Title from image caption Full caption: "Aviators Capt. James V. Martin and Mrs. Capt. [Lilly Martin] with their aeroplane - The first in Alaska - under the midnight sun, Fairbanks, Alaska, 1913"
Title taken from caption on Album. "Title taken from caption on Album. "The aviators lined up and ready to leave Fairbanks. They received various souvenirs, dogs, gold dust, fur parkees [parkas], etc."
Title taken from caption on Album. "The aviators lined up and ready to leave Fairbanks. They received various souvenirs, dogs, gold dust, fur parkees [parkas], etc."
"Number 10 and 11. This is a...on the outside Pan American had a chief engineer who was in charge of the pilot group that required all this ground school and studying to get the title of a master pilot. So the international correspondence school...
"Number 10 and 11. This is a...on the outside Pan American had a chief engineer who was in charge of the pilot group that required all this ground school and studying to get the title of a master pilot. So the international correspondence school...
"And the last one here, number 15. Yea that was that borrowed DC-3, it was destined for Pan American's China facility, China National Airline, but we had use of it to operate a few trips over through British Columbia to prove it was...
Title taken from verso. Men standing in front of Hisso Standard J-1 in Alaska. Also from verso: "The boots and caps were modish and efficient attire in 1925 for both aviators and mechanics on planes such as this. "Jenny", Noel Wien's Hisso Standard...
"This is number 12 that we're working on. Yea, that shows the Pan-American 707 approaching the terminal area after making the first landing out there, and we had half the town out there to celebrate a jet into Juneau."
"This is number 12 that we're working on. Yea, that shows the Pan-American 707 approaching the terminal area after making the first landing out there, and we had half the town out there to celebrate a jet into Juneau."
"This is number 12 that we're working on. Yea, that shows the Pan-American 707 approaching the terminal area after making the first landing out there, and we had half the town out there to celebrate a jet into Juneau."
"Bonus scans: my father's favorite is him in his fur hat leaning against the cowling of the Ballanca on skis. The last one is him in his Pan Am uniform."
Description from interview with Ralph Savory and his daughter, Diane.
"Bonus scans: my father's favorite is him in his fur hat leaning oagainst the cowling of the Bellanca on skis. The last one is him in his Pan Am uniform."
Description from interview with Ralph Savory and his daughter, Diane.
"Picture number 3. That's Pan Am's winter uniform up there. We had a seal skin cap and regular navy overcoat and everything. Of course when it got cold we had parkas and everything to go over it."