REFERENCE CODE: AkAMH

REPOSITORY NAME:
Anchorage Museum at Rasmuson Center
Bob and Evangeline Atwood Alaska Resource Center
625 C Street
Anchorage, AK 99501
Phone: 907-929-9235
Fax: 907-929-9233
Email: resourcecenter@anchoragemuseum.org

Guide prepared by: Sara Piasecki, Archivist

TITLE: Steve McCutcheon Collection

COLLECTION NUMBER: B1990.014

OVERVIEW OF THE COLLECTION

Dates: circa 1890-1990

Extent: approximately 180 linear feet

Language and Scripts: The collection is in English.

Name of creator(s): Steve McCutcheon, P.S. Hunt, Sydney Laurence, Lomen Brothers, Don C.
Knudsen, Dolores Roguszka, Phyllis Mithassel, Alyeska Pipeline Services Co., Frank Flavin, Jim
Cacia, Randy Smith, Don Horter

Administrative/Biographical History:
Stephen Douglas McCutcheon was born in the small town of Cordova, AK, in 1911, just three
years after the first city lots were sold at auction. In 1915, the family relocated to Anchorage,
which was then just a tent city thrown up to house workers on the Alaska Railroad.
McCutcheon began taking photographs as a young boy, but it wasn’t until he found himself in
the small town of Curry, AK, working as a night roundhouse foreman for the railroad that he
set out to teach himself the art and science of photography. As a Deputy U.S. Marshall in
Valdez in 1940-1941, McCutcheon honed his skills as an evidential photographer; as assistant
commissioner in the state’s new Dept. of Labor, McCutcheon documented the cannery
industry in Unalaska. From 1942 to 1944, he worked as district manager for the federal Office
of Price Administration in Fairbanks, taking photographs of trading stations, communities and
residents of northern Alaska; he sent an album of these photos to Washington, D.C., “to show
them,” he said, “that things that applied in the South 48 didn’t necessarily apply to Alaska.”
1

1 Emanuel, Richard P. Steve McCutcheon's Alaska, Alaska geographic, v. 25, no. 1, p. 35


McCutcheon was drafted into the Army in July 1944 and received an assignment as a combat
photographer for the 14th
/ Signal Service Company. His military service was short: in January
1946, he was elected to fill the territorial Senate seat vacated by the death of his father,
Herbert. That same year, he started his first business, Mac’s Foto, developing film, producing
prints, and selling photography supplies. Soon, he branched out into commercial photography.
Obtaining a private pilot’s license in 1949, McCutcheon took annual aerial shots of Anchorage;
a hunting guide license allowed him to work with hunters shooting films of backcountry
expeditions. His stock photographs of the local flora and fauna, geological features, glaciers,
and other natural features, as well as Alaska Native culture, earned him an international
reputation..

McCutcheon retired from electoral politics in 1953, but was elected one of seven delegates-at-
large to the Alaska Constitutional Convention in 1955. While chairing the committee on the
legislature, he compiled what remains the most complete photographic record of the
Convention in existence.

The Good Friday Earthquake of 1964 destroyed McCutcheon’s photo shop but provided a
boon in jobs to document damage for insurance purposes. Between customer contracts and
his own desire to capture the event, he created a huge catalog of images of the destruction.
He and printer Steve Hafling partnered on a small book, Alaskan Earthquake Pictorial, which
sold 20,000 copies.

In 1970, McCutcheon was again at the center of history in the making, when he became the
first official photographer for the Alyeska Pipeline Service Company, builders of the Trans-
Alaska Pipeline System. Over the course of seven years he took more than 30,000
photographs, capturing the lives of pipeline workers as well as the technical aspects of this
major engineering achievement.

Throughout his multifaceted career, McCutcheon “used his camera to record the history he
was helping to make.”
2 He captured the history of Alaska during a time when few gave any
thought to the epic transformations going on around them. In the process, he documented
lives lived on a rugged frontier, a meeting of cultures, the building of a civilization, the
triumphant development of natural resources, and the changing landscape of a northern
region impacted by climate change. In McCutcheon’s photographs are lessons for any who
would study the history of America’s pioneering spirit, the traditions and accommodations of
Alaska Native peoples, the history of technology in extreme climates, the dominance of oil in
modern society, or the effects of climate on man and nature.


Scope and Content Description:

2 Emanuel, p. 47

There are approximately 125 glass lantern slides, 11 glass plate negatives, 4200 prints, 95,000
negatives, and 92,500 slides. The negative and slide images comprise the bulk of
McCutcheon’s commercial work and stock library, and focus particularly on the oil, fishing, and
timber industries; Alaska politics and statehood; construction; earth sciences; the 1964 Alaska
Earthquake; and Anchorage and other Alaskan communities. There are also numerous non-
Alaskan images from around the United States and various international locations. Materials
in Series 1-2 and 6-7 are images collected by McCutcheon during the course of his career.

Arrangement:
The collection is arranged in eight series: 1. Prints collected by McCutcheon. 2. Glass plate
negatives. 3. Trans-Alaska Pipeline System (TAPS) prints. 4. Transparencies. 5. Film negatives.
6. P.S. Hunt glass lantern slides. 7. Panoramas. 8. 2018 Addendum.
See below for further subdivisions within series.


CONDITIONS GOVERNING ACCESS AND USE

Restrictions on Access: The bulk of the collection is open for research use. Images used in
litigation are restricted.

Physical Access: Different series have different physical access requirements. Access to glass
materials is limited. Some negatives have been moved to the freezer.

Technical Access: No special equipment is needed to access the materials.

Conditions Governing Reproduction and Use:
The Anchorage Museum is the owner of the materials and makes available reproductions for
research, publication, and other uses. Written permission must be obtained from the
Anchorage Museum before any reproduction use. The Anchorage Museum does not
necessarily hold copyright to all of the materials in the collections. In some cases, permission
for use may require seeking additional authorization from the copyright owners. Images in
Series 3 (TAPS) are works-for-hire under copyright to Alyeska Pipeline Services Co.

Preferred Citation:
[Photographer’s name], Steve McCutcheon Collection; Anchorage Museum, B1990.014.[series
number].[photo number]

ADMINISTRATIVE INFORMATION

Acquisition and Appraisal Information:
The McCutcheon collection was donated to the Anchorage Museum over the period 1990-
1999. An addendum, including slides, negatives, photo prints, publications, ephemera, objects,
and manuscript materials, was received from the estate of Gloria McCutcheon in July 2018.


Processing Notes
During his lifetime, McCutcheon organized and described his materials before transferring
them to the Museum. His arrangement has been maintained within the negative and slide
series. Initial processing of the collection focused on the photographic prints, which were most
accessible for patron use. Guides to the subject subdivisions within the negative and slide
series were developed by Museum staff for in-house patron use.

Over 700 images from the Trans-Alaska Pipeline System series were digitized and loaded into
the Alaska Digital Archives in 2007.

In 2009, the Bob and Evangeline Atwood Alaska Resource Center (ARC) was awarded a grant
of $50,000 from the Alaska Community Foundation’s Anchorage Statehood Celebration Fund
to process and scan 35,000 negatives contained in the McCutcheon Collection over a two-year
period. In 2010, the ARC received a digital collection cataloging grant in the amount of
$18,840 from the Interlibrary Cooperation Grant program administered by the Alaska State
Library, to be used for metadata capture for 10,000 images. As of May 10, 2011, 13,864
negatives have been scanned and 7537 metadata records have been created in the Museum’s
integrated database system, The Museum System (TMS).

In 2015, staff began reorganizing Series 4 from original slide drawers into subseries that mirror
the subseries in Series 5. Work temporarily ceased in 2018.

In 2018, processing of the addendum from the estate of Gloria McCutcheon began with
incorporation of slides and 4 x 5 negative materials into existing series (4 and 5). A collection
of circa 2200 35mm strip negatives, dating from the period 1939-1942, were rehoused,
scanned, and removed to freezer. Ephemera was sorted into existing Vertical Files, and
publications were transferred to cataloging.

Separated Materials
Panoramas and glass materials filed separately. Nitrate negatives and deteriorating acetate
negatives removed to freezer.

Note
Processing of this collection is ongoing. This guide is not intended as a complete description of
the collection.

RELATED MATERIALS
CIHS McCutcheon, B1964.x.006
McCutcheon Prints, B2003.011

SUBJECTS
Alaska—Photographs

Detailed Description of the Collection


Series 1: Prints collected by McCutcheon
[235 b&w images, 37 color photomechanical postcards.
Images 1-206 attributed to collection of Lyda May Kellogg (b. 1859)
Images 207-255 are Albertypes taken by Case & Draper, mounted in album titled “The gold
fields of the Klondike,” copyright 1899, J.B. Prather, Douglas, Alaska.
Descriptions by Museum Volunteer George Darrow]

.1.1 - Hotel Dexter Golovin Bay [group of people and dog team gathered in front of hotel, circa
1900-1901]
.1.2 - [dog sled team on winter street in front of building, possibly Golovin Bay]
.1.3 - Golovin Bay camp, 1900-1901
.1.4 - Selling a mat [two men wearing parkas, one on right holding mat, buildings in
background]
.1.5 - Mission church [Golovin Mission church on right, sod house at left]
.1.6 - Going out to stake gold claims, winter 1901 [two men harnessing reindeer to freight sled
loaded with cargo]
.1.7 - Preparing to start [two men with freight sled being pulled by reindeer]
.1.8 - [two men standing with reindeer harnessed to freight sled]
.1.9 - Starting for a long stampede up the Koyuk River [three people with sled being pulled by
reindeer. Original image badly faded]
.1.10 - Native houses [Inupiat dwellings]
.1.11 - Albert Burke reindeer [two men standing with reindeer]
.1.12 - 1894, Chinik, Alaska. Photo by Frank H. Nowell. The four buildings in the foreground are
Mission buildings including chapel with small square tower which was also the school house.
The larger building in this picture is the hotel. The long building to the left of the hotel is the
warehouse of the Wild Goose Co., of which Mr. C.D. Lane from president. [between 1898-
1911]
.1.13 - Mary & child [Inupiat mother and child]
.1.14 - Eskimo hut [person standing in front of Inupiat dwelling, sled in foreground, log
building at right]
.1.15 - Hauling ice [man with dog team and sled]
.1.16 - Mollie and her children [woman wearing white parka sitting with two children in sled
basket, man standing on runners]
.1.17 - Jennie and Charlie [Inupiat children standing in front of wooden building]
.1.18 - Sledding [two children in sled, Alaska Native man standing behind sled, second man
partially visible at right, Hotel Dexter upper left, Golovin]
.1.19 - Sinrock Mary's reindeer herd, 1500 deer, is biggest herd in Alaska [Changunak
Antisarlook Andrewuk, 1870-1948]
.1.20 - Native dogs [two dogs with sled. Original image badly faded]
.1.21 - Jeannie [?] and Uncle Ed [man and woman wearing parka and sunglasses sitting on
chairs on boardwalk in front of clapboard building, each holding small child]
.1.22 - Two white men [two men under a shed roof in front of a corrugated tin building, man
on right sitting on snow berm]

.1.23 - Mr. Griffin, post master at Golovin and his clerk, Mr. McCutcheon [H.H. McCutcheon,
circa 1900-1908]
.1.24 - [four men with three reindeer, two reindeer harnessed to sleds]
.1.25 - Eskimo dogs
.1.26 - Dog sled [two children in sled, man wearing eyeglasses standing behind sled, second
man visible at right, Hotel Dexter on left, Golovin]
.1.27 - Hotel Dexter, Golovin Bay [two dogs and sled in front of hotel]
.1.28 - Mission church [Golovin Mission church, sod house in center]
.1.29 - Cache
.1.30 - Eskimo girl, O Duk Dock [Inupiat girl wearing parka posed in front of log cabin]
.1.31 - Grandma Adams, Little Jessie D. and O Duk Dock [three people posed in front of log
cabin]
.1.31a - An Eskimo family [on verso:] Anchorage, Alaska, 1925. Eskimo woman and white
husband. Mrs. George Ashenfelter and her children
.1.32 - Fourth Ave., Anchorage [street scene, with businesses including Doctor [?] Retail
Pharmacy, Carrol & Co., Bank of Anchorage, Brown & Hawkins, Cow's Cream, circa 1917]
.1.33 - Anchorage dock. McCann [photographic postcard. Alaska Railroad tracks and buildings
along Ship Creek]
.1.34 - Admiral Evans at dock, Anchorage, 1920 [steamship at dock. Manuscript note from H.J.
Bell to Mrs. Kellogg on verso]
.1.35 - Gov. R.R. office bldg., Anchorage [photographic postcard. Alaska Railroad building]
.1.36 - Gov. hospital, Anchorage [photographic postcard. Alaska Railroad hospital]
.1.37 - New Pres. Ch. and parsonage at Anchorage, Mr. McBride, pastor [First Presbyterian
Church, circa 1916]
.1.38 - Post office, Anchorage, Alaska. Strye Photo [photographic postcard, circa 1917]
.1.39 - Anchorage, summer of 1915 [photographic postcard. Tent city]
.1.40 - The Loop, Alaska Railroad. In the building of the Alaska Railroad from Seward to
Fairbanks, many obstacles had to be overcome and one of the greatest engineering feats in
the construction was the building of the famous Loop at mile 50 [color photomechanical
postcard]
.1.41 - Nellie Brown
.1.42 - Nellie Edythe Brown, Anchorage, Alaska
.1.43 - Claim No. 6, "'49 Gulch Bench." W.C. Wilkins, Aug. '99 [on verso:] Rich mine in
Klondyke, McCutcheon [seven men at a placer mine in the Klondike, man at lower right
shoveling dirt into a rocker box]
.1.44 - Dawsun July 4th
/ . Lorenzo E. Robertson [on verso:] Dawson, 1899 [street scene, with
horse-drawn cart and signs for businesses including Klondike Trading Co., Ryan Trading,
Bartlett Bros. Packers and Forwarders, W.M. Gorman]
.1.45 - Celebrating in Dawson, July 4th
/ , 1899. Lorenzo E. Robertson [on verso:] This is a view of
Dawson, Alaska [sic] on July 4, 1899. E.E. Kellogg present also his father Timothy Kellogg
[street scene, with American flags flying from buildings in center, signs for businesses
including Hoffman House Bar and Grill, The Dominion, Moss and Kreling, Pond & Co. Souvenir
Jewelry, Northern Café Bakery

