At head of title: The National Geographic Magazine. Relief shown by hachures and spot heights. Shows railroad, steamship, and telegraph and cable lines. Inset: Western extension of Aleutian Islands. In color.
It is assumed the river is the Iditarod and that the town visible in the distance is Iditarod. Related photographs from the Reed collection of the town of Iditarod are at UAF-1968-21-126 and UAF-1968-21-133. It is believed...
This is a photograph of George Glass and his seventeen year old son Ophir with their dog teams at the summit of Rainy Pass while traveling on the Iditarod Trail with Irving Reed in March 1920. Related Rainy Pass...
Three men gold panning on Little Creek, Innoko. The caption identifies them as [illegible] Glass, G. W. Glass, and I. M. Reed. A magazine article by Irving Reed, "Rainy Pass by dog team," describes the circumstance of...
A musher poses with a dog sled while crossing Rainy Pass on the Iditarod Trail in late March 1920. The trip was made by George Glass, his 17 year old son Ophir Glass, and Irving Reed. It is unknown which of them is the...
Photograph of Valdez, Alaska in winter. Two people walk through the snow near the Producers and Consumers Exchange. This photograph is believe to have been taken in March 1920 when Irving Reed traveled from Seattle to...
View of Valdez, Alaska with snowy mountains in the background. The photograph was taken by Irving Reed from the steamer Alameda while traveling from Seattle to Seward so that he could travel the Iditarod Trail by dog...
View of Valdez from a distance. This photograph was most likely taken from the ship Alameda in March 1920 when Irving Reed traveled from Seattle to Seward by boat so that he could travel the Iditarod Trail. See his...
View down Fourth Avenue in Anchorage, Alaska on March 15, 1920. The store on the left looks like it says Brown & Hawkins. Another photograph (AMRC-b65-2-4) says there is a Brown & Hawkins store on 4th Avenue. There was...
People with sled dogs are at the Little Susitna Roadhouse. From related photographs, it is known that the two people on the right are George Glass and his seventeen year old son Ophir, who traveled with Irving Reed on the...
The musher with the dogsled team near the log cabins, is either George Glass or his seventeen year old son Ophir. They traveled the Iditarod Trail with Irving Reed in March 1920. See Reed's magazine article, "Rainy Pass by...
Three dogsled teams at Knik. Several log buildings are in the background, as well as the sign of the Knik Roadhouse, and and the Two Girls Cafe. The three mushers are Irving Reed, George Glass, and his seventeen year old...
"Near Lakeview, Swentna [Skwentna]." Irving Reed, George W. Glass, and his seventeen year old son Ophir, undertook a trip on the Iditarod Trail in late March 1920. Reed wrote a magazine article, "Rainy Pass by dog team,"...
George Glass and his seventeen year old son Ophir, stand with their sled dog teams at the Pass Creek Roadhouse at Rainy Pass. The roadhouse was owned by the Anderson brothers at the time. A magazine article by Irving Reed...
Six men pose for this photograph in front of Clough's Roadhouse in McGrath. George and his seventeen year old son Ophir are the two on the left and Irving Reed is third from the right. Irving Reed and the two Glasses...
George Glass and his seventeen year old son Ophir with Irving Reed (center) pose for this photograph at the Skwentna Roadhouse. Skwenta Crossing, is where the Iditarod Trail crossed the Skwentna River. Reed wrote in a...
View across the frozen Susitna River to the town of Susitna Station. In March 1920 Irving Reed traveled the Iditarod Trail by dog team. In his magazine article, "Rainy Pass by dog team," he wrote that Susitna station was...
Two mushers outside two log cabins at Yankee Creek. George Glass, his seventeen year old son Ophir, and Irving Reed traveled by dog sled for 14 days from Wasilla to Yankee Creek in late March 1920. Reed described this...
Irving Reed, in front, with George and Ophir Glass on either side of him, pose with "French Joe" (Joe Blanchell), who is holding the rifle. Three dog teams with sleds are visible. French Joe's was also known as the Rohn...
George Glass and his seventeen year old son Ophir, pose with their dog teams outside the Northern Commercial store in Takotna. A magazine article by Irving Reed (Alaska Sportsman, v. 31, Oct. 1965, pp. 8-13) identifies...