Title from slide index prepared by Peter Haase 14 July 2006. "Hat & Pepi. Think this is at Tok." Two men sit on the back of a snowmobile, the rear one waving. Behind them are utility poles, electric and telephone lines, several white,...
View of the radio building at the Cape Chiniak "White Alice" facility, on Kodiak Island, Alaska. White Alice was a form of radar built by the U.S. Air Force in the mid 1950's. Built during the height of the Cold War, the U.S. Air Force intended...
View of two workers climbing the dome atop a "White Alice" facility at Cape Chiniak, on Kodiak Island, Alaska. White Alice was a form of radar built by the U.S. Air Force in the mid 1950's. Built during the height of the Cold War the U.S. Air Force...
View of Santa Claus handing out gifts to children. From attached press release: "Press Release. Headquarters Alaskan Air Command APO 942, Seattle, Washington. Office of Information. Telephone BRoadway 5-8001 or Elmendorf AFB SKyline 2-6122. For...
Title taken from caption. View of Santa Claus posing beneath a sign held up by two airmen, near the tail end of a C-123 airplane. Sign reads: "Air Force. Sergeants Association. Chapter 605. Elmendorf AFB Alaska. Operation. Santa Claus." From...
View of Santa Claus greeting children. From attached press release: "Press Release. Headquarters Alaskan Air Command APO 942, Seattle, Washington. Office of Information. Telephone BRoadway 5-8001 or Elmendorf AFB SKyline 2-6122. For immediate...
Title taken from caption. View of dogsled race contestants during Fur Rendezvous celebration in downtown Anchorage, Alaska. From verso: "Headquarters Alaskan Air Command, APO Seattle 98742, Office of Information Telephone 272-6111 or Elmendorf AFB...
Title taken from caption. Army Sergeant Andy Helm on telephone in his office in Anchorage, Alaska, with posters advertising Valentines Day dance to be held at Kashim Club (11th Air Force Club at Fort Richardson in Anchorage, Alaska). Poster in...
View of men, two wearing uniform hats, inside Anchorage Fire Station in Anchorage, Alaska. Bulletin board, alarm system, clock, and telephone are on wall in background. Chalkboard is in background, while boxes are in right foreground. Photograph...
View of White Alice Communications site at Northeast Cape Air Force Station at Northeast Cape on Saint Lawrence Island, Alaska. The White Alice Communications System (WACS) was a United States Air Force telecommunication link system constructed in...
Two Signal Corps crewmen standing in front of a railroad car and holding what appears to be linesmen's harnesses used in climbing telephone poles. Photograph most likely taken in the Cook Inlet or Kenai Peninsula area.
Title taken from slide. View of car dealership in Anchorage, Alaska destroyed after the March 27, 1964 earthquake. Sign on the left side of the building reads Service Dept. Entrance. View cars, power lines, telephone poles, and street lights.
View of damage to houses in the Turnagain area of Anchorage, Alaska after the March 27, 1964 earthquake. Image includes fences, power lines (telephone poles).
Avalanche across a road, tentatively identified as the Seward Highway south of Anchorage, Alaska, after the March 27, 1964 earthquake. Image includes view of power and/or telephone lines.
View of damage to a building tentatively identified as Alaska Sales and Service in Anchorage, Alaska after the March 27, 1964 earthquake. In the background, to the left of the damaged structure, a Union 76 gas station is visible. Power lines,...
View of a street in Anchorage, Alaska after the March 27, 1964 earthquake. Damage to a building is seen in the center of the photo. Chevron sign appears on the center-left. Sign on building, on the left, reads Everything starts with Atlas...
View of buildings in Anchorage, Alaska, tentatively identified as West 8th (Eighth) Avenue after the March 27, 1964 earthquake. Image includes men, women, cars, trucks, street lights, telephone poles and electric lines.
View of damaged bridge tentatively identified as on the Seward Highway, south of Anchorage, Alaska after the March 27, 1964 earthquake. Construction of a new bridge is to the left. Electric lines and/or telephone poles are visible, as is Turnagain...
Image shows the collapse of the outer wall of a building in Anchorage, Alaska after the March 27, 1964 earthquake. Image includes people, cars, trucks, businesses, electric and telephone lines. Sign on building across the street reads Insurance.