Caption reads: "C. Hills [Hill's] team starting in 4th annual all Alaska sweepstakes winning 2d money. 81 hours, 400 mls. n.p. [2?]/11/11 Nome Alaska" Photos UAF-1985-122-46 to UAF-1985-122-48 may be of the same...
Title taken from creator's notes. Notes read: More shots of team plus individual shots. The Six Mile team played the Ladd Field team and the winning team played the winning team of Fairbanks in a midnight game on the longest day of the...
Title taken from creator's notes. Notes read: More shots of team plus individual shots. The Six Mile team played the Ladd Field team and the winning team played the winning team of Fairbanks in a midnight game on the longest day of the...
Title taken from creator's notes. Notes read: More shots of team plus individual shots. The Six Mile team played the Ladd Field team and the winning team played the winning team of Fairbanks in a midnight game on the longest day of the...
Title taken from creator's notes. Notes read: More shots of team plus individual shots. The Six Mile team played the Ladd Field team and the winning team played the winning team of Fairbanks in a midnight game on the longest day of the...
Title taken from caption. Caption continues: "Finley. Dempwolfe. Keilhorn. White. Belfort. Senator Thomas. Garcia." According to official reports and the Fourth of July program, the proper title and spelling of names is as follows: Commander G.T....
Verso: Senator Ernest Gruening (D-Alaska) meets with two members of the "Spenard Lions," one of the two Anchorage hockey teams in Washington, D.C. this week for the Capitol Invitational Hockey Tournament, just before winning their first game. The...
53 second, color with sound film clip. Images include dog teams passing on the trail and racers crossing the finish line. George Attla is identified by the track announcer at the Alaska Dog Mushers Association track on Farmers Loop Road at...
Title from cataloger's notes. Full note reads: "Presentation of trophy awarded to hockey team winning the games three different years, which Ladd Field Hockey Team won. University Bus Lines offered the trophy. Left to right - University...
Title from album caption. Start of sled dog race near Cushman Street Bridge on Chena River. Samson's Hardware and Immaculate Conception Church steeple in background. According to the Fairbanks Daily News-Miner of March 12, 1931, the Bill...
Title from album caption. Dog team running on Chena River ice. The sternwheeler Idler sits at the river's edge. According to the Fairbanks Daily News-Miner of March 12, 1931, the Bill Corey team was driven by Jack Murphy in the H. Wendell...
Portrait of Herbert Lawrence holding a Signal Corps trophy for winning a dogsled race in Fairbanks, Alaska, March 1929. Judge Cecil H. Clegg is in the background with his hand on the sled. From caption: "Herbert Lawrence (half breed) driver of...
View of trophy presentation after a race. Herbert Lawrence, musher, is the the foreground. The man to the far left of the photograph is Signal Corps Staff Sergeant Reeser presenting the trophy to Judge Cecil H. Clegg, the dog team owner. The...
Title taken from front. Winning dog team, Nome, Alaska, with group of spectators looking on and buildings in background. April 13, 1908. Photographer: O. D. Goetze.
Title taken from verso. View of scoreboard with final scores for Fur Rendezvous Sled Dog Race in Anchorage, Alaska, with boat on trailer at right and pedestrian at left. Board shows Jimmy Malamute as winning musher. Signs in background read:...
Title supplied by cataloger. Iditarod Trail and Race. From left to right: Al Crane, Dick Mackey, Leo Rasmussen. Slide labeled, 'Photo copyright Joe Redington Sr. K Original format: 35mm color slide
Title from image caption Also, faint caption at bottom of image reads, "Reindeer racing against dogs, reindeer winning, Nome, Alaska," [HQ Kaiser] Winter scene, with reindeer drawing sledge down snow-packed street Photographer's...
Dogteam lined up in front of wooden buildings. A number of people look on. Eli Smith, an Alaska mail carrier, mushed his dog team 8,000 miles from Nome to Washington, D.C. in 1907, winning a $10,000.00 wager on this feat.