This color slide depicts two unidentified men measuring a salmon at King Salmon, Alaska in 1962. The man on the left holds a measurer, and the man on the right holds the salmon in a white wooden trough. The photographer is unidentified.
This color slide depicts unidentified men standing on a dock at King Salmon, Alaska in 1962, measuring and cleaning salmon. There are salmon in metal tubs on the dock, and two pairs of men hold salmon on white tables. A man in the top left of the...
This color slide depicts four men standing on a fish trap in King Salmon, Alaska, 1962. The man on the right wears a red cap and a vest. The photographer is unidentified.
View of some of the homes built along the cliffs of King Island. The buildings are supported by stilts braced against the steep slopes. A hide is stretched out on a frame in the right hand side foreground of the photograph.
Title taken from front. View looking up Matanuska River, Matanuska River Valley, Alaska. Also from front: "King Mountain on right. A.E.C. G221." An Alaska Engineering Commission photo. Photographer's number G221. 1916. Photographer: P.S. Hunt....
Title taken from front. View looking down Matanuska River from mouth of Chickaloon River, with King Mountain to left, Matanuska Valley, Alaska. From front: "A.E.C. G231." An Alaska Engineering Commission photo. Photographer's number G231. 1916....
Title taken from front. View of King Mountain along Chickaloon Branch of Alaska Engineering Commission Railway, Southcentral Alaska. Also from front: "A.E.C. G1026." An Alaska Engineering Commission photo. Photographer's number G1026. Oct. 1918....
Title taken from front. View of world's largest king crab mounted and displayed in Kodiak, Alaska. 1970's? Photographer: Frank Whaley. Original photograph size: 8" x 10".
Title taken from verso. Group photo of government officials and others at dedication for new post office in King Salmon, Alaska. Man standing second from left in first row: E.L. "Bob" Bartlett. Dec. 8, 1964. Photographer: Ward W. Wells. Original...
King Cove School, which was built through labor from Pacific American Fisheries Cannery, was transferred to the Office of Indian Affairs in 1939; in 1938, 32 students were enrolled