.1.46 - Berry & Rich claim on Eldorado. Kell[y?] [on verso:] Old mines in the Klondyke [mining
camp on Eldorado Creek, Yukon Territory, with several flumes visible. Possibly W.P. Kelly
photographer]
.1.47 - Canadian Bank of Commerce, Dawson City
.1.48 - Looking down Eldorado [on verso:] In the Klondyke [mining camp on Eldorado Creek,
Yukon Territory, with two log cabins in center, several flumes visible]
.1.49 - Bard & Journel claims No. 60 Below Bonanza. W.C. Wilkins, Aug. 12th
/ , '99 [mining
operation, with log cabin and flumes]
.1.50 - The Saunders sisters in Dawson, summer of 1898 [four women, six men, and dog sitting
on hillside]
.1.51 - The great Klondyke Basin [on verso:] Mouth of Klondyke [Klondike River]
.1.52 - Dawson St. in 1898 [street scene, with people, musher with dog team and sled, and
signs for businesses including John McDonald Tailor, Geo. Brewitt, Kellogg Steam Laundry &
Baths]
.1.53 - A patch of peas in Days Addition, Dawson. L.E. Robertson, photo [on verso:] Garden in
Dawson [picket fence surrounding vegetable garden, three log cabins in background, man and
dog at right]
.1.54 - Klondyke Bridge [suspension bridge over Klondike River at Dawson, Yukon River in
background]
.1.55 - Gold Hill, Klondyke [mining, Klondike]
.1.56 - Claim at mouth French Gulch, Aug. 14th
/ , '99. W.C. Wilkins [on verso:] [illegible] the
Klondyke [mining operation at French Hill, with two flumes, men operating small boiler for
thawing ground]
.1.57 - French Hill. W.P. Kelly [on verso:] In the Klondyke [mining, Klondike]
.1.58 - 11 Aug. 1962, Westminster Hotel, Dawson City, Yukon Terr. [possibly Max Sherrod on
left, with unidentified couple at birthday party]
.1.59 - Educated Eskimos of Alaska, graduates of Carlisle University. Frank H. Nowell [on
verso:] No. 90598 publ. by Portland Post Card Co., Portland, Ore. and Seattle, Wash. (Made in
Germany) [Color photomechanical postcard. Two Alaska Native women wearing Western style
clothing, students of Carlisle Industrial Indian School between 1879-1918]
.1.60 - An Eskimo beauty. Edward H. Mitchell, San Francisco [Color photomechanical postcard.
Alaska Native woman wearing fur parka]
.1.61 - Eskimo woman and child. Edward H. Mitchell, San Francisco [Color photomechanical
postcard. Alaska Native mother and child]
.1.62 - Mickaninie's kow kow [Color photomechanical postcard. Alaska Native mother nursing
two children]
.1.63 - "Obleka" [studio portrait of Alaska Native woman wearing fur parka. Photographer
Frank H. Nowell, 1907]
.1.64 - Eskimo Mickaninnies on parade. Edward H. Mitchell, San Francisco [Color
photomechanical postcard. Alaska Native women and children standing in front of two walled
tents]
.1.65 - Kit-Le-Lourigen, East Cape, Siberia. Frank H. Nowell [on verso:] Publ. by Portland Post
Card Co., Portland, Ore. And Seattle, Wash. (Made in Germany) [Color photomechanical
postcard. Studio portrait of Siberian Yupik man, 1905]

.1.66 - Eskimo drying fish. Edward H. Mitchell, San Francisco [Alaska Native man wearing
traditional clothing standing in front of fish drying rack]
.1.67 - Chief of Little Diomede Islands and family, Behring Straits. F.H. Nowell [on verso:]
90532 publ. by Portland Post Card Co., Portland, Ore. and Seattle, Wash. (Made in Germany)
[Color photomechanical postcard. Inupiat family]
.1.68 - Residence of E.E. Kellogg [on verso:] E.E. Kellogg's wife and son in picture, about 1908,
Fairbanks, Alaska. This is our house in Fairbanks. From Frank Kellogg
.1.69 - Beauty contest girls sent from different towns, Fairbanks Ice Carnival, 1936 [six
contestants standing in front of ice carving, flanked by two Royal Canadian Mounted Police
men; left to right sashes read Miss Nenana, Miss Anchorage, Miss Dawson, Miss Alaska, Miss
Fairbanks, Miss University]
.1.70 - E.E. Kellogg under the x. His machine shop in Fairbanks [on verso:] From Ed to May
Kellogg, Fairbanks, Alaska. Our store, and just as we started for the Kuskokwim in December
1911. We had 7 dogs but the photo only shows two, the plate was too small [six men and two
women standing in front of the B.H. & K. Hardware Store. Ed E. Kellogg marked with 'x'. Two
dogs with sled in foreground]
.1.71 - Fairbanks, Alaska [Alaska Railroad bridge over the Tanana River, Northern Hotel on far
right]
.1.72 - Fairbanks, Zeppala dog team. Mr. Zeppala & daughter in sled. Fairbanks Ice Carnival,
1936 [Leonhard Seppala and Sigrid Seppala]
.1.73 - Treadwell Mine, 300 stamp mill, vanner room [on verso:] Published by Edw. H. Mitchell,
San Francisco, for J.B. Caro & Co., Inc., Juneau, Alaska [Color photomechanical postcard.
Interior, Alaska Treadwell Gold Mining Company]
.1.74 – Treadwell Mine, Alaska, boarding house, main dining room. [on verso:] Published by
Edw. H. Mitchell, San Francisco, for J.B. Caro & Co., Inc., Juneau, Alaska [postcard]
.1.75 – C-148. Juneau, Alaska, looking down Gastineau Channel [on verso:] Juneau, the capitol
of Alaska, is situated on Gastineau Channel about 1,033 miles northwest of Seattle. The
settlement and development of Juneau depend largely on mining, it being situated in what is
known as the Juneau Gold Belt [Color photomechanical postcard]
.1.76 – Tuxecan totems near Wrangell, Alaska [Color photomechanical postcard. Totem poles
at Tuxekan]
.1.77 – Totem, Indian grave, Alaska [photographic postcard. Mortuary pole, with blackfish
totem over box]
.1.78 – Treadwell Mine, 300 stamp mill, battery floor, “B” side [on verso:] Published by Edw. H.
Mitchell, San Francisco, for J.B. Caro & Co., Inc., Juneau, Alaska [Color photomechanical
postcard. Interior with batteries]
.1.79 – Totem pole of Thlinget Chief Kian, Ketchikan [on verso:] One of the most noted of the
totem poles of Ketchikan is the famous Totem Pole of Chief Kian. It is surmounted by the
fabled bird Kajuk. Below this bird is an eagle and below the eagle is the wolf [Color
photomechanical postcard. Chief Kyan pole]
.1.80 – Famous Chief Shake’s Totem, Wrangell, Alaska [on verso:] Geo. Shake’s Totem,
sometimes called the Raven Totem, is surmounted by the Raven Creator. The box is the chief’s
box, supposed to have spiritual power. Below is the young Raven, the creator of man. Below is

the daughter of the creator and the mother of the young creator [Color photomechanical
postcard. Chief Shakes totem pole]
.1.81 – Mendenhall Glacier and Auk Lake, near Juneau, Alaska [on verso:] Mendenhall Glacier.
It is situated about 15 miles north of Juneau on a beautiful boulevard built and maintained by
the U.S. Bureau of Roads. From the glacier the highway continues and crosses the Mendenhall
River and around the “Loop” affording a view of beautiful Auk Lake [Color photomechanical
postcard. View from Auke Lake]
.1.82 – “Mazama” or mountain goats, killed by W.H. Case, Juneau, Alaska [on verso:] Published
by Edw. H. Mitchell, San Francisco, for J.B. Caro & Co., Inc., Juneau, Alaska [Color
photomechanical postcard. Two men and a young girl looking over the results of a hunt for
mountain goats. Case possibly on right, holding rifle]
.1.83 – Mendenhall’s Glacier, near Juneau, Alaska [on verso:] Mendenhall Glacier, situated
about fifteen miles north of Juneau, can be reached by auto. This glacier perhaps is the
greatest attraction to tourists inasmuch as they are able to get a much better idea of the
formation of a glacier in general [Color photomechanical postcard]
.1.84 – Juneau, Alaska [on verso:] Juneau, the capital of Alaska, is situated on Gastineau
Channel about 1,033 miles northwest of Seattle. The settlement and development of Juneau
depend largely on mining, it being situated in what is known as the “Juneau Gold Belt.” [Color
photomechanical postcard. Waterfront, with Juneau-Douglas Bridge and Douglas Island at left]
.1.85 – Night view, Juneau, Alaska [on verso:] Juneau at night. Moonlight on the waters of
Gastineau Channel presents a scene of unsurpassed beauty. Electrical illumination of the city
and surroundings are modern in every respect. Photographer: Winter & Pond [Color
photomechanical postcard. Juneau in foreground, Douglas Island at right]
.1.86 – Log cabin Pres. Church, Juneau, Alaska [Photographic postcard. Exterior of Presbyterian
Church]
.1.87a – Russian Church, Sitka, Alaska [on verso:] St. Michael’s Cathedral. This remarkable
edifice built in 1817 in the form of a cross is the most historic shrine of religion on the Pacific
Coast. The cathedral is equipped according to the lavish customs of Imperial Russia, with gold
and silver trimmings, jeweled crowns, robes of costly textures, and paintings of rare beauty
and inestimable value [Color photomechanical postcard. St. Michael the Archangel Cathedral]
.1.87b – Alaska Juneau Mine and Juneau, Alaska [on verso:] Alaska-Juneau Mine. Juneau is
situated in what is known as the “Juneau Gold Belt.” Placer gold was first discovered in the
Juneau district in the early ‘80’s in Gold Creek. Later prospectors discovered gold quartz
deposit in the hills back of Juneau. The development of these prospects resulted in operations
of a number of mining properties, the principle one of which is the Alaska-Juneau Gold Mine
[Color photomechanical postcard. Juneau in left foreground, Mount Juneau in center
background, mine at right]
.1.88 – Taku maid [Photographic postcard. Nude woman standing on ice floe, Taku Glacier in
background. Winter & Pond, photographers]
.1.89 – City Hall, Juneau, Alaska. J.B. Caro & Co., Inc.
.1.90 – Treadwell Mines, Alaska, showing Juneau in distance [on verso:] The Treadwell Mines
were the first to demonstrate the possibility of the treatment of low-grade ore in Alaska. The
small plant constructed soon after the discovery of the mine has been increased to a capacity
of 880 stamps. Concentrates are treated by the cyanide process. Photographer W.P. Co. [Color

photomechanical postcard. Mine in foreground, Gastineau Channel in center, Juneau in far
distance at left]
.1.91 – State House, Juneau [on verso:] Alaska’s capital, Juneau, Alaska. Built by the U.S.
government, this building is also called the federal building. The Governor’s Office, Legislature
chambers, federal court, post office, telegraph office, federal agencies, and the Alaskan
Museum are located here. Howard C. Robinson, photographer [Color photomechanical
postcard]
.1.92 – Juneau and Douglas, Alaska, showing new bridge [on verso:] Juneau-Douglas Bridge.
For many years, communication between these two pioneer Alaska cities was entirely by ferry.
Recently there has been a modern bridge built across the channel greatly simplifying travel
between these cities [Color photomechanical postcard. Bridge at left, Douglas Island in
foreground, Juneau in distance. After 1935]
.1.93 – Alaska capitol building, Juneau, Alaska [on verso:] Federal and territorial building,
constructed in 1930 at cost of approximately $750,000 houses all federal and territorial
offices, post office, cable office, and territorial museum [Color photomechanical postcard]
.1.94 – Ketchikan, Alaska. Thwaites [Photographic postcard. waterfront view from Tongass
Narrows]
.1.95 – The totem poles, Alert Bay, Vancouver Island, B.C. [on verso:] Alert Bay seems to be
the most southerly boundary of the country that uses totem poles. The Ninikish Indians of
Alert Bay are different in language and customs from all the tribes of the north. The totem
poles, however, have characteristics somewhat similar [Color photomechanical postcard]
.1.96 – Ku-Seaa, Thlinget woman, Sitka, Alaska. W.H. Case [Photographic postcard. Portrait of
Tlingit woman]
.1.97 – Native women weaving baskets, Alaska. Winter & Pond Co. [Color photomechanical
postcard. Three Tlingit women weaving grass baskets. A child in a cradle board is on the right.
A nursing bottle is on the ground in front of the cradle board. Circa 1897]
.1.98 – Haines and Fort W.H. Seward, Alaska [on verso:] Construction of Fort W.H. Seward, a
U.S. military post, was commenced in 1903. Two companies of infantry are now stationed
here. Haines was established soon after the discovery of placer gold in the Porcupine District
fifty miles northwest of this point. It has since been the base of supplies for this district, with
the hope of someday becoming a railway terminal for one of the most logical routes to the
interior of Alaska. W.P. Co. [Color photomechanical postcard. Fort in the left foreground, with
Army dock extending into Chilkoot Inlet]
.1.99 – Indian village, Alaska [Color photomechanical postcard. Waterfront view of Haida
village of Klinkwan, with totem poles in front of houses and church in left background]
.1.100 – Chilkat salmon cannery, Chilkat, Alaska [Color photomechanical postcard. Panoramic
view of cannery on Chilkat Inlet]
.1.101 – Totems at Kas-saan, Alaska [on verso:] Kassan totems [Haida village of Kasaan,
showing totem poles in front of houses]
.1.102 – Whale totem, Fort Wrangle. LaRoche Photo [on verso:] Big totem pole [top portion of
Go-na-ka-dot totem at Wrangell. A log building surrounded by a picket fence is in the
background. Circa 1897]
.1.103 – Mission school, Sitka. LaRoche Photo [on verso:] Sitka [Sitka Industrial and Training
School]

