museum in Blaine, Washington, held an opening for its new exhibit on Bristol Bay salmon fishing. Tim Troll, Alaska fisheries historian, curator of the exhibit, and author of Sailing for Salmon: The Early Years of Commercial Fishing in Alaska’s Bristol Bay, 1884-1951, spoke about the many historic photos that comprise the exhibit and screened a film SALTING SALMON IN TAKU INLET With two canneries to manage, Buschmann ceased salting at the end of 1901. This was the last operation that solely salted salmon from the Taku River. For a number of years the Taku Harbor cannery salted and mild cured the Inlet’s fish at that facility. Ron and Nan Schonenbach asked me about Taku Point that they currently own. “HELPING HAND” MILITARY RESPONSE TO GOOD FRIDAY EARTHQUAKE The Alaska Good Friday Earthquake began at 5:36 p.m., March 27, 1964, with a force that measured at the time of 8.3 to 8.6 on the Richter Scale, later upgraded to 9.2. It lasted approximately four minutes and affected an approximately 100,000 square-mile area of South Central Alaska with the epicenter over six miles inland from College Fiord.OF GOLD AND GRAVEL
OF GOLD AND GRAVEL A Pictorial History of Mining Operations at Coal Creek and Woodchopper Creek, 1934–1938 Yukon-Charley Rivers NationalPreserve
CANNED NN CANNERY
Work began in the spring of 1902, with the steamship Yukon bringing supplies to the site on March 7 . Barron purchased the 53’ steam tug Kodat, and contracted with the Juneau Iron Works to do repairs .On May 7 Barron took the Kodat to Funter where it was beached for further modifications into a cannery tender . This vessel was later renamed the Buster, a nickname of both J.T. andCURRENT ISSUE
Current Issue Volume 36 / Number 1/ Spring 2021. Articles: William Schneider, “When a Small Typo Has Big Implications” Chris Allan, “Daredevil: How the Aviator Clarence Prest Tried (and Failed) to Pioneer an Air Route through Alaska to Siberia”REMEMBERING KAGUYAK
Several tidal waves struck Kaguyak that evening, measuring between thirty and fifty feet high. In between waves, village men attempted to salvage supplies fromAUCTION BID STATUS
Item: Minimum Bid: Current High Bid: Stuck, A Winter Circuit $30.00: $50.00: Southeastern Alaska views: $5.00: $55.00: Lt. Castner’s Alaska Exploration: $22.50: $70 THE SEWARD SHAME POLE: COUNTERING ALASKA’S The original pole at Tongass was a shame pole, erected in the 1880s to ridicule Secretary of State William H. Seward for failing to repay the gifts he had received from Chief Ebbits, clan leader of the Taant’a kwáan Teikweidí and one of the most high-ranking men at Tongass Village. According to oral histories among the Taant’a kwáan PARK’S CANNERY, UYAK BAY Park’s Cannery, Uyak Bay. In 1934, Herbert Dominici built a one-line cannery on Kodiak Island, across from Amook Island in Uyak Bay. His was the newest cannery in a neighborhood relatively flush with canning operations. In fact, he was formerly the superintendent at one such cannery, that owned by Northwestern Fisheries, located at the Uyak THE COLD WAR YEARS 1946-1991 The Korean War and the heating up of the Cold War following the Soviet Union detonation of an atomic device August 29, 1949, followed by a hydrogen device August 12, 1953, and the development of more capable jet bombers during the early 1950s, increased military spending as the U.S. rearmed for a possible conflict.CANNED NN CANNERY
Work began in the spring of 1902, with the steamship Yukon bringing supplies to the site on March 7 . Barron purchased the 53’ steam tug Kodat, and contracted with the Juneau Iron Works to do repairs .On May 7 Barron took the Kodat to Funter where it was beached for further modifications into a cannery tender . This vessel was later renamed the Buster, a nickname of both J.T. andGOLD RUSH BICYCLING
Gold Rush Bicycling. Soon after the snow retreats from Alaskan roads, bicyclists in sleek, colorful, body-hugging outfits begin zipping along with cars, pickups, and the earliest of what will become the summer profusion of motorhomes. Today’s cyclists had predecessors dating back well over a century. Terrence Cole, Professor of Historyat the
PRESIDENT HARDING’S VOYAGE OF UNDERSTANDING, JUNE 1923 Library of Congress. In June 1923 Harding started off on his trip across the country to Alaska, which he called the “Voyage of Understanding.”. Harding was not a very competent president, and his term in office was marred by scandals and scoundrels. Before his westward journey public confidence in the president was at a lowpoint, and he
HOONAH | ALASKA HISTORICAL SOCIETY PAF’s purchase of the Haines cannery—the company’s first venture into Alaska ’s fisheries—seems to have been untimely, because that year there was a great shortage of sockeye salmon in Lynn Canal.Of the five species of Alaska salmon, sockeye were by far the most desired by canners. The Canal’s principal sockeye streams, the Chilkat and Chilkoot rivers, had been, in the words of a Tlingit Indian children playing with a toy canoe in Taku Harbor south of Juneau, Alaska, May 25, 1905. Edward M. Kindle Collection, U.S.Geological Survey.
