Relief shown by hachures. Shows gold-bearing locations. Insets: Copper River of Alaska -- Klondike River of N.W. Territory. Includes table of distances and mail routes. Printed for S.N. Wood & Co., Columbian Woolen Mills, 718-722 Market St. San...
Shows overland and water routes to the Klondike gold fields. Relief shown by hachures and spot heights. Panel title: Map of the Klondike. "Reprinted from Harper's Weekly, August 14, 1897." Includes ancillary map of Alaska. 17.2 x 14.1 cm.,...
Title taken from front. View of people at docks in Seattle, Washington, as ships prepare to set sail for Alaska during the Gold Rush. Publisher's number 2190. 1897? Publisher: Lowman & Hanford, Seattle. Postcard. Original photograph size: 3 1/2" x...
Relief shown by hachures and spot heights. Insets: Route oue saivra l'expedition du "Temps" par le Chilkoot -- Trace du district du Klondike releve en Octobre, 1897 -- Minimum and maximum temperatures for Klondike, 1896.
Shows land and sea routes to the Klondike and Fortymile gold discoveries. Relief shown by hachures and spot heights. At head of title: The Century Atlas. Insets: Sitka, Glacier Bay and vicinity -- Western portion of Aleutian Islands. "No. 58."...
One of the ships that helped launch the Klondike gold rush in 1897 when she steamed into port with purportedly a "Ton of Gold"; on November 12, 1910, the ship hit a rock and grounded near Katalla; all passengers and crew survived
One of the ships that helped launch the Klondike gold rush in 1897 when she steamed into port with purportedly a "Ton of Gold"; on November 12, 1910, the ship hit a rock and grounded near Katalla; all passengers and crew survived Name written...
Thomas Clarke Noyes married Frances Muncaster (then, Arabelle Frances Patchen)in 1897. Settling in Candle, Alaska, Tom established the T.C. Noyes Banking Co. and became associated with the mining industry. In about 1905, they adopted a five-year...
On verso: Edward Barnes arrived in Wrangell around 1864 or 1865; Barnes Bros started logging in vicinity of Wrangell with ox teams around 1897 (J. M. Wyckoff, "Lumbering in Alaska," August 1923 Pathfinder)