1 281 résultats
193059169Cordova Alaska: Cordova Daily Times 1930. Folio. 10.5 x 13.75 in. 64 pp. printed in green-tinted ink throughout. With photo illustrations and illustrated ads throughout. Colour-illustrated gold softcovers lettering in dark brown & red on front & back covers sepia-tinted photos both covers couple small closed tears center fold crease some edgewear still VG- copy from the library of Archibald Angus MacDonald 1892-1977 stepson of famed southern California oil man William F. Byrne as well as oil company and drilling equipment company owner and manager of MacDonald & Burns Oil Producers. First edition of this lavishly illustrated promotional supplement issued annually by the Cordova Daily Times extolling the progress and development in Alaska for automobile travel tourism mining opportunities agriculture and more as the Great Depression began to take hold. Cordova Daily Times paperback
193760206New York: Frederick A. Stokes Co. 1937. 8vo. x 2 340 pp. Photo frontisp. numerous photo plates. Beige publisher’s cloth pictorial maps on endpapers purple lettering on spine w/ d.j. vivid Art Deco cover art of dogsled team across the Arctic landscape minor chipping & edgewear to upper & lower fore-edges head & foot of spine still NF/G copy. Third printing of this insightful memoir by Forrest b. 1892 written during her three years working as a teacher with her then husband Earle Forrest amongst the Inuit community of Wainwright Alaska. The work is still cited as an accurate depiction of life in Alaska during the opening decades of the 20th Century and her artifact collection of Inuit Scrimshaw and Traditional tools were donated to the Museum of Man in San Diego while her notebooks which focused on Inuit culture cooking and foodways were donated to Bowling Green. This dustjacket cover art differs from the first printing. Frederick A. Stokes Co., hardcover
196662197Princeton NJ: Published by the Author assisted by Dow Jones Books 1966. 8vo. xiii 1 139 1 pp. Photo frontisp. numerous photo plates text illustrations. Red publisher’s cloth gilt lettering w/ d.j. cover art w/ headline clippings from the 1930 flight minor scuffing edgewear still NF/VG copy inscribed by the author on ffep. to Chief Justice Paul Cashman Reardon 1909-1988 of the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court from 1962 to 1972. Second printing inscribed presentation copy of this excellent first-hand account which was written contemporaneously by the author during his 12000 mile air trip in a Moth biplane across the country. The memoir details their stopovers in the desert of West Texas an Idaho farm field a frantic cross-wind takeoff from a California airport to avoid a lawman wanting to see the plane’s Federal registration and finally reaching Alaska where the author and his copilot “Pete†Blodgett both hunted and killed Alaska Brown Bears on Admiralty Island. Lombard 1895-1985 was a World War I veteran pilot navigated the yacht “Nina†to a Queen’s Cup Race off the Coast of Spain in 1928 flew the first plane to cross the Rocky Mountains in 1928 and would later serve as director of the Dow Jones & Co. for 30 years. [Published by the Author, assisted by Dow Jones Books], hardcover
193754760Seattle WA: Alaska Steamship Co. Printed by Frank McCaffrey 1937. 8vo. 8 pp unpaginated. With colour text illustrations. Colour-illustrated and printed softcovers Art Deco cover art & lettering photos of Alaska on front cover border metallic ink turquoise & pink slight shelfwear NF copy w/ Nordale Hotel receipt for Frank L. Poole of Tacoma laid-in July 26 1937. First edition thus of this beautifully printed passenger list for the SS Baranof a 373 foot steamship displacing 8900 tons one of 16 ships in the fleet operated by Alaska Steamship Company operating out of Seattle to Skagway Seward and Nome. Alaska Steamship Co., [Printed by Frank McCaffrey], paperback
