Title taken from information with photo. View of Shell Oil Cuss II drilling rig on barge in Cook Inlet, Alaska. Also from information with photo: "Barge with derrick." Sept. 1963. Photographer: Ward W. Wells. Original photograph size: 8 1/8" x 10".
Title taken from information with photo. View of Shell Oil Clomar II drilling platform on barge in Cook Inlet, Alaska. Lettering on barge reads: "Clomar II." Sept. 1964. Photographer: Ward W. Wells. Original photograph size: 8" x 10".
Title taken from verso. Aerial view of Shell Oil drilling rig in Cook Inlet, Alaska, with another drilling rig in background. Aug. 1967. Photographer: Ward W. Wells. Original photograph size: 10" x 8".
Title from sleeve. View of rig and view of the south west leg which shows electrolysis damage. Views made at low low water for Shell Oil Company. 2 1/4 B&W negative.
Title from sleeve. View of rig and view of the south west leg which shows electrolysis damage. Views made at low low water for Shell Oil Company. 2 1/4 B&W negative.
Title from sleeve. View of rig and view of the south west leg which shows electrolysis damage. Views made at low low water for Shell Oil Company. 2 1/4 B&W negative.
Inscribed on front, "To Shell, Thanks! Mayor Fran Ulmer" Note on verso identifies people as Dan Amundson?, Bill Overstreet, Jim Johnson, Fran Ulmer, and Shell Simmons
Shell Simmons poses with unidentified man; Shell's Cessna 185, which he flew 1969-1975, in background; sign on plane: "Juneau, Alaska, 'Capital City of the Great Land'"; sign on building in background reads, in part, "El Cajon"
Shell Simmons (second from left), Bee Simmons (far right), and two unidentified people pose in front of Shell's private plane, a Cessna 185 with sign: "Juneau, Alaska, 'Capital City of the Great Land'"
Title from verso. Photograph of a Japanese shell exploding near a U.S. position. Verso reads: "Attu Island -- With a roar, a Japanese shell explodes near a U.S. position. The Nips [ Nipponese ] fought furiously and clung to their...
Shell Simmons [in middle?] and three other men work on a car with a 1941Washington license plate; man on right wears overcoat from the J. M. Perry Institute, a technical institute in Yakima, Washington