Remainder of title: Thomas Riggs, Jr., Member Alaskan Engineering Commission, and C. W. Richie and H. J. Atwell, Acting Register and Receiver of the United States Land Office, at Fairbanks, Alaska.
Title taken from donor's caption. "1905, gold prospectors headed for Fairbanks taken on the Summit --25 miles from Valdez". Very early one morning we moved our camp over the pass. Heavily loaded, we were late in reaching the summit. Ten...
Title taken from front. View of men on boats on Lake Bennett, Canada, with United States flag flying from third boat from left and men holding oars and poles to move boats. From verso: "Boats on Lake Bennett. Spring of 1898." One man in photo may...
57 second film clip, black & white/silent. Clip shows an Alaska Freight Express barge. Two crewmen open the cargo door and move a small ramp into place. The camera pans down different holds.
Title from verso. Photograph of soldiers carrying ammunition from a protected position. Verso reads: "Attu Island -- When American forces landed on Attu Island early last May at two points, Massacre Bay, and north of Holtz Bay, the Jap [...
Title and caption taken from verso of UAF-1970-11-51, from which this image differs only slightly. Photograph of soldiers carrying ammunition from a protected position. Verso reads: "Attu Island -- When American forces landed on Attu...
Title from verso. Photograph of U.S. troops advancing on Holtz Bay on Attu Island. "Attu Island -- When American forces landed on Attu Island early last May at two points, Massacre Bay, and north of Holtz Bay, the Jap [ Japanese ] garrison on...
Title from image caption Cattle move single file along upper trail to Thompson Pass; below are numerous horses, sleds, and drivers Photographer's number G 1176
Joint Capitol Move press conference, Captain Cook Hotel; seated, left to right: Mike Stepovich, Wally Hickel, Jay Hammond, Keith Miller and William Egan.
In Winter and Pond Company's photograph album THE TRAIL OF '98 Full album caption: "Supplies and mining equipment in tremendous quantities move daily over the trail. Klondike outfits near Dyea, 1898."
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.
Caption: "Young married couple outside their sod house. The house is made by making the frame out of drift wood and then covered with sod to keep the cold wind out during the winter days. In summer they move out into tents."