Title taken from caption on slide. "Ice locked freight stern wheelers at Nenana on Tanana [River]. New bridge in rear. Fort Wainwright HHC 171st. April 1967." The inscription "YBL" is visible on the side of the vessel. Additional note...
View of the stern wheeler "Quickstep" in the snow in Nome, Alaska. The sign on front of the boat reads: "This steamer for sale." From verso: "Quickstep snow in Nome - Alaska." ca. 1901-1902. Photographer: probably Grace Carr Raymenton.
View of six stern wheelers at Northern Navigation Company docks, Dawson, Yukon Territory. Sign on boat at right reads: "Bailey." From verso: "'Sarah' and 'W. H. Isom' with barges at Nor[thern] Nav[igation] Co[mpany] dock, Dawson, Y[ukon]...
A stern wheeler is pushing a barge on a large river with a very flat landscape in the background. Related photographs are at UAF-1968-21-112 and UAF-1968-21-115.
A stern wheeler is pushing a barge on a wide river. The landscape in the background is very flat. Related photographs are at UAF-1968-21-112 and UAF-1968-21-114.
Title from caption. Photograph of a sternwheeler pushing a barge full of cargo. Narrative in photo album reads: "Below shows how steamers pushed huge loads of freight before then both up & down river."
Title taken from front. View of riverboat Matanuska docked along Matanuska River in Southcentral Alaska, with horses in foreground and background and men on shore and on boat. Also from front: "The Sydney Laurence Co. Anchorage, Alaska. A.E.C....
Close-up, side view of the SARAH Perhaps the largest steamer on the Yukon river, she hit a rock October 1903 about 70 miles below Eagle and sank; no lives were lost but about 400 tons of freight were lost (Kinky Bayer)
Title taken from caption. View of the U.S. Coast Guard Cutter Spencer (formerly the John C. Spencer), off shore from Anangula Island (also Ananiuliak Island). From May's journal, dated June 5th: "After we returned to the ship the Ariadne moved up...