.1.104 – Edwin Jones, Ketchikan, Alaska. Stationary engineer, Citizens Light Power & Water
[Edwin Jones standing on pier holding fishing rod and reel and salmon]
.1.105 – [barkentine Phyllis Comyn]
.1.106 – Steamship “Corwin” in Alaskan waters [Color photomechanical postcard]
.1.107 – Steamship “Mariposa” in Alaskan waters, Alaska Steamship Company [on verso:] The
“Mariposa,” one of the three biggest liners of the Alaska Steamship Company, is equipped
with wireless telegraph apparatus and is famous for the social life that is a distinct feature of
the ships of the Alaska Steamship Company. Noted for the specially constructed aft large
observation smoking room where bridge whist and other games can be enjoyed as the
steamer passes through the scenery [Color photomechanical postcard]
.1.108 – A.C. Co.’s steamer “Admiral Sampson”. W.H. Case [Color photomechanical postcard]
.1.109 – U.S. battleship Maryland at Seward, Alaska [on verso:] The U.S. battleship Maryland
was sent to Alaskan waters to test the steaming qualities of the many undeveloped coal
deposits. This view shows the Maryland at anchor in the beautiful harbor of Seward [Color
photomechanical postcard]
.1.110 – [steamship Northwestern at dock]
.1.111 – [Russian Orthodox Church of St. Herman at Kodiak, two large fuel tanks at right, with
Standard Oil Company building below the tanks. Fuel drums on dock in foreground, man
aboard ship at right]
.1.112 - [Color photomechanical postcard. Same as .109]
.1.113 – S.S. Jefferson, Juneau, Alaska. Elite Studio [Photographic postcard. Ship in Gastineau
Channel]
.1.114 – Kodiak, Alaska. Thwaites [Photographic postcard. Waterfront with docks]
.1.115 – Kodiak celebrities. Standing: Jorgen Frederickson, Charles D. [Olopp?], R.O. Chadwick,
Warren Taylor, Harry Becker. Sitting: Mrs. Ben Kraft (Edna), Velma Ameling, Carter D.D.S., W.J.
Erskine
.1.116 – S.S. Walla Walla [on verso:] San Francisco. Steamship leaving for Alaska [crossed out:]
Taken by May Kellogg now in Alaska
.1.117 – Mrs. Rush Yost Coffee, 2. Max Sherrod RSN, 3. Dr. Earl Albrecht, 4. Mrs. Johnson, 5.
Dr. Pollock DDS, Katherine Powers, in front of Palmer Hospital. Ordway [circa 1936]
.1.118 – Matanuska Junction just started in July 1916 [two men and woman on the Alaska
Railroad right-of-way at Matanuska Junction. Man on the left is hewing wood from a heavy
beam]
.1.119 – Ross Sheeley, manager, Palmer, Alaska; private secretary Lois M. Spencer. Ordway
[circa 1936]
.1.120 – Mt. McKinley, Alaska, 20,300 ft. in height. Sydney Laurence
.1.121 – Bonanza Mine, Alaska [mine at Kennecott]
.1.122 - $1,200,000 in gold from Alaska [Photographic postcard]
.1.123a – Nome [on verso:] Post office at Nome [large group of men standing in front of
building, dog team with supply-laden sled in foreground]
.1.123b – F.H. Nowell [two reindeer with sleds]
.1.124 – Steamers at Nome, Alaska [on verso:] Nome city and hills from the steamer, Oct.
1899. Taken by May Kellogg in Alaska [three steamships in the roadstead]

.1.125 – Wrecks on Nome beach in summer 1900. The “Harriet” (schooner) [schooner Harriet
of Chicago at left, second schooner at right]
.1.126 – [Nome, circa 1898-1900, with Norton Sound on the left. Three mining flumes in
center, two horses pulling construction materials in center foreground]
.1.127 – [Photographic postcard. S.S. Northwestern in icy waters]
.1.128 – Eskimo ivory carver. Copyrighted by F.H. Nowell, 1904 [Alaska Native man carving,
holding adze in right hand]
.1.129 – Claim No. 9 on Anvil Creek, Nome, Alaska. One of the richest claims in all Alaska
[eleven men working in a placer mine on Anvil Creek east of Nome. The large device in the left
foreground is a rotating sieve-like device called a trammel that is used to separate finer
material from coarse material. A man holding a shovel for loading the trammel is partially
visible]
.1.130 – P.H. Anderson, Oakland, Cal. [?] [on verso:] P.H. Anderson owner #9 & #2 on Anvil
Creek in Nome about 1901
.1.131 – Claim #4 on Anvil Creek [six men working a mining flume]
.1.132 – No. 9, Anvil Creek [on verso:] Claim no. 9 on Anvil Creek, Nome, Alaska [seven men
working a sluice box. A flume leading up to the sluice box is visible to the right of the man in
the center]
.1.133 – Eskimo woman cleaning tomcod. F.H. Nowell [Alaska Native woman cleaning fish]
.1.134 – Nome, Alaska, July 1900. Dobbs [bird’s eye view of tents and supplies on beach]
.1.135 – Nome, 1900 [?] [men on street in Nome, laundry on clothesline at left, walled tents
on the right]
.1.136 – Cabin in Nome [exterior of cabin, rocker box for gold mining to right of pipe in center]
.1.137 – [people on street in front of The Elk in Nome. The Sideboard Saloon is on the left]
.1.138 – Nome, Alaska [Alaska Commercial Co. A new building is under construction at left]
.1.139 – [people on dirt street in front of the Seattle Saloon in Nome. Sign at left for Bohemian
Beer. Sign over door reads, in part, “The Lowell”]
.1.140 – Nome, Alaska [street scene, man leading horse in foreground]
.1.141 – Skin boat [overturned umiak on the bank of the Nome River, buildings of Nome visible
in background]
.1.142 – Eskimos at Nome [group of Alaska Natives loading an umiak on the Nome River, kayak
at right, buildings of Nome in background]
.1.143 – Nome beach [tents on the beach. Two gold pans are visible in the wooden crate in left
foreground. A gold pan, bucket, and stove are in front of the tent on the left. Two men are
working a rocker box in center. Bering Sea is on the right]
.1.144 – Nome beach [tents on the beach. An overturned dory is visible at right. A large boiler
is visible in the center. Bering Sea is on the left]
.1.145 – Dredging in Nome [bucket dredge on the Nome River]
.1.146 – Nome [two ships in the Bering Sea roadstead at Nome]
.1.147 – Steamers at Nome [three ships in the Bering Sea roadstead at Nome]
.1.148 – Landing at Nome [man standing on the landing stage at right is attaching a line from
the boom over his head to lighter full of passengers. A stack of bags and a group of pipes,
along with other cargo, is in the left foreground. Three dories, one with raised mast, are visible
in the Bering Sea. Seventeen ships are visible on the horizon]

.1.149 – [people, tents, and cargo on the beach at Nome, Bering Sea in background]
.1.150 – Lighters at Nome [lighter loaded with passengers on the beach. Passengers and cargo
loading or unloading via a ramp. Two more loading ramps are in the foreground. A man in a
dory is visible at left]
.1.151 – [small boat from the ship Catherine Sudden lies on the beach at Nome. A man in a
dory is in the center. The wreck of the Catherine Sudden is visible on the horizon. The ship was
wrecked in June 1900]
.1.152 – Beach at Nome, 1900 [dories, men, and cargo on the beach. Two horses pulling a cart
are visible above the wooden ramp at center. A wooden landing stage containing a winch and
cable is on the right. Bering Sea at upper left]
.1.153 – [beach scene at Nome. A wharf with a building on it is on the left. A dory is on the
right, and a sailboat with a lowered mast is visible behind the small boat at center. Bering Sea
in background]
.1.154 – Nome, Alaska [men, cargo, and tents on the beach. Flag in center has a large “V” on
it]
.1.155 – Cooper’s Landing bunch, Frank Towle, Arne Sundby, Dunk Rittle (deceased), Clara
Manthey, Gus Manthey, Mrs. Charlie Lien [?], Mrs. Frank E. Towle, Bettie Sundby
.1.156 – Iris Rosswog, Genevieve, Lois Means, Joe Rosswog, Mother Beth Means, Tommy
Nestor, Bill Ward, Earl “Bob” Means, Charles Nestor, Fr. Melbourne, Elsie Rosswog, Marie,
Cordova?
.1.157 – [group of unidentified men and women standing in front of wall with sign “We
trample on impossibilities”]
.1.158 – Harold Painter, City Clerk, Seward, Alaska
.1.159 – Robert Kuvara, Feb. 13, 1938
.1.160 – Milo Vance Jockovich, 1 yr.
.1.161 – Olive Audette Cannon, Jim Galen’s bookkeeper, 1917
.1.162 – May Bloom, first girl born in Seward Hospital, Barbara Jean Kellogg, Lori Ellen Shuster,
Bonny Lou Douglas, Seward youngsters 1939 [group portrait with other unidentified children]
.1.163 – Edward E. Cushman, 1911 [Judge Cushman standing in front of office entrance]
.1.164 – August term district court, Unga, Alaska, 1910 [Judge Edward E. Cushman third from
right, and other members of the court standing on steps in front of building]
.1.165 – [missing, number never assigned?]
.1.166 – Camping [illegible] Lake Bennett [two men cooking a meal on a camp stove in front of
a tent at Bennett Lake, B.C.]
.1.167 – Miles Canyon [Yukon River]
.1.168 – Miles Canyon [on verso:] Miles Canyon from the trail, Northwest Territory near White
Horse Rapids. Taken by May Kellogg
.1.169 – Miles Canyon in [illegible]. L.E. Robertson [man transiting Miles Canyon on the Yukon
River in a raft with a mast]
.1.170 – White Horse Rapids [four men transiting White Horse Rapids on the Yukon River in a
raft. The men in the bow and stern are steering with oars. Two men in the center appear to be
bailing. A man is standing on the riverbank at right]
.1.171 – Dog team bound for Dawson. M.K.S. [unidentified man standing with dog team and
sled]

.1.172 – Running White Horse Rapids, June 1899. L.E. Robertson [men transiting White Horse
Rapids on Yukon River in a raft. Man standing on riverbank at right]
.1.173 – Skagway River near the summit of White Pass, Alaska. Taken from the train July 1899
[scenery on White Pass & Yukon Route]
.1.174 – At Whitehorse [on verso:] Sheep in meadow at White Horse Rapids, N.W.T., taken in
July 1899
.1.175 – White Horse Rapids, Northwest Territory. Taken in July 1899 [unidentified man on
riverbank]
.1.176 – Trail over White Pass in 1898 [group of men on White Pass Trail. The man in the
center is riding a horse being led by man at extreme right, who is sitting on a crate labeled
“Reindeer Evaporated Cream”]
.1.177 – Porcupine Canyon, White Pass [group of men with pack horses on a frozen stream
bed in winter. One of the horses is pulling a small sled]
.1.178 – Launching the Gleaner at Lake Bennett, Alaska [riverboat Gleaner at Bennett Lake,
B.C.]
.1.179 – Cabin on Bonanza Creek, Klondyke [two men and two women, one holding basket of
flowers, standing in front of log cabin, Klondike]
.1.180 – City Hall at Skagway, Alaska, in 1899 [two women and man standing on boardwalk in
front of log cabin]
.1.181 – Street scene in Skagway [pack horse standing in a dirt street. The building behind the
tall pole is a hotel]
.1.182 – U.S. District Court officials, Third Div., Alaska. P.S. Hunt [on verso:] 1911 courthouse
people, Judge Edward E. Cushman, Clerk of Court Ed. M. Larkin, U.S. Marshal Harvey Sullivan,
Dist. Attorney George R. Walker, Kathryn Galen Deputy Clerk, Ike Hamburger court reporter
[additional names on verso:] De Lind, Jim Fish, Bourse, Tom Scott, George Gashaw
.1.183 – Millard (deceased), George M. Brown, Frank Boyle deceased, Judge Walker deceased,
Geo. J. Love deceased, Cong. Minister F.R. Brenneman dead, Minister Ziegler, J.H.D. Bouse
dead, Ike Hamburger dead, J.P. Geraghty dead, Guy Brubaker, E.E. Ritchie dead, Dad Ingram
dead, Arthur Lang, Judge Bunnell. [photographer] P.S. Hunt [group of men attending a formal
breakfast]
.1.184 – 3rd
Div. Alaska Federal Court, Ike Hamburger court reporter, Dist. Attorney Walker,
Deputy Clerk Kathryn Galen, Judge Cushman, Ed Larkin Clerk of Court, Harvey Sullivan U.S.
Marshal, J.H.D. Bouse, Tom Scott, Al Sullivan, Horace De Lane [?] [group portrait]
.1.185 – Valdez B.B. Club, 1909 Champions, Southern Alaska. Al Sullivan, E.E. Ritchie, Dr.
German Gregory, Chas. Bush, Wm. Caswell, Ernest Amundsen, Park Griswold, Joe Murray
[photographer] P.S. Hunt [baseball team]
.1.186a – [early view of Valdez, Valdez Glacier visible behind town, S. Blum & Co. General
Outfitters at right]
.1.186b – U.S. Dist. Court officials, 3d Div., Alaska, Judge E.E. Cushman presiding. P.S. Hunt
[Taken March 1912 at Valdez, identified people include B.F. Millard, District Attorney George
R. Walker, Judge Edward E. Cushman, U.S. Marshall Harvey Sullivan, Horace DeLane, H.B.
Ingram, Tom Scott, J.D. Bouse, Al Sullivan, Ike Hamburger, Kathryn Galen, Ed Larkin]
.1.187 – Pete Larson, hunter and guide, Unga, Alaska. P.S. Hunt G1711 [Pete Larson sitting on
bear carcass]

.1.188 – Fresh water stream at Dutch Harbor, Unalaska. Taken Oct. 1899 [village scene, with
Church of the Holy Ascension at left, unidentified man standing next to double-ended dory in
foreground]
.1.189 – Greek church at Unalaska [on verso:] Dutch Harbor, Unalaska, Greek Catholic Church
in the distance. Fresh water in foreground. Taken Oct. 1899 by May L. Kellogg [Church of the
Holy Ascension at right]
.1.190 – Unalaska, Aleutian Islands [five ships in Dutch Harbor. Mountains of Unalaska Island
in background]
.1.191 – Old Russian block house at St. Michaels, Alaska, built 1833. F.H. Nowell [Color
photomechanical postcard. Two Alaska Natives wearing parkas in front of Russian blockhouse
at St. Michael, one displaying the American flag. Four small cannons visible]
.1.192 – Midnight sun on the Yukon, Alaska [on verso:] Here in Alaska we must readjust ideas
of a lifetime. During the summer months there is continual daylight and one may enjoy
outdoor recreation even at midnight in some of the northern regions [Color photomechanical
postcard]
.1.193 – Eagle City, Alaska [on verso:] Eagle City, on Yukon River, 125 miles below Dawson
[waterfront of Eagle. North American Transportation and Trading Co. building at left. Rowboat
next to stack of fuel wood in center. Unidentified man standing at right. Riverboat and dory
pulled up next to riverbank at right]
.1.194a – Rescue on 30 Mile River, spring 1898 [on verso:] 30 Mile River on Upper Yukon, the
rescue of three drowning men. L.E. Robertson [men standing on riverbank at left watching
rescue, man in dory at right. Moored to the riverbank in the foreground is a flat boat with a
mast, a man in a small rowboat, and a larger rowboat with a mast]
.1.194b – Skookum Jim’s claim No. 1 above Bonanza. The claim proved quite valuable, as high
as $300.00 to the pan being taken out [four men working a placer mine on Bonanza Creek in
the Klondike. A windlass is above the mine shaft. Man at right displaying his gold pan]
.1.195 – Dock at St. Michael
.1.196 – Old mission at Golovin Bay, 1901-1902 [group of men, women, and children standing
in front of building, two dogs in foreground. Image badly faded]
.1.197 – Indians at Rampart [Alaska Natives]
.1.198 – Steamer L.G. Power going to Dawson [riverboat L.G. Power moored to Yukon River
bank]
.1.199 – L.G. Power [riverboat L.G. Power moored to Yukon River bank]
.1.200 – Coal mine [riverboat moored to pier at right, mine buildings on left, Yukon River near
Rampart?]
.1.201 – On the Yukon River, June 12, 1901. H.J. Goetzman [on verso:] Yukon steamer Susie
.1.202 – Circle City on the Yukon [on verso:] Trading post, Frank Kellogg in foreground
.1.203 – Nulato on the Yukon River in 1899 [fuel wood pile on left, log structure on posts is
possibly a landing stage for riverboats]
.1.204 – Ft. Yukon 1898. Robertson party at Fort Yukon, Alaska, July 1898. Housekeeping
minus housekeepers [fourteen men and small boy in front of three log cabins. Two men at left
are eating off tin plates. Camp stove in right center, walled tent partially visible at right]
.1.205 – Fort Selkirk on the Yukon, 1899 [several people standing in front of four log buildings]

.1.206 – Crossing Looshi Lake, Upper Yukon River [pack horses pulling sleds loaded with freight
across a frozen lake, possible Tutshi Lake, B.C.]

