View of some of the burned out buildings from the Big Fire in Nome, 13 Sept. 1905. Fresh milled lumber is visible for the rebuilding and one structure is already going up. The name Goetze appears in the bottom right of the photograph and may be...
Title taken from front. View of burned down buildings after big fire, Nome, Alaska, with people surveying the damage. Photographer's number 726. Sept. 13, 1905. Photographer: O. D. Goetze.
Title from image View of the front of Jimmy's store, with produce and magazines on display; two women, a cat, and a man are outside Note beneath photo reads, "This Greek was quite Dawson character; burned out twice. Will Rogers was...
Title and description taken from accompanying material. "Dart": Mail, Frt. Pass. Bow on, burned and half sunk in Lake Union with other burned or scrapped vessels.; "Reliance":Small, old Sd. Pass boat. Stbd. bow, laying in junk yard Lake Union,...
African-American soldiers stand at attention on the Klondike Company's wharf in Dyea. Note from Karl Gurcke: They were (in Dyea) for a brief period of time (July 1899) before they were burned out by a forest fire and had to move to Skagway.
During the 1920's, many of the original totem poles in Kake were burned. After many years of not having totem poles, the residents of Kake, Alaska organized to acquire and place a 132-foot pole in the town. Alaska Indian Arts, Inc. of Haines,...
During the 1920's, many of the original totem poles in Kake were burned. After many years of not having totem poles, the residents of Kake, Alaska organized to acquire and place a 132-foot pole in the town. Alaska Indian Arts, Inc. of Haines,...
During the 1920's, many of the original totem poles in Kake were burned. After many years of not having totem poles, the residents of Kake, Alaska organized to acquire and place a 132-foot pole in the town. Alaska Indian Arts, Inc. of Haines,...
During the 1920's, many of the original totem poles in Kake were burned. After many years of not having totem poles, the residents of Kake, Alaska organized to acquire and place a 132-foot pole in the town. Alaska Indian Arts, Inc. of Haines,...