Title from article, published in 1989, about the first officially sponsored derby, held in Juneau in 1947 Note: Dick Harris won the first Golden North Salmon Derby with a 38-pound, 4-ounce salmon
Title from image. Photographer's number 20S. Salmon Creek Dam; designed by Lars Jorgensen, chief engineer Harry L. Wallenerg, was the first true constant-angle arch dam. It is 168 feet high and 648 feet across. Completed in 1914. Alaska...
Title from image. Photographer's number S.43. Salmon Creek Dam; designed by Lars Jorgensen, chief engineer Harry L. Wallenerg, was the first true constant-angle arch dam. It is 168 feet high and 648 feet across. Completed in 1914. Alaska...
Salmon Creek Dam; designed by Lars Jorgensen, chief engineer Harry L. Wallenerg, was the first true constant-angle arch dam. It is 168 feet high and 648 feet across. Completed in 1914. Alaska Electric Light and Power Company (AEL&P), Juneau,...
Title from image. Photographer's number S.37. Salmon Creek Dam; designed by Lars Jorgensen, chief engineer Harry L. Wallenerg, was the first true constant-angle arch dam. It is 168 feet high and 648 feet across. Completed in 1914. Alaska...
Title from image. Salmon Creek Dam; designed by Lars Jorgensen, chief engineer Harry L. Wallenerg, was the first true constant-angle arch dam. It is 168 feet high and 648 feet across. Completed in 1914. Alaska Electric Light and Power...
Title from image. Salmon Creek Dam; designed by Lars Jorgensen, chief engineer Harry L. Wallenerg, was the first true constant-angle arch dam. It is 168 feet high and 648 feet across. Completed in 1914. Photographer's number 14.S. Alaska...
Title from image. Photographer's number S.46. Salmon Creek Dam; designed by Lars Jorgensen, chief engineer Harry L. Wallenerg, was the first true constant-angle arch dam. It is 168 feet high and 648 feet across. Completed in 1914. Alaska...
Title from image. Photographer's number S.44. Salmon Creek Dam; designed by Lars Jorgensen, chief engineer Harry L. Wallenerg, was the first true constant-angle arch dam. It is 168 feet high and 648 feet across. Completed in 1914. Alaska...
Title from image. Photographer's number S.45. Salmon Creek Dam; designed by Lars Jorgensen, chief engineer Harry L. Wallenerg, was the first true constant-angle arch dam. It is 168 feet high and 648 feet across. Completed in 1914. Alaska...
From text of document: Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America, in Congress assembled, That for the purpose of protecting and conserving the fisheries of the United States...
Title taken from caption. View of a man, a woman, and three children at Naknek, Alaska. The woman is dressing salmon for drying and there is a pile of prepared salmon in the center of the photo. Caption also says: "Native woman dressing salmon....
Title taken from caption. View of a tent, bidarka, and salmon drying racks full of salmon at Naknek River, Alaska. Caption also says: "Natives drying salmon at the mouth of the Naknek River." Photo taken during National Geographic Society...
Title taken from album. View of the settlement of Little Salmon, Yukon Territory, Canada (incorrectly identified as Alaska), taken from the Yukon River. Little Salmon is at the confluence of the Little Salmon and the Yukon rivers and consists of a...
Title taken from verso. View of Peter L. Ferry family members on bridge over stream with spawning salmon, near Cordova, Alaska. 1929. Original photograph size: 3 1/2" x 5 3/4".