“The gold fields of the Klondike”
.1.207 – No. 29 Eldorado, which proved to be the richest claim on the creek, was bought by
Chas. Anderson for $800. It is a well known fact that he refused $400,000 for the claim
.1.208 – Skagway, Alaska [two small ships and several boats in the harbor]
.1.209 – The flood at Dawson, June 1st
, 1898 [flooded street, several men in a dory in center,
small scow at right, men in small boats at left. Signs on the buildings read “Wanted! Quartz
Placer Claims”, A.J. Bannerman & Co. Mine Brokers, Yukon Mine Exchange, Nelson A. Soggs
Jeweler and Optician]
.1.210 – Lake Bennett [boats and barges at camp on Bennett Lake]
.1.211 – Excursion train on trestle at mouth of tunnel, White Pass and Yukon Railroad
[locomotive and two passenger cars on wooden trestle, possibly steam-driven pile driver at
right]
.1.212a – Pack team loading at Deep Lake [two men and five pack horses]
.1.212b – Lake Lindeman [tent city just south of Bennett Lake]
.1.213a – Arrival of steamer May West, first boat up the river, June 1898 [May West seen
behind two large tents on the bank of the Yukon River. Sign on tent reads “Highest prices paid
for merchandise & provisions, we buy & sell for cash only”]
.1.214 – Stampede to the Atlin gold fields [group of eleven men on trail, some wearing
packboards]
.1.215a – Cargo of native dogs [thirteen dogs on a small raft]
.1.215b – Mongrel dog team [five dogs harnessed to sled, musher standing behind, two logs
cabins in background]
.1.215c – Dog team hauling lumber [two dog teams pulling sleds loaded with lumber]
.1.216 – Sluicing scene on Bonanza [five men working a placer mine on Bonanza Creek, a large
sluice box runs across creek]
.1.217 – Typical Klondike summer scene during the wash up [eight men shoveling pay piles of
rock into two sluice boxes]
.1.218a – Esquimaux hut construction [native dwelling under construction]
.1.218b – Esquimaux [three native men in traditional dress displaying their catch of salmon]
.1.218c – Native women [studio portrait of three native women, carved wooden mask at left
possibly Tlingit or Haida, woman at left wearing button blanket, woman in center wearing
woolen trade blanket, spruce root basket in center foreground]
.1.218d – Native women cleaning fish [six native women, boy watching on left, basket in right
foreground]
.1.219 – High cribbing at No. 30 and No. 31 Eldorado [mining operations on Eldorado Creek.
Two men standing on top of the cribbing are operating winches]
.1.220 – Steamers at docks, Skagway, Alaska [five steamships at docks]
.1.221 – The famous French Hill discovery opposite No. 16 Eldorado [mining claim]
.1.222 – Scene on the White Pass trail [mule train carrying bales of hay up the trail after a light
snowfall]

.1.223 – Blockade at the canyon on the White Pass trail [men and horses clearing the trail after
a rock fall, horse at right harnessed to sled loaded with large rock]
.1.224 – White Pass Hotel
.1.225 – White Pass canyon [pack train traversing the pass in winter]
.1.226 – First excursion train on summit of White Pass, February 21st
, 1898 [pack train on right
with more pack horses in center, near British flag]
.1.227 – Canyon City, Dyea Trail [mining camp on Taiya River, sign at lower right reads
“Campers rest sample room”]
.1.228a – Chilkoot Pass summit [cabin with tar-paper roof, stacks of supplies visible, British
flag flying. Cables and towers of aerial tramway at upper right. One man in front of cabin,
second man standing at right]
.1.228b – Chilkoot Pass, continuous line of packers [line of men ascending the “Golden Stairs”
to summit. Cables of the aerial tramway visible in upper right. Four men in center foreground,
three riding on sled]
.1.228c – Chilkoot Pass, foot of summit [group of miners at The Scales preparing to summit
pass, packs and piles of supplies in foreground, men climbing stairs in background near aerial
tramway]
.1.228d – Chilkoot Pass scales [piles of supplies at The Scales]
.1.228e – Chilkoot Pass, packing over summit [men climbing stairs]
.1.229 – Tramway over summit of Chilkoot Pass [The Scales on Chilkoot Trail, sign on small
building at right reads “Gasoline Tramway Co.”]
.1.230 – Custom House on summit of Chilkoot Pass, showing aerial tramways which transport
large quantities of provisions, also, British flag which caused a good deal of comment at the
time it was placed there as there seemed to be some question about its right to be there
.1.231 – The death dealing snow slide, Chilkoot Pass, April 3d, 1898 [avalanche]
.1.232 – Portage between Lindeman and Bennett [camp located between Bennett Lake and
Lake Lindeman]
.1.233 – Lake Bennett looking back over portage. Skagway and Dyea Trails come together at
this point [camp at Bennett Lake, dories in various stages of construction visible on bank]
.1.234 – Goat team on the Dyea Trail [team of goats harnessed to sled]
.1.235a – Boat building at Lake Bennett [men building boats, double-ended dories at left, scow
at right]
.1.235b – Whipsawing lumber [seven men at a sawmill near Bennett Lake. Two men using
whipsaw while two men sit on log. Two men standing near mill, another man reclining on a
horse in background, two dogs at left]
.1.235c – Packing between Lindeman and Bennett [group of men with two pack mules, four
men pulling sleds]
.1.236 – Grand canyon [Miles Canyon on the Yukon River]
.1.237 – Breaking of the Yukon [ice on the river during breakup]
.1.238 – Ice along shore after the breaking up, showing the result of an ice jam, the large
chunks being forced out on the banks, which which [sic] in time gradually melt and disappear
[three men standing on bank, dory at upper left]
.1.239a – Canoe races, Queen’s birthday [canoe racing on the Yukon River]

.1.239b – Street scene, Dawson, 1898 [crowded street scene, pile of logs in dirt street,
restaurant in left center, E. Merman Barbershop at right]
.1.239c – Climbing greasy pole, Dawson [crowded street scene]
.1.240 – General view of Dawson City, N.W.T. [Yukon River in foreground]
.1.241 – Street scene in Dawson, July 4th
/ , 1898 [crowd gathered on banks of Yukon River, one
man holding sign advertising Dawson City Bottling Co., Dawson City Brewery]
.1.242 – Arrival of N.A.T. Co.’s steamer Hamilton at Dawson, June 1898 [crowd standing on
Yukon River bank as Hamilton approaches, boardwalk in foreground]
.1.243 – Mining scene No. 24 Below on Bonanza. Taken during the dark winter months at 63
degrees below zero [three men working on high cribbing for hydraulic mining]
.1.244a – Looking up Eldorado from No. 16. The country in this vicinity is rather rolling, the
hills contain wash gravel in which gold is almost always found but not always in paying
quantities
.1.244b – Looking down Eldorado No. 16. The country in this vicinity is rather rolling, the hills
contain wash gravel in which gold is almost always found but not always in paying quantities
.1.245 – [missing]
.1.246 – [missing]
.1.247 – [missing]
.1.248 – [missing]
.1.249 – [missing]
.1.250 – Berry’s claim, showing the forks of Eldorado and Bonanza. Bench claims at this point
are exceedingly rich, one of the largest nuggets found in the country was extracted near here
.1.251 – No. 11 Eldorado showing both winter and summer work on the same claim. The
upper part being drifted in winter, while the lower end with summer cut is worked in the
summer months [six men, two holding shovels, standing with three wheelbarrows. A frozen
mining flume is in the foreground. A large pipe for hydraulic mining, supported by cribbing, is
visible in background]
.1.252 – “Takou City” between Takou Arm and Atlin Lake [tent camp on Taku Arm of Tagish
Lake]
.1.253 – Hotel Buster, Pine Creek, British Columbia (Atlin gold fields) [group of men, man in
center at small table made of plank and log, one man sitting in chair made from tree branches,
two men eating out of gold pans]
.1.254 – First excursion train on the White Pass and Yukon Railroad [group of men and women
standing in front of train]
.1.255 – Street scene at Skagway during the Great Rush [dirt street crowded with pedestrians
and pack horses, signs for “Largest Drug Store in Alaska”, Kelly Block, and Occidental Hotel,
banner advertising O’Brien & Hinkle Packers


Series 2: Glass Plate Negatives

Series 3: TAPS Prints
Photo numbers – Headings
 1 —39 - Prudhoe Bay, 1970-1976
 40 —133 – Pump station #1
 134 —147 – Sagavanirktok River
 148 —149 – Deadhorse
 150 —183 – Franklin Bluff
 184 —185 – Sagwon Camp
 186 —203 – Pump station #2
 204 —231 – Pump station #3
 232 —257 – Happy Valley Camp
 258 —279 – Tooklik Camp
 280 —325 – Galbraith Lake Camp
 326 —359 – Pump station #4
 360 —369 – Anaktuvuk Pass
 370 —476 – Atigun Camp
 477 —513 – Chandalar Bench
 514 —516 – Hammond River
 517 —566 – Dietrich Camp
 567 — Wiseman
 568 —588 – Coldfoot Camp
 589 —603 – Koyukuk River
 604 —609 – Pump station #5
 610 —612 – Bettles
 613 —648 – Prospect Camp
 649 —696 – Klutina/Old Man Camp
 697 —734 – 5 Mile Camp
 735 —812 – Yukon River, 1970-1974
 813 —902 – Yukon River, 1975-1979
 903 —923 – Pump station #6
 924 —954 – Hess Creek
 955 —969 – Livengood Camp
 970 —975 – Tolvana Creek
 976 —980 – Pump station #7
 981 —987 – Wickersham Dome
 988 —993 – Tatalina River
 994 —1005 – Fort Wainwright
 1006 —1012 – Goldstream
 1013 —1017 – Fox
 1018 —1022 – Davidson Ditch
 1023 —1032 – Tanana River
 1033 —1109 – Pump station #8
 1110 — Jarvis Creek
 1111 —1125 – Delta Camp
 1126 —1128 – Pump station #9
 1129 —1134 – Donnelly Dome
 1135 —1136 – Denali Fault
 1137 —1169 – Pump station #10
 1170 —1173 – Isobel Pass Camp
 1174 —1175 – Hogan’s Hill
 1176 —1177 – Sourdough Camp
 1178 —1202 – Gulkana
 1203 —1220 – Glennallen Camp
 1221 — Pump station #11
 1222 —1237 – Willow Lake
 1238 —1257 – Tazlina
 1258 —1315 – Tonsina Camp
 1316 —1335 – Squirrel Creek
 1336 —1348 – Pump station #12
 1349 —1358 – Tiekel
 1359 —1362 – Sheep Creek Camp
 1363 —1367 – Richardson Highway crossings
 1368 —1370 – Ptarmigan Drop
 1371 —1509 – Thompson Pass
 1510 —1524 – Coal dusting at Thompson Pass
 1525 —1611 – Keystone Canyon
 1612 —1693 – Valdez pipe arrival and storage
 1694 —1675 – Alaska Native contract workers
 1676 —1687 – Pipeline nearing Valdez terminal
 1688 —1703 – Valdez terminal site prior to construction
 1704 —1734 – Valdez terminal early construction
 1735 —1856 – Valdez terminal tank farm
 1857 —1918 – Valdez terminal ballast water tanks
 1919 —1925 – Valdez terminal compressor building
 1926 —2029 – Valdez terminal power plant
 2030 —2047 – Valdez terminal incinerator
 2048 —2050 – Valdez terminal shops
 2051 —2072 – Valdez terminal living quarters
 2073 —2099 – Valdez terminal office and OCC tower
 2100 —2216 – Valdez terminal tanker berths in order
 2217 —2265 – Valdez terminal loading arms
 2266 —2321 – Valdez terminal tankers arriving and leaving
 2322 —2343 – Valdez terminal metering building
 2344 —2372 – Valdez terminal oil spill containment
 2373 —2422 – Valdez terminal aerial photos
 2423 —2428 – Valdez terminal night photos
 2429 —2452 – Pipe yard, Anchorage cementing
 2453 —2516 – Pipe yard, Fairbanks storage and cleaning
 2517 —2581 – Pipe yard, Fairbanks cleaning and coating
 2582 —2590 – Pipe yard, Prudhoe Bay, cleaning and coating
 2591 —2596 – Pipe storage in stacks
 2596 —2616 – Pipe distribution via train
 2617 —2638 – Pipe cleaning, wrapping and insulating
 2639 —2655 – Pipe tests, Cold, Barrow and Prospect
 2656 —2665 – Pipe tests, Hat, UA Fairbanks, and Prospect
 2666 —2682 – Pipe tests for leaks and damage
 2683 —2734 – Pipe damaged
 2735 —2795 – Pipe welding
 2796 —2824 – Tests for valves and welding skill
 2825 —2839 – Pipe welds and x-rays
 2840 —2931 – Pipeline ditching
 2932 —2987 – Pipeline above ground
 2988 —3034 – Pipeline valves
 3035 —3069 – Trucks and equipment
 3070 —3073 – Haul Road, soils and tests
 3074 —3122 – Haul Road, equipment
 3123 —3206 – Haul Road, construction
 3207 —3252 – Soils tests, Chena Ridge
 3253 —3260 – Soils tests, Chandalar Bench
 3261 —3276 – Tests, pipeline movement
 3277 —3280 – Tests, reindeer, Nome
 3281 —3285 – Bridges
 3286 —3332 – Animals and pipeline
 3333 —3341 – Animals and homesteader crossings
 3342 —3366 – Material for roads and pads
 3367 —3399 – Pipeline below ground
 3400 —3417 – Pipeline completed, distant views
 3418 —3507 – Pipeline close-ups
 3508 —3602 – Erosion control, Hess Creek
 3603 —3620 – Erosion control, Condo’s Canyon
 3621 —3659 – Erosion control, Tatalina Hill
 3660 —3675 – Erosion control, bedding materials
 3676 —3736 – Erosion control, 1970
 3737 —3812 – Erosion control, 1971
 3813 —3878 – Erosion control, 1972-1975
 3879 —3894 – Permafrost
 3895 —3940 – Permafrost tests
 3941 —3965 – Pigs
 3966 —4041 – Firsts
 4042 —4062 – Finals
 4063 —4082 – Models, maps and drawings
 4083 —4087 – People and offices
 4088 —4154 – Signs
 4155 —4174 – Gas pipeline construction


