Title by indexer. Image shows a group of men in suits posing for an official photograph. On the left side of the photo hangs a sign on which "Fraternal Order of Eagles" is legible. On the right side of the image, a sign for the Arctic...
Group photograph outside a log building with the following people identified: Mayor Ryan of Annette Island, Charlie Purvis, Oscar Craig, Kay Hitchcock (Copper Center, AK Native Brotherhood), Theodore Hetzel, Howard Rock.
Title from image. Postcard of Skagway with AB Mountain in the background. Narrative in photo album reads: "On the mountain peak may be seen roughly the letters A. B. which members stand for Arctic Brotherhood. Picture at right...
Title from image. Postcard of the Arctic Brotherhood Hall and the A B Mountain. Narrative in photo album reads: "Only 'sourdough' Alaskans may be members of this lodge."
Title from caption. Postcard of Tanana as seen from the tower at Fort Gibbon. The A B [Arctic Brotherhood] Hall is identifiable at the center far right. Narrative in photo album reads: "View of Tanana looking east from the tower in Ft....
The H. C. Barley Photographs consist of more than 200 images of Skagway and vicinity in Alaska as well as nearby parts of northwestern British Columbia and southern Yukon. Barley, the official photographer for the White Pass & Yukon Route railroad,...
Title from caption. Photograph of two men in white posing with two dead mountain goats. Caption reads: "Two members of the Arctic Brotherhood order out on a hunting trip in the hills near Skaguay with white regalia of the order on, and...
Title from caption. Photograph of the interior of the Arctic Brotherhood Hall. The membership, dressed in primarily white regalia, stand posed with hands out before them.
The Coleen M. Platner Photographs (ca. 1909-1920s) contain photographs of pioneer children and their families living in Alaska, chiefly Iditarod, Chatanika, Little Eldorado City, and Eldorado Creek. There are also photographs from Nome and the...
Clipping removed from a publication with the caption: Skagway is at the head of the Lynn Canal, and this picture gives some idea of the fall of the tide when one notes the length of the long docks extending out into the water. The mountain in the...
Title from accompanying material. In lower-right corner: "L.E. Robertson Photo". A sign at the back of the stage reads "Bioneer Punk House"; a sign at right reads "All kuhns look alike to Bevington".
Title taken from verso. View of the audience attending the Bureau of Land Management Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act (BLM ANCSA) hearing in the Alaska Native Brotherhood Hall (ANB) on Willoughby St, Juneau, on April 10, 1975. Original...
Exterior shot of the Alaska Native Brotherhood Hall on Willoughby Street, Juneau. The Bureau of Land Management Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act (BLM ANCSA) hearings were held here on April 10, 1975. Sign outside building reads "BLM Public...
Exterior of the Alaska Native Brotherhood hall in Sitka. Bureau of Land Management Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act (BLM ANCSA) hearings were held here on April 11, 1975. Sign outside building reads "BLM Public Hearing 9am". A second sign...
Bureau of Land Management Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act (BLM ANCSA) hearings taking place in the Alaska Native Brotherhood hall in Juneau, April 10, 1975. Members of the public in the foreground. At the top table, from left to right (from...
Bureau of Land Management Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act (BLM ANCSA) hearings taking place in the Alaska Native Brotherhood Hall, Sitka, April 11, 1975. Members of the public in the foreground. Left to right on stage (from verso): Neil R....
View of the diesel oil tanks at Alaska Pacific Consolidated Mining Company's Independence Mine. Mine buildings and tailings piles are partially visible in the background. Original photograph size: 4" x 5".
Front view of the Arctic Brotherhood Hall building in Skagway, Alaska. The building front is covered with driftwood. Signs on the building include: "A B [Arctic Brotherhood]," "Camp Skagway No. 1," and "1899" above the doorway. ca. 1925.