(3:57 min.) (04 of 24) 04 After the war. Worked the passenger ships for years. Moved ashore into receiving ship stores. Did receiving for Korea and Vietnam wars. Moved up to the main office. Got to make deals for a million dollars. ...
Title from indexer. A man looks on from the deck of the Cape Victory, an Alaska Steamship Company vessel, which was regularly contracted to do transport work for canneries. Pier 42, pictured here, was a major transportation hub for travel to...
Verso: Many of Alaska's salmon canneries are located along uninhabited parts of the coast and mainland. More than 25,000 persons find world [work] annually in the fishing industry.
Title taken from image. Photograph of the Blodgett Cannery with the Village of Kodiak in the background, the cannery, and in the foreground several canvas tents housing what is probably cannery employees. A steamship is tied up to the wharf of...
One map in two segments on one sheet. Includes key to operating, reserve and defunct canneries and salteries and existing hatcheries. Bulletin U.S.F.C., 1901, Chart B.
Published in [Washington, D.C.] by the United States Fish Commission...
The Edward L. Creamer Papers consist of one memoir titled "A Dogface in Alaska: Surveying and Surviving," with digital print copies of 190 photographs. The memoir details Creamer’s experiences as topographic computer with U. S. Army’s 551st...
Title from caption. Photograph of an unidentified cannery town. Narrative in photo album reads: "Two salmon cannery towns practically deserted except during the canning season."
An e-mail from Chuck Mobley, dated September, 2009,...
The entire collection contains reports, correspondence, pamphlets, and administrative records received from the agricultural stations at Matanuska, Fairbanks, and Petersburg. The papers address such topics as environmental data, Alaskan flora,...