Series 4: Transparencies
35mm slides
Heading Drawer No.
4th of July Mt. 50
75th anniv., Tent City 38
Acicular Ice Lenses 61
Adak 42
Adams, Mt. WA 50
Africa 97
Agglomerates 65
Agronomists 20
Aialik Bay 56
Aialik Glacier 102
Air freight 30
Air strips/Runways 30
Aircraft 121
Aircraft, historical 1
Airplanes 30
Airplanes, Wrecks 30
Airports 38, 40, 41
Akutan 42
Alaska Highway 28
Alaska officials 3
Alaska Railroad see ARR
Alaska Range 54
Alaska State Fair 5
Alaskaland 41
Aleutian Islands 68, 100
Aleutian Mts. 54
Aleutian Pen. Mts. 50
Alexander Creek 42
Alitak 42
Allen Glacier 102
Alluvials 63
Alyeska 42
Ambler 42
Amchitka 42
Anaktuvuk Pass 42, 50
Anchorage 38-40
Anchorage Port 39
Anchorage Historical 38
Andesites 65
Androsace 85
Anemone (flower) 85, 6
Aniakchak Crater 52
Anniversaries, historic 3
Anodes 120
Anomaly oddities 64
Ants 97
ANWR 16
Apples 83
APU 98
Archaeology 20, 114
Arches (geology) 100
Arnica 85
ARR 31, 32
ARR 31, 32
Arrow grass 92
ARR purchase 3
Art at Public bldgs 95
Artists 3
Aspen 82
Atigun River 50, 71
Atlin, BC 21
Atwood Building 3
Atwood, Evangeline 2
Augustine, Mt. 52
Aurora Peak 54
Aurora 19
Australia 97
Authors 3
Automobiles (see Cars)
Avalanche 56, 58
Avens 85
Aviation, historical 1
Azalea 85
Bainbridge 102
Baker Glacier 102
Baleen 112
Ballast Water Treat. System 119
Ballooning 29
Baneberry 83
Banks Island, CA 22
Bar in river 63
Barnacles 6
Barnard Glacier 102
Barrow 42
Barrow 102
Barry Glacier 102
Basalts 65
Basket Work 113
Bays 68
Beach lines 63
Bear Flower 85
Bear Glacier 102
Bearberry 83
Beaufort Sea 60
Beaver 42, 106
Bedstraw 85
Bees 97
Beetles 97
Bench markers 25
Berries 83
Bethel 42
Bettles 42
Billings Glacier 102
Biological lab 20
Bird watchers 5
Bistort 85
Black Face Monkey 97
Black Footed Albatross 78
Blackburn, Mt. 53
Blackstone Glacier 102
Blanket Toss 116
Blizzards 18
Bluebells 85
Blueberries 85
Boats Aground 122
Bones 61
Bore Tide 100
Bot Fly 97
Boundary markers 25
Boundary stations 25
Boundary 42
Braiding (rivers) 72
Brant 74
Break Up (rivers) 58
Brooks Range 50
Broom Rape 85
Cactus 93
Calcarius Lapponicus
Calico Bluff 64
Camas Lily 86
Camicia 102
Camp Robber 77
Campanula Barbata 86
Campbell Lake 40
Camping (tent/trailer) 11
Canada coast 22
Canada Jay 77
Canneries/Freezers 8
Canol (see Ross River)
Cantwell 42
Cantwell Glacier 102
Canyons 62
Cape Points 68
Capitan Mt. 53
Carcross, YT 21
Cariboo Range 50
Caribou Hunt 112
Caribou 108
Cars, Antique 25
Cars, Wrecked 25
Cascade Glacier 102
Cascades Streams 69
Cascades 70
Casement Glacier 102
Castner Glacier 102
Cat Tails 92
Cat trains to Arctic 26
Cat’s Paw 86
Caterpillars 97
Cattle 128
Cayman Island 97
Cedars 82
Cenozoic Era 65
Champagne, YT 21
Chatanika River 71
Chatter marks 58
Chena Hot Springs 43
Chenega 42
Cherts 65
Chicken 42
Chickweed 86
Chief Bluff 63
Chief Rock 63
Chigmit Range 50
Children 115
Childs Glacier 102
Chilkat Mts 50, 71
Chilkat River 71
China 97
Chisana Glacier 102
Chisana 42
Chitina Glacier 102
Chitina 42
Chitina River 71
Chitons 6
Chitistone Gorge 53
Christmas 98
Chugach Mts 50, 71
Chugach Park 16
Chukchi Sea 56
Chunekukleik, Mt. 50
Church Doings 110
Churches 110
Cinquefoil 86
Circle 42
Civil Engineers 121
Claim Notices 124
Clam Digging 14
Clarks Point 42
Clear Creek Streams 69
Cloudberry 83, 86
Clouds 18
Clover 92
Coal Export & Shipping 125
Coal Mining 125
Coal Power 9
Coal Seams 125
Coghill, Jack (Lt. Gov.) 2
Coins, Bingles 1
Cold weather 18
Coldfoot 42
College Fjord 102
Colony Glacier 102
Coltsfoot 86
Columbia Glacier 56, 102
Columbia Peak 50
Columbine 86
Comets 20
Commercial Fishing 122
Conglomerates 65
Construction 120
Conventions 3
Cook Inlet Ice 56
Copper Center 42
Copper River Highway 28
Whitehorse/Dawson 28
Copper River 71
Copper River & NW RR 32
Copper Rr. Valley 71
Cordova 42
Cornel 86
Corner Stakes 124
Cormorant 73
Corydalis 86
Cotton Grass 92
Council/Solomon RR 32
Cow Parsnip 86
Coyote 106
Crab pots 8
Crabbers 122
Crabs (comm.) 8
Crabs (non-comm.) 6
Crabs, Coconut 8
Cranberry 83, 86
Cranes (birds) 76
Cress 86
Cross-Culture 113
Crowberry 83, 86
Cryoturbation 60
Cuckoo Flower 86
Currants 83, 8
Currency 1
Daisy 87Dalton Highway 28, 65
Davidson Ditch (mining) 125
Dawson City RR’s 32
Dawson, YT 21
Deborah, Mt. 54
Deer Cabbage 87
Deer 109
Deformed Trees 81
Delphinium 87
Delta estuary 68
Delta 42
Dempster Highway 27
Denali Highway 28
Denali Rangers 126
Devil’s Club 82, 87
Diapensia 87
Dietrich Pass 50
Differential Erosion 57
Dikes & Intrusions 64
Dinglestadt Glacier 102
Diomede 43
Discovery Days (Fbks) 41
Dock (Flower) 87
Dog Teams 13, 111
Dog Wood 86
Dogs 13, 111
Dogsled 111
Dolls 113
Dolly varden fishing 14
Dolomite 65
Donnelly Dome 54
Douglas 43
Dredges 124
Driftwood 95
Drill Cores 124
Drilling 118, 121
Drum, Mt. 52
Drumlins 62
Dryas 87
Ducks 75
Dutch Hills 54
Eagle City 43
Eagle Glacier 102
Eagle Proj. 20
Eagle River 39, 40, 71
Eagles 79
Edgecumbe, Mt. 52
Eggs in one basket 1
Egypt 97
Eielson Center 126
Eklutna Glacier 102
Eklutna Lake 69
Eklutna 110
Elderberry 83, 87
Eldridge Glacier 102
Elfin Cove 43
Elk 109
Ellamar 43
Elliot 102
Ellsworth Glacier 102
Elsa, YT 21
Emporer Geese 74
End of the Road 26
Erosion by ice 58
Erosion Control 57
Erosion 57
Eskers 62
Eskimo Art 113
Eskimo Carving 113
Eskimo Dances 116
Eskimo Hunting 112
Eskimo Whaling 112
Eskimos 115
Excelsior Glacier 102
Exit Glacier 102
Experimental Crops 98
Explorer Glacier 102
Fairbanks 41
Fairplay, Mt. 54
Fairweather, Mt. 50
Falcons 76, 79
Farm Harvests 128
Faro, YT 22
Faults 64
Feed & Signs 105
Ferns 84
Fiords 68
Fire hydrants, Seldovia 26
Fireweed 87
Fireworks 95
Fish barriers 8
Fish Boats 122
Fish counting 8
Fish farming 8
Fish spawn 8
Fish Tenders 122
Fishing 111
Fishing, deep sea 14
Fishing, kids 14
Fishwheel 111
Flags 1
Flood Plains 72
Fog 17
Folded sedimentary rocks 64
Food 9
Foraker, Mt. 54
Ford, Gerald (Pres.) 2
Forest Fires 81
Forests 81
Forget-Me-Not 87
Formations 64
Fox (animal) 106
Fox Glove 87
Fox, AK 43, 5
Fraser, BC 22
Fredericka Mt. 53
Frogs 6
From Skolai Pass 53
Frontal systems 18
Frost fracturing 61
Frozen falls 56
Fruits 83
Fun Mining Panning 124
Fungus 84
Fur and traps 15
Fur Rendezvous 5
Fur Seal 107
Gambell 43
Games 10, 12
Garnets 124
Gas Line 120
Gas Rocks 65
Gas wells 35
Gates Glacier 102
Gates of the Arctic NP 16
Geese 74
87
Geological Samples 124
Geomorph Fire 61
Geranium 87
Girdwood 43
Glacial Erratics 62
Glacial Potholes 62
Glacial till 63
Glacier Bay NP 16
Glaciologists 20
Glennallen 43
Glenn Highway 28
Gliders 29
Glomerates 65
Goat’s Beard 87
Godwin Glacier 102
Gold Dredging 125
Gold Nuggets 124
Gold Scales 124
Goldenrod 87
Gorges 62
Gossen 64
Grand Canyon 97
Grand Pacific 102
Granite 65
Grasses 92
Gravel Mining 124
Graves 110
Grayling fishing 14
Graywackes 65
Grebe 78
Grewingk 102
Grizzly Bears 108
Ground Ice 61
Groundsels 87
Groups, meetings 4
Grouse 76
Gulf-Arctic Sea Drilling Units 123
Gulkana Glacier 102
Gulkana River 71
Gulkana 43
Gull 78
Gypsum 65
Haenke Glacier 103
Haines 43
Haleakala Crater 52
Haley Creek 71
Halibut Boats 122
Halibut Cove 43
Halibut 8
Harbor Views 122
Hard Rock Mining 124
Harding Entrance 68
Harding Icefield 103
Harpooning 112
Harriman Fiord 103
Harriman Glacier 103
Hatcheries/activities 8
Haul Road 120
Hawaii 97
Hawks 79
Hawksbeard 88
Hayes, Mt. 54
Healy 43
Heart Leaf 88
Heather 88
Hedysarum 88
Helicopters 29
Hellebore 88
Hemlock 82
Heney Glacier 103
Herb Willow 88
Herbert Glacier 103
Heron 73
Herring Gull 78
Herring spawn 8
Hess Cr.? 50
Hickel, Walter (Gov.) 2
Highway bridges 26, 27
Highway failures 26
Highway maintenance 26
Highways at Nome 28
Highways 27
Hiking 12
Historical Drilling, Not Kenai 123
Historical Mining Eqpt. 124
Hoar-frost scenes 56
Hogan Creek 62
Hole in the Wall Glacier 103
Holes 100
Holgate Glacier 103
Holy Cross 43
Homer Spit 68
Homer 43
Homesteads 128Hong Kong 97
Hooligan fishing 14
Hope 43
Horse Tails 92
House construction 38
Houses 114
Hubbard Glacier 103
Huckleberry 83
Hunting on horses 15
Hunting trophies 15
Hunting 15, 107
Hydraulics 124
Hydroelectricity 9
Ice Bridges 26
Ice Carving 98
Ice Core 61
Ice Lenses 61
Ice planning 58
Ice Road 26
Ice sculpture 5, 58, 95
Icebergs 56
Iceworms (fantasy) 56
Icicles 56, 58
Igloos 114
Iliamna Volcano 54
Iliamna 52
Independence Mine 16
Indian Dances 114
Inlet Tankers 123
Inlets 68
Insolation 58
Inuvik, NWT 22
Iridopocone Bicolor 77
Iris 88
Iron Oxide 65
Iron pollution 72
Islands 100
Ivory 113
Jacksina Glacier 103
Jacob’s Ladder 88
Jade Mts. 54
Jade 124
Jaegers 76
Jarvis, Mt. 53
Jasmine 88
Jelly fish 6
Jim Creek 71
John River 71
Johns Hopkins Glacier 103
Juneau 43
Kachemak Bay 68
Kaltag 44
Kames 62
Kantishna 43
Kanuti River 72
Karst 61
Katmai 16, 52
Kayaking 117
Kelp/Algae 6
Kenai 44, L171
Kenai Fiords Nat. Park 16
Kenai Lake 69
Kenai Mts. 50
Kennicott Copper Mine 124
Kennicott Glacier 103
Keno, YT 22
Ketchikan 44
Kettle Lakes 69
Kettle Moraine 62
Kiana 44
Kihiltna Glacier 103
Killiwake 78
King Island 44
King Salmon 44
Klondike Loop 28
Klukwan 44
Knik Arm 56
Knik Glacier 103
Knik River 71
Knik 43
Knowles, Tony 2
Kobuk dunes 16
Kobuk River 71
Kobuk 44
Kodiak 44, L168
Kokrines 44
Kotzebue 44
Koyukuk River 71
Koyukuk 44
Kuskalana Glacier 103
Kwethluk 44
Laborador Tea 88
Lake Bennett 69
