View of a number of wooden buildings that appear to be connected, Talkeetna, Alaska. The sign on the pole out front reads: "Roadhouse. Lodging Meals Liquor". Photo taken between 1969 and 1979. Original photograph size: 3 1/2" x 3 1/2".
Woman in gold rush era costume sits on bar pouring drink with painting of dancers on wall in background and liquor bottles on shelf behind her during "Bonanza Days" events in Anchorage, Alaska. From caption: "Connie Phillips on the bar." Some signs...
Title taken from caption. View of buildings and people during Beaver Roundup in Dillingham, Alaska. Also from caption: "Dillingham, AK." Signs on buildings read: "David Green fur buyer" and "D.C. Co. General merchandise. Liquor." Photograph type:...
View of damage to buildings along onFourth Avenue in Anchorage, Alaska after the March 27, 1964 earthquake. Large building in center is the Anchorage Westward Hotel. Signs on storefronts on the left read, partially, Hotel, Denali Bar, Liquor Store,...
View of damage to buildings in Anchorage, Alaska after the March 27, 1964 earthquake. Sign on building, center, reads Anchorage Cold Storage Co., Inc. Additional sings on that building read Coca-Cola, Wholesale Liquor Dealer, Franchise Bottlers....
View of buildings damaged in Anchorage, Alaska after the Marchc 27, 1964 earthquake. Sign on building, center, reads Anchorage Cold Storage Co., Inc. Additional signs on the building read Coca-Cola, Wholesale Liquor Dealer, Franchise Bottlers of...
View of 4th (Fourth) Avenue in Anchorage, Alaska after the March 27, 1964 earthquake. Large building, center right, is the Anchorage Westward Hotel. Signs on immediate right read Green Dragon Cocktails and Dena(li). Signs on right, further down the...
View of men standing outside bus station in Anchorage, Alaska, possibly on 4th Avenue, with buses at right of building and trucks and car parked in front. Sign on bus terminal reads: "City bus terminal. Matanuska K[?] lines. Anchorage city...
Title from sleeve. View of street in Haines, with Howser's store on the left, Jacksons and liquor store on the right. Pedestrians in street and on sidewalk, and trucks parked along the street. Mountain in background. Photographer's number: 26340. 2...
Title from sleeve. View of the Carrs grocery store and Oaken Keg liquor store in Kenai. A white Chrysler drives down the street in the foreground, while a red car and a green truck drive past. Utility poles hold wires crisscrossing the streets. 2...
Title from sleeve. A young boy walks toward a paved street in Seward. Buildings, automobiles, and utility poles line the street. On the corner is the home of the ILWU Local 139 and Prince Hotel, bar and liquor store. Photographer's number: 9124. 2...
Title supplied by cataloger. Not sure which dog race, Iditarod or Fur Rendezvous. A woman crouches next to the lead dog. A sign reads, 'Commercial Liquor Store' in the background. Crowds watch from stands. Original format: 35mm color slide
Many men fill the room, with two women at far back; gambling game at left; bar and liquor at right Note accompanying photograph: "Jack London frequently visited Juneau's first dance and gambling hall, the Louvre bar, background for many of his...
Street scene showing businesses and automobiles; business signs include the following: Cut Rate Liquor, Rexall Drugs, Gastineau Hotel, Ludwig Nelson Jeweler, Harry Race Drugs, Graves Shoes, and Bailey's Bar
Businesses in view: Juneau Billiard Co., previously Juneau Liquor Co. and later Percy's; beyond that, the Montana, another former saloon, Northern Laundry, and the new First National Bank Building; visible at the end of the street, the Seward...
Eighteen men, five women, and two babies pose in front of a house, holding liquor bottles, skunk cabbage leaves, small American flags, and one accordion
Slavery was an accepted custom in many Native tribes. On May 8, 1886, District Judge Layfayette Dawson in Sitka decided that the Thirteenth Amendment and the 1866 Civil Rights Act abolishing slavery applied to the "uncivilized tribes" of Alaska. ...
Congress was almost totally ignorant of Alaska, many suspected that the purchase was a bad bargain, and the only interest revolved around fur sealing. Therefore, many Congressmen were reluctant to pass Alaska...