Title from signs on buildings A string of pack horses in street in front of shops, which include the hotel, restaurant, feed store, bakery, lunch counters, and saloon; [Dawson?]
Title from sign on building Signs advertise various services and amenities: Lunch Counter, Beds, Bunks, Cots, Beer, and "Bread for Sale"; also, "Outfits Bought"; men with pack horses and mules in front of building [in Skagway?]
Mules and horses feed on hay in front of two log buildings; a British flag is raised on pole between buildings; many tents are pitched on snowy ground in background
Group of men, a couple of whom have backpacks and walking sticks, gather around a wooden stand holding a book or ledger; wooden building on left and barrel on stand at right
In Winter and Pond Company's photograph album THE TRAIL OF '98 Full album caption: "Through winter's desolation into the silent depths of the great Yukon district the gold seekers rushed with their heavy loads on the trail to the Klondike,...
A Wisconsin legislator and U.S. Attorney, Delaney moved to Alaska during the Klondike Gold Rush and served as the first mayor of Juneau, Alaska, from 1900 to 1901
One of the ships that helped launch the Klondike gold rush in 1897 when she steamed into port with purportedly a "Ton of Gold"; on November 12, 1910, the ship hit a rock and grounded near Katalla; all passengers and crew survived
One of the ships that helped launch the Klondike gold rush in 1897 when she steamed into port with purportedly a "Ton of Gold"; on November 12, 1910, the ship hit a rock and grounded near Katalla; all passengers and crew survived Name written...
Sign in image reads: American Forest Week, April 22-28, 1928, A Week to Think and Talk of Forest Benefits, Timber - Water - Health. Cross section of a Sitka Spruce tree, with rings marked to indicate the dates of notable historical events: The...
Sketch of three people running rapids in a long narrow boat Note: Edwin Tappan Adney (1868-1950) was an artist, a writer, a photographer, and an experienced woodsman. Harper's Weekly sent Tappan Adney to the Klondike in the summer of 1897