Lake Hood/Spenard 39
Lake Isobel 71
Lake Laberge 69
Lake Louise 69
Lakes 69
Lamplough Glacier 103
Landmark 62
Landslides 62
LaPerouse Glacier 103
Lapland Longspur 77
Larkspur 88
Lavas 65
Law 1
Leather Leaf 88
LeConte Glacier 58, 103
Legislators 2
Lemmings 105
Lesser Canadas 74
Leutkea 89
License plates 26
Lichen 84
Light House 100
Lightning 18
Lime Creek 57
Limestone 65
Limpets 6
Liquid/Solid gas 17
Little Tonsina River 71
Littoral 68
Lituya Bay 68
Livengood 45
Location Notice 124
Loess 62
Logan Glacier 53, 103
Logan, Mt. 50
Logging 7
Loons 78
Lousewort 88
Lowe River 71
Lucia Glacier 103
Lychnis 89
Lynx 106
Maclaren Glacier 103
Magpies 77
Malaspina Glacier 103
Manley Hot Springs 45
Maples 82
Marathon, Mt. 53
Marathons, Seward 10
Marble 65
Marcus Baker, Mt. 50
Margery Glacier 56, 103
Marigold 89
Marine Scenes 68, 100
Marmot 106
Marsh Felwort 89
Marshall 45
Masks 113
Mastodon Flower 89
Matanuska Glacier 103
Matanuska River 71
Mayo, YT 22
McBride Glacier 103
McCarthy Fiord 57
McCarthy Glacier 103
McCarthy 45
McHugh State P 16
McKinley 55
McNeil camp 11
Meat & Fish 111
Medical 20
Meekins, W.G. 71
Mekoryuk 45
Melt Water 69
Mendenhall Glacier 103
Mentasta 50
Merganser 77
Merlings 79
Metamorphic Formations 64
Methane Upwell 69
Metlakatla 45
Mexico 97
Mice 105
Migratory Waterfowl 73, 74
Miles Glacier 103
Military aircraft 29
Milk Vetch 89
Miller with Hubbard 103
Miners 128
Mining Camps, Abandoned Towns 125
Mining Eqpt. Gold Rush Days 125
Mirages 17
Mist Maid 89
Misty Fjords 16
Mixing (rivers) 72
Mobile Homes 25
Moffit, Mt. 54
Monkey Flower 89
Monkshood 89
Monozite & Syanite 65
Moon 19
Moose Pass 45
Moraine 62
Mosquito 97
Moss 84
Moss Berry 83
Moths 97
Mountain Ash 83
Mt. Adams, WA 54
Mts. & Valleys 50
Mud cracks 64
Mud Flats 100
Mud Volcano 52
Muir Glacier 103
Muir Inlet 57
Mukluks 112
Muldrow Glacier 103
Multiple Erosion 57
Murkowski, Frank 2
Murre 78
Musk Ox 105
Muskrat 106
Mussels 6
Nabesna Glacier 103
Nabesna 45
Naknek 45
Nameless Peak Yukon 54
Narcissus 89
Natazhat, Mt. 53
Native People 110
Natural Metal 124
Navy & Gov. Ships 122
Necks Caldera Ash Cones 52
Needle Ice Lenses 61
Nelchina Glacier 103
Nenana Glacier 103
Nenana River 71
Nest & Eggs 73
New Rampart, YT 22
New Zealand 97
Nikolaevsk 45
Ninilchik 45
Nizina Glacier 57, 103
Nolan Mining Camp 45
Nome 45
Nome RR 32
Noorvik 45
North Pole 45
Northern Fulmar 78
Northway 45
Nulato 45
Nunatak 58
OCC Controls Center 119
Odd Boat Names 122
Ogilvie Glacier 103
Ogilvie Mts 50
Oil “Best of the Biz” 35
Oil or Gas Processors 123
Oil, Drilling 33
Old Artifacts 113
Old Crow 22
On Shore Historical Drilling 123
Orange Glacier 103
Orca Inlet 68
Orchid 89, L165
Ores 124
Outwash Fans 57
Ouzinkie 45
Overflow 58
Owls 77
Oxytrope 89
Oyster Catcher 73
Packing L136
Paint Brush (Flower) 90
Palmer 47, L168
Parades 4
Parakeet Auklet 78
Parhelion 18
Parks Highway 28
Parks, Anchorage 38
Parnassus 90
Parrya 90
Parsnip 90
Pasque Flower 90
Pavlov 52
Pea (flower) 90
Peats 62
Pelley River, YT 22
Penstemon 90
People & Bears 108
People 2, 4, 5, 115
Permafrost Conf. 3
Permafrost 59-61
Peters Creek 104
Petersburg 47
Peterson Glacier 104
Petersville 47, 55
Petrified wood 64
Petrochemical ComplexesL140
Petroglyphs 113
Phalarope 73
Pharo Rock 63
Phillip Smith Mts. 71
Photographers 121
Piamute 47
Picnics 4
Pika 106
Pillar Buttes 63
Pilot Station 47
Pine 82
Pingo 60
Pins, ornaments 1
Pipe 118, 140
Pipeline 118, 119
Placer Mines 124
Planes at Villages 111
Plants 84
Plateau Glacier 104
Platforms in Cook Inlet 123
Platinum 124
Pleasure Boats 117
Plover 76
Point Graham L168
Point Hope 47
Polar Bears 20, 108
Pollution 130
Polychrome Glacier 104
Polygonals 60
Poplar 82
Poppy 90
Porcupine 106
Porcupine Glacier 104
Porcupine River 71
Porphyritic Olivine 65
Port Graham 47
Port Lions 47
Portage Glacier 56, 104
Portage to Whittier 31
Portage 47
Post Offices, Mail, Boxes 25
Potter Sanctuary 74
Potter State Park 16
Power generation 9
Prehistoric Stumps 62
Preparing Fish 111
Primrose 90
Prince Rupert, BC 22
Prince Wm. Sound 68
Process Pieces 113
Prospectors 124
Prudhoe operations 33
Ptarmigan 76
Puffin 78
Pulp mills 7
Pumice 65
Pump Stations 119
Pussy Toes 90
Pyrites 65
Pyrola 90
Quartz 65
Rabbit 106
Radiolarian Chart 65
Rafting 117
Railroad 32
Rain and squalls 18, 31
Rain Forest 81
Rainbows 18
Rampart City 47
Rapids Glacier 104
Rasmuson, E/ML 3
Raspberry 83, 90
Raven 77
Reagan, Ronald (Pres.) 2
Reclamation 124
Recreation vehicles 13
Redoubt, Mt. 50, 54
Redwoods 81
Refineries 123
Regal Glacier 104
Regal Mt. 53
Reid Glacier 104
Reid Inlet 56
Reindeer 109
Rendu Glacier 104
Rescue 12
Research ships 20
Resurrection Bay 68
Retail trade 9
Revegetation 120
Rhododendron 90
Rhone Glacier 104
Rhubarb 90
Rhyolite, Polychrome Pass 65
Richardson Highway 28
Richardson Mts NWT 54
Riggs Glacier 104
River Boating 117
River Ox Bows 72
Rivers 69, 72
Road construction 26, 27
Road Houses 127
Roads/trails, historical 1
Roadside signs 26
Roaring 104
Robson, Mt. 50
Rock Glacier 63
Rock types 64
Roons 84
Rose Finch Aleutian 73
Rosehips 83
Rosemary 90
Roseroot 90
Ross River, YT 22
Ruby 47
Rural roads 27
Russell Fiord 50
Russell Glacier 104
Ruth Glacier 104
Sagavanirktok River 71
Sage 90
Sailing 117
Saint Michael 47
Saint Paul 46, 47
Salix 80
Salmon Berry 83
Salmon Derby 14
Salmon Fishing 14
Sand Point 47
Sandstone 65
Sandwort 90
Sanford, Mt. 53
Service Berry 90
Saussurea 90
Savoonga 46
Sawmills 7
Sawyer Glacier 104
Saxifrage 91
Scallops 8
Scarp or Dike 63
Schists 65
Schools 98
Schwamm, John 98
Science instruments 20
Sea Lift 120
Sea Lion 107
Sea Otter 20, 107
Sea Stacks 68
Sea Urchins 6
Seal & Ugruk Hunt 107, 112
Sedge 91
Sedimentary 64
Seiners 122
Seismic Work 123
Seldovia 47
Senecio 91
Set Netters 122
Seward 46
Seward Highway 28
Sheridan Glacier 104
Shrike 76
Shrubs 82
Shuksan, Cascades 50
Shungnak 47
Silt storm 62
Siltstone 65
Silver Berry 83
Silver City, YT 22
Silverweed 91
Sitka 47
Six Mile River 71
Skagway 46
Skagway Road 28
Skating 10
Skiing 10
Skilak Glacier 104
Skin Work 113
Skolai Pass 53
Skunk Cabbage 91
Sky 19
Sky crane 29
Slates 65
Slikenside Scouring 58, 64, 65
Slush flow channel 63
Smartweed 92
Snails 6
Snow Geese 74
Snow Glasses 113
Snow Sculptures 98
Snow Shoes 10, 113
Snow 58
Snowmachines 13, 111
Soapberry 91
Soapstone 113
Soil 62, 72, 121
Solar Panels 98
Soldotna 47
Song Birds 73
Sorrel 91
Sorting 63
Spain 97
Spencer Glacier 57
Spiders 97
Spirea 91
Spits 68
Sport fishing 14
Sports 13
Spring Beauty 91
Spruce 81, 82
Spurr, Mt. 52
Squarao 93
Squirrels 105
St. Elias Range 50
Star Flower 91
Starring 110
Starwort 91
State Ferry 117
Statues & Memorials 97
Steamboat Rock 63
Steller Jay 77
Sterling 47
Stevens, Ted 2
Stikine Basalts 65
Stikine camps 11
Stikine River 71
Stonecrops 91
Storms 18
Strawberry 91
Stream Cut Valleys 62
Stream Outwash 57
Streams 69
Sukakpak, Mt. 50
Sulzer, Mt. 53
Sun Dew 91
Sun Effects 19, 46
Suntrana 47
Surprise Glacier 104
Surveyors 121
Susitna Glacier 104
Susitna River 71
Susitna, Mt. 54
Swamps 59
Swans 73
Swimming 12
Taku Glacier 104
Talkeetna 46
Talkeetna Mts. 50
Talus 63
Tanada Peak 53
Tanana River 71
Tanana 46
Tankers 119
TAPS Construction 35, 71
Taraxacum 91
Tarr Inlet 56
Tatitlik 46
Taylor Highway 28
Tazalina Glacier 104
Teklanika River 71
Telegraph Creek, BC 22
Teller 46
Tent City 3
Tern 78
Thailand 97
Thermal Erosion 57
Thermal Tests 120
Thimble Berry 91
Thistle Berry 83
Thompson Pass 120
Thorofare Glacier 104
Taiga 59
Tidal Areas 100
Tide pools 6
Tokositna Glacier 104
Tombstone Mt. Yukon 54
Tordrillo Mts. 50
Tors 63
Totems 113
Tour Boats 117
Tour Buses 26
Tourism 5
Tracks in snow 56
Tracy Arm 16
Trade Beads 113
Traders 128
Trading stations 9
Trails, miners 26
Trappers Creek 46
Trappers 128
Tree Swallows 77
Trees 81, 82
Triassic Epoch 65
Trollers 122
Trucking 25
Tsaina River 71
Tundra 59
Turnagain Arm 56
Turner Glacier 104
Twaharpies Glacier 104
Twin Flowers 92
Twin Glaciers 104
Twin Otter (airplane) 30
Twisted Stalk 92
Tyonek 7, 46
UA Farm 98
UAA 98
UAF 3,4
Umiaks 111
Unalakleet 48
Unalaska 48, 110
University Peak. 53
Upper Nelchina River 71
US Government Officials 3
Usibelli 48
Valdez 48
Valdez Arm / Bay 68
Valdez Glacier 104
Valerian 92
Valleys 62
Valves 120
Vancouver, BC 21
Vapor 17
Variegated Glacier 104
Veniaminof 52
Vetch 92
Wagtail, Yellow 73
Wainwright 48
Wakefield crab 8
Wallflower 92
Walnut Canyon 97
Walrus & People 20, 107, 112
Wandering Tatler 73
Warm Springs Bay 48
Warm Springs Lakes 69
Washington Creek 71
Wasilla 48
Water Erosion 57, 100
Water: clear & silt mix 72
Waterfalls 70
Waterskiing 10
Waves 100
Waxwing 73
Waysides/Rest areas 27
Weasel 105
Weasel-Snout 92
Weather 18
Welding 121
West Fork Glacier 104
Wet Lands 100
Whales 107, 112
White Front Goose 74
White Mandarin 92
White Pass RR 32
White River 57, 71
Whittier 48
Widgeon 75
Wild Cats Cook Inlet 123
Wild Celery 86
Willows 80
Wind, Generating 98
Wiseman 48
Witherspoon, Mt. 50
Wolf 106
Wolverine 105
Wood Nymph 92
Wood Pecker 76
Wood 113
Work Boats 122
Wormwood 92
Worthington Glacier 104
Wrangell 48
Wrangell Mts. 53
Wrangell River 71
Wrangell-St. Elias 16
Yakataga 48
Yakatat Glacier 104
Yakutat 48
Yellow Jacket 97
Young, Don 2
Yukon outcroppings 64
Yukon River 71
Yukon Territory 22
Zion Canyon 97

