(5:12 min.) (05 of 08) Repairs on the Alaska Run for the Alaska Steam Ship Captain Brastad; lost propeller at sea; Stitt, James -- chief engineer; secure the propeller; steam ship -- towed ship back to Seattle; repair -- cylinder head; stop the...
Accession Number: 96-26 Descriptive Narrative: Paper cut-out in the shape of a paulownia leaf, printed in gold, black and green. Background printed on each side is a photographic reproduction of a leaf in gold and black. In the center is a...
Closeup view of Bill Ritter holding two Alaskan king crabs, about to drop them into the cooking vat at the Alaska-Fresh Crab Plant in Homer, Alaska. He is dressed in a rubber apron and wearing a hat. Original photograph size: 4" x 6".
Title by cataloger. An automobile parked on the cliff side of a gravel road. Two women are sitting on the step rail of the car, and there is a wooden guardrail on the riverside of the road. The river is a steep drop down from the rock cliff.
A porch attached to a house with drop siding. A picket fence is in front of the house. Some type of climbing plant is growing on strings attached to the porch roof. Related photographs of the same house are:...
A woman in a full-length dress stands on a porch. The house appears to have wood drop siding. Related photographs of the same house are: UAF-1968-21-153, UAF-1968-21-156, UAF-1968-21-157, UAF-1968-21-158, UAF-1968-21-159,...
These photographs were taken between 1899 and 1911 and depict life in the region around Forts Gibbon and Egbert. Included are hunting parties, military personnel, camp buildings, scenery, dog sledding and skiing. Steamships are shown loading wood...
Most of the collection consists of photographs of person, mountains, equipment, and aircraft used in the expedition to recover bodies from the C-A1 of the ATC which crashed in the Mount McKinley region, circa 1944.
The following is the text on...
Title from image. Photograph of Multnomah Falls, claiming it is a 620 foot drop. Narrative in photo album reads: "Two of many such falls along the Columbia River Highway. The bridge on the left (94-70-955) carries the highway; but on the...