The Circle City fire station and water cart, circa 1905. On the fence the instructions say, “Ring Like Hell In Case of Fire.” Courtesyof Chris Allan.
A crowd gathering on the wharf in Ketchikan in Southeast Alaska, 1900. Courtesy of U.S. Geological Survey Photographic Library. The Alaska Steamship Company’s Steamship “Jefferson” in Skagway, Alaska, circa 1906. Courtesy Candy Waugaman. Loading a Northern Air Transport Ford Tri-Motor airplane, circa 1939. UAF-2010-50-362, Wien Family Papers, University of Alaska FairbanksArchives.
Fissures in the Seward Highway near Portage, Alaska following the Great Alaska Earthquake, March 27, 1964. Courtesy of U.S. Geological Survey Photographic Library. Can-Can girls at the Skagway Days of 98 celebration, 1960’s. Courtesy Candy Waugaman. “Game Coming to Market” — Residents of Eagle, Alaska pose in front of a sled loaded with caribou and Dall sheep, 1900. P277-4-52, James Wickersham Photographs, Alaska State Library. Eskimo men in kayaks, Noatak, Alaska, circa 1929. Edward S. Curtis Collection, Library of Congress Digital Collections. Crossing the Chilkoot Pass, circa 1898. Courtesy Candy Waugaman and Klondike Gold Rush National Historical Park. The gold rush boomtown of Nome on the Seward Peninsula, 1900. Courtesy of U.S. Geological Survey Photographic Library. Group on skis, circa 1900. UAF-1964-74-120, Charles S. Hamlin Papers, University of Alaska Fairbanks Archives. Stranding of the Princess May at Sentinel Island near Juneau, Alaska, August 5, 1910. Courtesy of U.S. Geological Survey PhotographicLibrary.
Syndicate Racing Team, Second Annual All-Alaska Sweepstakes, Nome, Alaska April 1st 1909. Copyright A. L. Bell. UAF-1984-192-68, Nome Dog Mushing Photographs, University of Alaska Fairbanks Archives.* Home
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WELCOME TO THE ALASKA HISTORICAL SOCIETYThe Alaska
Historical Society (AHS) is a non-profit, volunteer-based organization dedicated to the promotion of Alaska history by the exchange of ideas and information, the preservation and interpretation of resources, and the education of Alaskans about their heritage. Governed by a 15-member board, the Society provides a forum and a vehicle to achieve these goals. AHS is a membership organization with 430+ members. If you would like to join us, visit our membership page.
------------------------- Conference Information -------------------------RECENT BLOG ENTRIES
2021 CALL FOR PAPERS DATE POSTED: February 27, 2021 CATEGORIES: News “Communities Remembered and Imagined” Alaska Historical Society Annual Conference October 6-9 and 13-16, 2021 Call for Papers Alaska is full of once-thriving communities that now stand empty, or have vanished without a trace. Some were boom towns that grew up around a gold mine or processor, but shrank when the source of wealth dried up. ------------------------- 2021 STUDENT AND EMERGING PROFESSIONAL AWARDS DATE POSTED: April 15, 2021 CATEGORIES: News Student and Emerging Professional Awards Alaska Historical Society Annual Meeting and Conference, Communities Remembered and Imagined Virtual, October 6-9 and 13-16, 2021 The Alaska Historical Society offers two scholarship awards to attend its annual meeting and conference. One award is for a post-secondary student who is researching an Alaska history topic, and the other is ------------------------- 2021 AHS AWARDS: REQUEST FOR NOMINATIONS DATE POSTED: April 15, 2021 CATEGORIES: News Do you know individuals and groups which have done a worthy project, made long-term contributions to local history, made historical materials better known, or written a book that has contributed to the understanding and preservation of Alaska’s history this past year? It is time to nominate these folks for recognition by the AlaskaHistorical Society.
------------------------- AUCTION ENDS FRIDAY, MARCH 26 DATE POSTED: March 24, 2021 CATEGORIES: News Remember to check out the AHS Auction! Many wonderful books and ephemera! Take this opportunity to build your Alaskana collection or to acquire items to give as gifts. At the same time, you will be supporting the Alaska Historical Society. The annual auction is the organization’s primary fundraiser to support our programs. Encourageyour friends
------------------------- NEWSPAPER RESEARCH GUIDE DATE POSTED: March 15, 2021 CATEGORIES: News As of March 2021, a great new resource is now available in the AHS website’s For Researchers Section. Chris Allan, a historian with the National Park Service who is well known for his extensive use of historic newspapers to research innovative subjects, has prepared a guide called “The Newspaper Bonanza: How to Discover Alaska’s Past -------------------------Contact Us
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