Series 4: Transparencies
Medium format slides
[Arranged in negative subseries, as below]

Series 5: Negatives
Subseries Subject Heading
AK Native 1 Alaska Natives: Arts
AK Native 2 Artifact Carvers
AK Native 3 Eskimos
AK Native 4 Eskimo Hut
AK Native 5 Nulakutuk
AK Native 6 Eskimo People
AK Native 7 Eskimo People
AK Native 8 Eskimo Whale cutting
AK Native 9 Eskimo Hunting
AK Native 10 Eskimo Medicine
AK Native 11 Eskimos
AK Native 12 Eskimo Buying
AK Native 13 Blanket Toss
AK Native 14 Chilkat and Indian Dancing
AK Native 15 Eskimo People
AK Native 16 Native Sports, 4th of July
AK Native 17 Eskimo Schools
AK Native 18 Skin Sewing
AK Native 19 Eskimos and umiaks, kayaks, boats
AK Native 20 Eskimos Working
AK Native 21 Eskimo Family
AK Native 22 Eskimo Children
AK Native 23 Eskimo Children/Kids
AK Native 24 Artifacts: Tlingit, Haida, Eskimo
AK Native 25 Indian Artifacts and People
AK Native 26 Artifacts and Crafts
AK Native 27 Aleut People
AK Native 28 Churches and Graves - Natives
AK Native 29 Eskimo Dog Teams
AK Native 30 Fish Camps
AK Native 31 Fish Drying
AK Native 32 Fish Wheel and Trap
AK Native 33 Ice Fishing
AK Native 34 Eskimo Government
AK Native 35 Eskimo House
AK Native 36 Iglooks, Sod Houses, Barabaras
AK Native 37 Native Corps
AK Native 38 Sea Otter Hunt - Killing and Processing
AK Native 39 Tyoneks
AK Native 40 Tyoneks
AK Native 41 Haidas
AK Native 42 Indians
AK Native 43 Dance
AK Native 44 Totems and Carvings
AK Native 45 Totems and Tribal Houses, petrogylphs
Anc. 1 Anchorage: Sales, buying and selling
Anc. 2 Anchorage Housing
Anc. 3 Government Hill Housing
Anc. 4 Anchorage Housing: Turnagain by the Sea
Anc. 5 Anchorage Old Street Views
Anc. 6 Anchorage, International Airport
Anc. 7 Copies, Anchorage History
Anc. 8 Anchorage Parks and Playground, including school facilities
Anc. 9 Anchorage Vollyeball
Anc. 10 Anchorage Street Views, 1979
Anc. 11 Anchorage Old Street Views, 1940s
Anc. 12 Anchorage History, Streets and Buildings
Anc. 13 Anchorage Old Streets and Buildings
Anc. 14 Anchorage Streets
Anc. 15 Port of Anchorage
Anc. 16 Anchorage docks and harbors, historical
Anc. 17 Anchorage Buildings, related
Anc. 18 50th Anniversary Celebration of City of Anchorage
Anc. Air. 1 Anchorage Air, 1940s
Anc. Air. 2 Anchorage Air, 1950s
Anc. Air. 3 Anchorage Air, 1951
Anc. Air. 4 Anchorage Air, 1952
Anc. Air. 5 Anchorage Air, 1953
Anc. Air. 6 Anchorage Air, 1954
Anc. Air. 7 Anchorage Air, 1955
Anc. Air. 8 Anchorage Air, 1956
Anc. Air. 9 Anchorage Air, 1957
Anc. Air. 10 Anchorage Air, 1958
Anc. Air. 11 Anchorage Air, 1959
Anc. Air. 12 Anchorage Air, 1960
Anc. Air. 13 Anchorage Air, 1961
Anc. Air. 14 Anchorage Air, 1962
Anc. Air. 15 Anchorage Air, 1963
Anc. Air. 16 Anchorage Air, 1964-1965
Anc. Air. 17 Anchorage Air, 1966
Anc. Air. 18 Anchorage Air, 1969
Anc. Air. 19 Anchorage Air, 1969
Anc. Air. 20 Anchorage Air, 1970
Anc. Air. 21 Anchorage Air, 1971
Anc. Air. 22 Anchorage Air, 1972
Anc. Air. 23 Anchorage Air, 1973
Anc. Air. 24 Anchorage Air, 1974
Anc. Air. 25 Anchorage Air, 1975
Anc. Air. 26 Anchorage Air, 1976, 77, 78, and later
Anc. Air. 27 Anchorage Air, 1980
Anc. Bus. 1 Anchorage Businesses, General
Anc. Bus. 2 Anchorage Businesses, General
Anc. Bus. 3 Anchorage Businesses: A
Anc. Bus. 4 Anchorage Businesses: B
Anc. Bus. 5 Anchorage Businesses: C
Anc. Bus. 6 Anchorage Businesses: D
Anc. Bus. 7 Anchorage Businesses: E
Anc. Bus. 8 Anchorage Businesses: F
Anc. Bus. 9 Anchorage Businesses: G
Anc. Bus. 10 Anchorage Businesses: H
Anc. Bus. 11 Anchorage Businesses: I
Anc. Bus. 12 Anchorage Businesses: J
Anc. Bus. 13 Anchorage Businesses: K
Anc. Bus. 14 Anchorage Businesses: L
Anc. Bus. 15 Anchorage Businesses: M
Anc. Bus. 16 Anchorage Businesses: N
Anc. Bus. 17 Anchorage Businesses: O
Anc. Bus. 18 Anchorage Businesses: P
Anc. Bus. 19 Anchorage Businesses: Q
Anc. Bus. 20 Anchorage Businesses: R
Anc. Bus. 21 Anchorage Businesses: S
Anc. Bus. 22 Anchorage Businesses: T
Anc. Bus. 23 Anchorage Businesses: U
Anc. Bus. 24 Anchorage Businesses: V
Anc. Bus. 25 Anchorage Businesses: W
Anc. Bus. 26 Anchorage Businesses: Banks
Anc. Bus. 27 Anchorage Businesses: Cabs
Anc. Bus. 28 Anchorage Businesses: Churches
Anc. Bus. 29 Anchorage Businesses: Grocery Stores
Anc. Bus. 30 Anchorage Businesses: Hospitals
Anc. Bus. 31 Anchorage Businesses: Hotels
Anc. Hous. 1 Anchorage Houses
Anc. Hous. 2 Anchorage Housing
Anc. Hous. 3 Anchorage Neighborhoods
Anc. Hous. 4 Anchorage Trailer Courts
Anc. Hous. 5 Anchorage Homes, by owners
Anc. Sch. 1 Anchorage Schools
Anc. Sch. 2 Alaska Methodist University: Aerial
Anc. Sch. 3 Alaska Methodist University: Activities: Drama
Anc. Sch. 4 Alaska Methodist University: Activities: Film
Anc. Sch. 5 Alaska Methodist University: Activities: Music
Anc. Sch. 6 Alaska Methodist University: Activities: Sports
Anc. Sch. 7 Alaska Methodist University: Buildings
Anc. Sch. 8 Alaska Methodist University: Personnel
Anc. Sch. 9 Alaska Methodist University: Registration by Year
Anc. Sch. 10 Alaska Methodist University: Students by Year
Anc. Sch. 11 Anchorage Community College
Anc. Sch. 12 Anchorage Community College: Gold Panning Class
Anc. Sch. 13 UAA: Buildings Dedication
Anc. Sch. 14 UAA: People
Anc. Sch. 15 UAF: Aerial
Anc. Sch. 16 UAF: Campus Scenes
Anc. Sch. 17 UAF: Buildings
Anc. Sch. 18 UAF: People
Anc. Sch. 19 Trade Schools By Year
Anc. Sch. 20 Trade Schools: Rehabilitation Industries
Anc. Sch. 21 Trade Schools: Carpenters
Anc. Sch. 22 Trade Schools: Union Crafts
Anc. Sch. 23 Trade Unions
Anc. Util. 1 Anchorage Sanitation
Anc. Util. 2 Anchorage Utilities
Animals 1 Bison
Animals 2 Eagles
Animals 3 Birds
Animals 4 Insects
Animals 5 Beavers
Animals 6 Fox
Animals 7 Frogs
Animals 8 Goats
Animals 9 Lemmings
Animals 10 Lynx
Animals 11 Marmot
Animals 12 Pica
Animals 13 Porcupine
Animals 14 Rabbit
Animals 15 Squirrels
Animals 16 Wolverines
Animals 17 Wolves
Animals 18 Animal Signs
Animals 19 Bears
Animals 20 Caribou
Animals 21 Deer
Animals 22 Moose
Animals 23 Musk Ox
Animals 24 Reindeer
Animals 25 Fur Seals
Animals 26 Sea Lion
Animals 27 Harbor Seals
Animals 28 Seals
Animals 29 Sea Otter
Animals 30 Sheep
Animals 31 Walrus
Animals 32 Whale
Animals 33 Miscellaneous animals
ARR 1 Alaska Railroad: General
ARR 2 Alaska Railroad
ARR 3 Alaska Railroad, Historical
ARR 4 Alaska Railroad, Historical
ARR 5 Alaska Railroad: Workmen and Crews
ARR 6 Railroad, not Alaska Railroad
ARR 7 Alaska Railroad: Color
Cat.1 Catastrophe
Cat.2 Accidents, disasters, faulty construction
Cent. 1 Centennial Celebration and Art Show
Comm. 1 Communications
ConConv. 1 Constitutional Convention Groups in Cafeteria
ConConv. 2 Constitutional Convention Committees
ConConv. 3 Constitutional Convention Consultants
ConConv. 4 Constitutional Convention Delegates
ConConv. 5 Constitutional Convention Delegates at Large 1st & 2nd Div
ConConv. 6 Constitutional Convention Delgates at Large: 3rd Div
ConConv. 7 Constitutional Convention Delgates at Large: 4th Div
ConConv. 8 Constitutional Convention Delegates: Women
ConConv. 9 Constitutional Convention Constitution Hall
ConConv. 10 Constitutional Convention Officers
ConConv. 11 Constitutional Convention Opening
ConConv. 12 Constitutional Convention Plenary Session
ConConv. 13 Constitutional Convention Press
ConConv. 14 Constitutional Convention Signing
ConConv. 15 Constitutional Convention Staff
ConConv. 16 Constitutional Convention Visitors
ConConv. 17 Constitutional Convention Delegates A-B
ConConv. 18 Constitutional Convention Delegates C-D
ConConv. 19 Constitutional Convention Delegates E
ConConv. 20 Constitutional Convention Delegates F-G
ConConv. 21 Constitutional Convention Delegates H-I
ConConv. 22 Constitutional Convention Delegates J-K
ConConv. 23 Constitutional Convention Delegates L-M
ConConv. 24 Constitutional Convention Delegates N-O
ConConv. 25 Constitutional Convention Delegates P-Q
ConConv. 26 Constitutional Convention Delegates R
ConConv. 27 Constitutional Convention Delegates S
ConConv. 28 Constitutional Convention Delegates T
ConConv. 29 Constitutional Convention Delegates U-Z
Const. 1 Highways historical
Const. 2 Highways construction
Const. 3 Highways maintenance
Const. 4 Road signs
Const. 5 Bus and bus touring
Const. 6 Rock work and construction
Const. 7 Utility construction
Const. 8 Road construction
Const. 9 Road houses and lodges
Const. 10 Alaska Highway
Const. 11 Denali Highway
Const. 12 Edgerton Highway to Chitina
Const. 13 Glenn Highway North of Palmer
Const. 14 Glenn Highway South of Palmer
Const. 15 Haines Road
Const. 16 Hatcher Pass Road
Const. 17 Highways and Roads Misc.
Const. 18 McCarthy Road
Const. 19 McKinley Park Road (north of Fairbanks)
Const. 20 Parks Highway
Const. 21 Richardson Highway
Const. 22 Roads in Anchorage
Const. 23 Seward Highway - Portage Road
Const. 24 Southeast Roads
Const. 25 Sterling Highway
Const. 26 Taylor Highway Tetlin to Dawson (Eagle)
Const. 27 Highway Wreck
Const. 28 Equipment and Construction
Const. 29 Bethel Housing Project
Const. 30 Construction Turnagain Houses 1953
Const. 31 Construction 1972
Const. 32 Construction Equipment
Const. 33 Construction Miscellaneous
Const. 34 Construction 1971
Const.35 Construction, Anchorage
Culture 1 Culture - Music, Art, Dance
Culture 2 Dance
Culture 3 Theater Productions
Culture 4 Music
Culture 5 1962 Anchorage Festival of Music
Culture 6 Fireworks
Ed. 1 Schools
Ed. 2 Schools, kids and teachers
Ed. 3 Community college
Ed. 4 AMU (Alaska Methodist University)
EQ 1 1964 Earthquake: General
EQ 2 1964 Earthquake: Air Views of Anchorage
EQ 3 1964 Earthquake: ANS
EQ 4 1964 Earthquake: ARR
EQ 5 1964 Earthquake: Airport
EQ 6 1964 Earthquake: Anchorage Sand and Gravel
EQ 7 1964 Earthquake: Cordova Building
EQ 8 1964 Earthquake: Curiosities and Cracks
EQ 9 1964 Earthquake: Docks
EQ 10 1964 Earthquake: East 5th Avenue (Alaska Sales and Service)
EQ 11 1964 Earthquake: Fires
EQ 12 1964 Earthquake: Fireweed Lane
EQ 13 1964 Earthquake: L Street
EQ 14 1964 Earthquake: Mac's and McCutcheon Family
EQ 15 1964 Earthquake: Reconstruction
EQ 16 1964 Earthquake: Central Business District
EQ 17 1964 Earthquake: Central Business District Later
EQ 18 1964 Earthquake: Penny's
EQ 19 1964 Earthquake: Schools (see also airviews, reconstruction)
EQ 20 1964 Earthquake: Turnagain
EQ 21 1964 Earthquake: Turnagain Later
EQ 22 1964 Earthquake: Highway Damage
EQ 23 1964 Earthquake: Whittier and Portage
EQ 24 1964 Earthquake: Airviews not Anchorage
EQ 25 1964 Earthquake: Aleut Relocation
EQ 26 1964 Earthquake: Turnagain Arm
Geog. 1 Flags
Geog. 2 Maps
Health 1 Public safety
Health 2 Health
Home 1 Cabins - summer
Home 2 Cabins and cache - winter
Home 3 Cabins and cache - summer
Home 4 Homesteading
