Physical description: 13 pages, handwritten on yellow legal-sized sheets. Places mentioned: Auk Bay (Alaska) ; Auk Village (Alaska) ; Berners Bay (Alaska) ; Cape St. Elias (Alaska) ; Douglas (Alaska) ; Douglas Island (Alaska) ; Fairheaven (Alaska) ; Gastineau Channel (Alaska) ; Juneau (Alaska) ; Norway Point (Alaska); Olivers Inlet (Alaska) ; Outer Point (Alaska) ; Point Bishop (Alaska) ; Present Bay (Alaska) ; Seattle, WA ; Seymour Canal (Alaska) ; Sheepcreek (Alaska) ; Stikine River (Alaska) ; Stikine River (Alaska) ; Taku Harbor (Alaska) ; Taku Inlet (Alaska) ; Vancouver, BC ; Wrangell (Alaska); Youngs Bay (Alaska)
The History of Aukquon
This story begins aboute 15th
century. At Stikine River now.
The people lives at Wrangell.
At that time people lived in
big houses. Some were built
out of Yellow Cedar bark its like
the shape of plywood.
Different tribes and clans
lived in different houses. The
people were strict with each
other. They word was law. The
Dog Salmon clan had a leader
now they call chief had one eye
All the family and relatives lived
in one big house.
One day the leader was at
home alone he had a old lady
slave watches over him. And
it happened the tire was out
He told the slave to go next
door to get the fire started.
She went and picked up a
burning wood. They teenagers
at home. They stopped the old
lady took the burning stick away from her.
They told her to acted like
her master which she did
closed one eye and looked
around. They sure made fun
of her.
They soon gave up and gave
her the fire. When she got back
she threw the burning wood in
the fire place she was mad