Relief shown by hachures and spot heights. Shows location of various minerals, and routes of trails and steamship routes. Insets: Sketch map showing all lake routes -- Map of Nome Peninsula showing new gold fields of Cape Nome, Golovin Bay & Cape...
Caption: Eskimos are not Indians, but Mongoloids. Both have all inherent reverence for their ancestors, the Japanese possessing the characteristic a degree stronger than the Eskimos. The Japanese serve fish raw. ...
Five young women identified as left to right: Kuzrere or Grace (Mrs. Percy Blatchford of Nome), Koot egweena, Angnohok, Oo me eeuk, Ang arolok or Bessie (Mrs. Henry Miller of Teller).
Two women identified as Nora (left) and Angnolok (right).
Caption: Eskimos are not Indians, but Mongoloids. Both have all inherent reverence for their ancestors, the Japanese possessing the characteristic a degree stronger than the...
Caption: Eskimos are not Indians, but Mongoloids. Both have all inherent reverence for their ancestors, the Japanese possessing the characteristic a degree stronger than the Eskimos. The...
Relief shown by hachures and spot heights. Cover title. Oriented with north to the upper left. Shows detailed water and overland routes to the gold fields. Includes key to mineral resources. Inset: Sketch map showing all lake routes [Skagway...
Shows sea and land routes to the gold fields. Relief shown by hachures and spot heights. Oriented with north to the upper left. Inset: Sketch map showing all lake routes. Color, mounted on linen, 57 x 93 cm.
Shows sea and land routes to the gold fields. Relief shown by hachures and spot heights. Oriented with north to the upper left. Inset: Sketch map showing all lake routes. Color, mounted on linen, 57 x 93 cm.
Map of the coast of B.C. and the Yukon, showing travel routes to the Klondike, and listing approximate distances between points on the journey. Compiled from the latest official reports for the British Columbia Board of Trade, Victoria, B.C. by...
Title from collection notes. White two-story building, trees, and a sign (with dogwood emblem on bottom) that reads: "Ashcroft Manor. In 1862 C.F. and H.P. Cornwall settled here and developed Ashcroft Manor. The ranch, with its grist and saw...