Home 5 Dog mushers
Home 6 Dogs
Ind. 1 Industry
Ind. 2 Machinery
Ind. 3 Trapping
Ind. 4 Water Well Drilling
Ind. 5 Blasting and Drilling
Ind. 6 Trucks and Trucking
Ind. 7 Power/Elec. Generation
Ind. 8 Workmen
Ind. 9 Hydro Construction/Power
Ind. 10 Airplanes
Ind. 11 Trucks and Mechanics
Ind. 12 Ice Road and Ice Bridge
Ind. 13 Hydro
Ind. 14 Power Plants
Ind. 15 Powerlines Poles
Ind. 16 Water Treatment Plants
Ind. 17 Pollution
Logging 1 Timber
Logging 2 Ketchikan Pulp Company Thorne Bay
Logging 3 Logging
Logging 4 Pulp and Pulp Mills
Logging 5 Buck and Fall Logging
Logging 6 Sawmills and Lumber
M1 Clams, digging-processing
M2 Fish spawning
M3 Fishes, kinds of etc.
M4 Fish
M5 Commercial Fishing
M6 Fish Industry
M7 Fish processing
M8 King Crab Industry
M9 Canneries, all areas
M10 Scallops and everything
M11 Fishing, set netting
M12 Dungeness crab
M13 Fishing boats
M14 Fishing hooligan
M15 Fishing salmon
M16 Halibut
M17 Herring
M18 Herring spawn harvest
M19 Fish camps
M20 Fish Nets and Camps
M21 Shrimp
M22 Wakefield Fisheries
M23 Fishing and crabbing
M24 Tidal pool and Misc.
M25 Long shoring
M26 Government/ice breaker
M27 Marine transportation
M28 Boats
M29 River boats
M30 Boats, small pleasure boats
M31 Steamboats
M32 Boats, tourist type
M33 Boat pilots and captains
M34 Ferry
M35 River tugs
M36 Tugs and barging
M37 Marine seismic shot
M38 Russian Fishing
M39 Salmon
Mining 1 Coal Mining
Mining 2 Gold Mining
Mining 3 Historical Mining
Mining 4 Mining (Other than Coal and Gold)
Money 1 Money and negotiables
P1 Oil Older Negs
P2 Oil field, Kenai Peninsula
P3 Seismic Views: Surface
P4 Oil Complex
P5 Offshore Drilling
P6 Texaco Platforms
P7 Oil Platforns
P8 Marathon Monopod
P9 Mobil - Phillips Cook Inlet
P10 Drill Rigs
P11 Refinery
P12 Oil drill onshore and some offshore
P13 Oil business - misc.
P14 TAPS
P15 Oil Construction
P16 Refinery
P17 Prudhoe Bay
P18 North Slope
P19 Keystone Canyon Highway
P20 Pipe transport
P21 Cat Train
P22 Construction Pipeline
P23 GRS - TAPS
P24 Camps
P25 Ice Road
P26 Pipeline, bridges and pump stations
P27 Pipeline - Valdez Terminal - Prudhoe
P28 Trans Alaska Pipe & Line
P29 Pipeline
P30 Pipe Stations
P31 Pipeline tests and test sites
P32 First Pipe Crossing at Tonsina River Crossing
P33 Aerials
P34 ARCO
P35 Fairbanks yards/Work
P36 Ice Haul Road/Pipeline
P37 Tankers for Oil and Gas
P38 Alyeska/Erosion Control
P39 Union Oil Collier Carbon Plant
P40 Valdez Terminal
P41 Offload pipeline supplies, Seward
P42 Oil Terminals and Tankers Valdez
P43 Docks Oil/General
P44 Pan American Oil Company
P45 Shell Oil Company
P46 B.P. Alaska Inc.
P47 Mobil/Phillips North Prudhoe et al.
P48 Ohio Oil Co. (late changed name to Marathon Oil)
P49 Union and Marathon Oil and Gas
P50 Oil Equipment
P51 Historical Oil in Color
People 1 People: Humor
People 2 People: General
People 3 Artists, Art by Last Name
People 4 Authors
People 5 People, Military
People 6 People, Movies and Documentaries
People 7 People, Celebrities (Non-Alaskan)
People 8 People, Pageants
People 9 People, Pioneers of Alaska
People 10 Festivals - Anchorage (includes 50th Anniversary of City)
People 11 Anchorage - Holidays
People 12 Anchorage - Parades by Year
People 13 People, Anchorage General, by Date
People 14 People, Anchorage General A-O
People 15 People, Anchorage General P-Z
People 16 People, Anchorage Children
People 17 People, Anchorage Civil Groups and Clubs
People 18 People, Anchorage Mayors
People 19 People, Rondy by Year
People 20 People, Rondy Queens
Pol. 1 Politics General
Pol. 2 People, U.S. House
Pol. 3 People, U.S. Senate
Pol. 4 Stevens, Senator
Pol. 5 Stevens, Ann (wife of Ted Stevens)
Pol. 6 Political Visitors
Pol. 7 Presidents
Pol. 8 Great Seal of the State of Alaska
Pol. 9 Democrats
Pol. 10 Voting
Pol. 11 Governors (General)
Pol. 12 Governors - Egan
Pol. 13 Governors - Gruening
Pol. 14 Gruening, Dorothy (wife of Ernest Gruening)
Pol. 15 Governors - H (alpha)
Pol. 16 Governors - Hickel
Pol. 17 Hickel, Mrs. Ermalee
Pol. 18 Governors - Miller
Pol. 19 Lieutenant Governors
Pol. 20 Judges
Pol. 21 Territorial Government Commissions
Pol. 22 Legislature - State (General)
Pol. 23 Legislature - State (Alpha By Name)
Sam. 1 Samovars
Science 1 Geomorphology
Science 2 Aurora
Science 3 Moon
Science 4 Sky and weather
Science 5 Science
Science 6 Scientists
Science 7 Misc. sciences
Science 8 Tundra taiga
Science 9 Relics
Science 10 Fossil relics
Science 11 Archaeology
Science 12 Petroglyphs
Science 13 Permafrost
Science 14 Snow and frost views
Science 15 Geology, air
Science 16 Geology
Science 17 Livestock
Science 18 Glaciers Glacier Bay
Science 19 Berries
Science 20 Forest Fire
Science 21 Trees
Science 22 Forests and Arctic Forests
Science 23 Vegetables
Science 24 Botanicals
Science 25 Farm views
Science 26 Farm air
Science 27 Hay and grains
Science 28 Wildflowers
Scn. 1 Portage Glacier
Scn. 2 Mountains
Scn. 3 Mountains & Volcanoes
Scn. 4 Mt. McKinley North
Scn. 5 Mt. McKinley
Scn. 6 Mt. McKinley South
Scn. 7 Glaciers
Scn. 8 Hubbard Glacier
Scn. 9 Lake George & Knik Glacier
Scn. 10 Laconte Glacier
Scn. 11 Margery Glacier
Scn. 12 Matanuska Glacier
Scn. 13 Mendenhall Glacier
Scn. 14 Tidal Bore
Scn. 15 Sea
Scn. 16 Islands
Scn. 17 Tidal
Scn. 18 Marine scenics
Scn. 19 Lakes and ponds
Scn. 20 Rivers and creeks
Scn. 21 Rivers, air
Scn. 22 Tide pool
Scn. 23 Sea coast
Scn. 24 Fjords
Scn. 25 Arctic Ice Pack
Scn. 26 Scenery - Kobuk
Scn. 27 Waterfalls
Scn. 28 Iceberg
Sports 1 Baseball
Sports 2 Basketball
Sports 3 Boat Racing
Sports 4 Bowling
Sports 5 Water skiing
Sports 6 Golf
Sports 7 Skiing
Sports 8 Sport fishing
Sports 9 Fur industry
Sports 10 Hunting
Sports 11 Hiking
Sports 12 Picnic
Sports 13 Camps and camping
Sports 14 Recreation
Sports 15 Sports and recreation
Sports 16 Snowmachining, racing, etc.
Sports 17 Beach and swimming
Sports 18 Misc. Sports
Sports 19 Snow machine
Sports 20 Skating
Sports 21 Camp Porcupine
Sports 22 Snowshoe sport
Sports 23 Boats, Misc.
Sports 24 Oil support boats
Sports 25 Work boats not oil
Sports 26 Dog team race - dogs
Sports 27 Winter sports
Sports 28 Sports fishing deep sea
Sports 29 Car Racing
StateBattle 1 Statehood Battle: General
StateBattle 2 Statehood Battle: Washington D.C Trip 1950 Ship of State
StateBattle 3 Statehood Battle: Crawford Committee
StateBattle 4 Statehood Battle: Statehood Committee
StateBattle 5 Statehood Battle: Tennessee Plan
StateBattle 6 Statehood Battle: Battle Anniversary
StateBattle 7 Statehood Battle: Rondy Parade 1958
StateBattle 8 Statehood Battle: Celebration 6/1958
StateBattle 9 Statehood Battle: 3 January 1959
TV 1 Adak
TV 2 Admirality Island
TV 3 Afognak
TV 4 Akiachak
TV 5 Akutan
TV 6 Alukanuk
TV 7 Alitak
TV 8 Alyeska
TV 9 Ambler
TV 10 Amchitka
TV 11 Amchitka Island
TV 12 Anaktuvuk Pass
TV 13 Andreafsky
TV 14 Atka
TV 15 Auke Lake
TV 16 Barrow/NARL
TV 17 Beaver
TV 18 Bell Island
TV 19 Bethel
TV 20 Bethel: Air
TV 21 Bettles
TV 22 Bieter
TV 23 Big Delta
TV 24 Big Lake
TV 25 Birchwood
TV 26 Black Rapids
TV 27 Cantwell
TV 28 Canyon Village
TV 29 Cape Lisbourne
TV 30 Chernofsky
TV 31 Chickaloon
TV 32 Chicken
TV 33 Chitina
TV 34 Chugiak
TV 35 Circle City
TV 36 Circle Hot Springs
TV 37 Clarks Point
TV 38 Cold Bay
TV 39 Copper Center
TV 40 Cordova
TV 41 Craig
TV 42 Curry
TV 43 Deadhorse
TV 44 Delta
TV 45 Denali Park
TV 46 Dillingham
TV 47 Dutch Harbor
TV 48 Eagle (City)
TV 49 Eagle River
TV 50 Eek
TV 51 Eklutna
TV 52 Ekwok
TV 53 Ester
TV 54 Eureka
TV 55 Fairbanks
TV 56 Fairbanks: Air
TV 57 False Pass
TV 58 Fort Liscum
TV 59 Fort Yukon
TV 60 Funter Bay
TV 61 Gakona
TV 62 Gambell
TV 63 Girdwood
TV 64 Glacier Bay
TV 65 Glennallen
TV 66 Golovin
TV 67 Gulkana
TV 68 Haines
TV 69 Hamilton
TV 70 Halibut Cove
TV 71 Holikachuk
TV 72 Holy Cross
TV 73 Homer
TV 74 Homer: Air
TV 75 Hoonah
TV 76 Hope
TV 77 Hydaburg
TV 78 Hyder
TV 79 Iniskin
TV 80 Innoko
TV 81 Iliamna
TV 82 Juneau/Douglas
TV 83 Juneau/Douglas: Air
TV 84 Kaltag
TV 85 Kanakanak
TV 86 Kasaan
TV 87 Katalla
TV 88 Kenai
TV 89 Kenai: Air
TV 90 Kenai: Russian Orthodox Church
TV 91 Kenai Peninsula
TV 92 Kennecott (See McCarthy)
TV 93 Ketchikan
TV 94 Ketchikan: Air
TV 95 Ketchikan: Historical
TV 96 Kiana
TV 97 King Island
TV 98 King Salmon/Naknek
TV 99 Klawock
TV 100 Klukwan
TV 101 Knik
TV 102 Kobuk
TV 103 Kodiak
TV 104 Kokrines
TV 105 Kotzebue
TV 106 Koyukuk
TV 107 Kwethluk
TV 108 Kwiguk
TV 109 Lake George
TV 110 Liberty Landing
TV 111 Livengood
TV 112 Marshall
TV 113 Mary's Igloo
TV 114 McCarthy/Kennecott
TV 115 McGrath
TV 116 McNeil River
TV 117 Mekoryuk
TV 118 Mentasta Lake
TV 119 Metlakatla
TV 120 Miles Canyon
TV 121 Minto
TV 122 Mixed villages
TV 123 Moose Pass
TV 124 Mountain Village
TV 125 Muir Inlet (not in drawer)
TV 126 Myers Chuck
TV 127 Nation
TV 128 Nenana
TV 129 Newenham, Cape
TV 130 Nikolaevsk
TV 131 Ninilchik
TV 132 Noatak
TV 133 Nome
TV 134 Nome - Sand Spit
TV 135 Noorvik
TV 136 North Pole
TV 137 Nulato
TV 138 Oldnes
TV 139 Old Crow
TV 140 Ouzinkie
TV 141 Paimiut
TV 142 Palmer
TV 143 Palmer - Air
TV 144 Palmer - Historical
TV 145 Paxson
TV 146 Pedro Creek
TV 147 Petersburg
TV 148 Petersburg - Air
TV 149 Pilot Point
TV 150 Point Station
TV 151 Point Hope
TV 152 Point Possession
TV 153 Port Graham
TV 154 Port Wakefield
TV 155 Port Lions
TV 156 Portage
TV 157 Rampart
TV 158 Ruby
TV 159 Russian Mission
TV 160 St. George
TV 161 St. Marys
TV 162 St. Michael
TV 163 St. Paul
TV 164 Sand Point
TV 165 Seldovia
TV 166 Seward
TV 167 Seward - Air
TV 168 Seward - Historical
TV 169 Shageluk
TV 170 Shemya Air Force Base
TV 171 Shismaref
TV 172 Shugnak
TV 173 Sitka
TV 174 Skagway
TV 175 Sledge Island
TV 176 Sleetmute
TV 177 Soldotna
TV 178 Squaw Harbor
TV 179 Sterling
TV 180 Stevens Village
TV 181 Stewart Creek
TV 182 Sunrise
TV 183 Suntrana
TV 184 Susitna Station
TV 185 Sutton
TV 186 Taku Harbor
TV 187 Talkeetna
TV 188 Tanana
TV 189 Tatitlek/Ellamar
TV 190 Teller
TV 191 Tok
TV 192 Tolovana
TV 193 Tyonek
TV 194 Tyonek - Air
TV 195 Tyonek - Hickel Visit, 1969
TV 196 Tyonek - People
TV 197 Unalakleet
TV 198 Unalaska/Dutch Harbor
TV 199 Unga
TV 200 Valdez
TV 201 Valdez - Historical
TV 202 Wainwright
TV 203 Wasilla
TV 204 Whittier
TV 205 Willow
TV 206 Wiseman
TV 207 Wrangell
TV 208 British Columbia (all)
TV 209 Burwash Landing
TV 210 Dawson City
TV 211 Dawson Creek
TV 212 Fort Nelson
TV 213 Fortymile/Fort Cudahy
TV 214 Inuvik
TV 215 Canada - Misc.
TV 216 New Rampart/Porcupine
TV 217 Old Crow
TV 218 Stikeen River/Telegraph Creek
TV 219 Whitehorse
TV 220 Yukon - Historical
TV 221 Carcross
TV 222 Alert Bay
TV 223 Elfin Cove
TV 224 Yakutat
USPS U.S. Mail

Series 6: Glass Lantern Slides

Series 7: Panoramas

Series 8: 2018 Addendum
[Numbered as B1990.014.2018]
Subseries 1: Negatives


Guide updated: July 17, 2019