56548Pullman & Seattle WA: Frank A. Golder 1912. Atlas folio. Five leaves sized from 12 x 22 in. up to 22.75 x 28 in. 1st. - Pencil manuscript on hand-ruled graph chart w/ boxes all filled in some additions on thick yellow paper stock two pieces taped together on verso; 2nd - Original typescript w/ some corrections made on typing paper two pieces taped on verso minor tear creasing; 3rd -- Blueprint from typescript; 4 & 5 both typescript copies on thin typing paper couple minor closed tears still VG set. Original manuscript and typescript tables prepared by Golder 1877-1929 for early lectures on Russian economic and diplomatic history and “A Survey of Alaska 1743-1799†1913. Published in the Washington Historical Quarterly these charts trace the growth and economic impact of the Russian fur trade from the 18th Century into the 19th Century. At the time Golder was unable to find one single source of the information so he created his own charts and they chronicle the growth and impact of the fur trade in Alaska breaking down not only all the vessels navigators and owners but also the types of cargo including beaver fox sea otter otter tails sea bears sea lions whale mustaches walrus tusks blue arctic fox and their values. The two additional typescript tables separate out the furs from the Chelichof and Golikofs Co. i.e. Shelikhov-Golikov Co. from 1786-1797 notorious for their massacres of indigenous Alutiiqs in 1784 on Kodiak Island known as the Awa’uq Massacre allowing the Russian Co. control over the island. Directly afterwards Golder spent the next decade actively working in Russian Archives during the Russian Revolution and eventually produced his Guide to Materials for American History in Russian Archives and built the massive Slavic language collection at the Hoover War History Collection. Frank A. Golder, unknown
191461710Los Angeles: Times-Mirror Printing and Binding House 1914. 8vo. 281 1 pp. With photo frontisp. photo plates plates illustrations historiated initials. Pictorial blue publisher’s cloth cover art in gilt silver & red of musher on an iceflow gilt lettering on spine minor shelfwear slight rubbing still VG bright copy from the library of former California State Librarian Gary Kurutz and Joseph Luke Janulaw 1893-1937 a Los Angeles CA fireman w/ ownership markings on front pastedown. First edition of this sensationalistic Klondike gold rush memoir recounting the experiences of 18 gold seekers from the YMCA setting out from New York Feb. 1 1897. After voyaging on a condemned brigantine with a drunken captain they purportedly attempted the Malaspina Glacier trek to the gold fields traversing from Yakutat Bay across the Wrangell-St. Elias range and dropping into the headwaters of the Tanana and Yukon Rivers. The absorbing tale is filled with contradictions as it relates the loss of three into ice crevasses madness while wintering in a cabin starving retreat across icefields and finally rescue by a passing revenue cutter. See: Terrence Cole Klondike Literature: These Alaska Gold Rush Tales Share a Prominent Characteristic with the Region’s Mountainous Terrain -- They are Very Tall. Columbia Magazine WHS 2008 Vol. 22 No. 2 pp. 9-16; Kurutz Klondike & Alaska Gold Rushes A Descriptive Bibliography 172. Times-Mirror Printing and Binding House, hardcover
191656549Washington D.C. & Juneau A.T.: Superintendent of Documents U.S. Surveyor General’s Office 1916. Oblong Atlas Folio. 24 x 19 in. 14 colour maps 1 large folding 17.25 x 41.5 in. Printed softcovers stapled and paper reinforcement at gutter margin some minor toning & soiling to fore-edges edgewear to spine minor scuffing and a couple removed label ghosting still VG- bright copy. First edition of this remarkably scarce plat map atlas for the Matanuska coal fields and township sites surveyed by Walker & McDaniel during their surveys following those on the Kenai Peninsula. By 1912 with the act establishing Alaska as a U.S. Territory and in 1914 the authorization to construct an Alaska Railroad there became an increased need and demand for coal. The Matanuska mines located about 45 miles northeast of Anchorage first began production in 1916 and would stay in continuous production through both World War I and World War II and well into the 20th Century re-opening again in the 21st Century. Not only do these maps show available government lease sites for coal mines but also available Township sites for homesteaders as required by the original Homestead Acts of 1866 and the 1916 Act for Alaska requiring surveys and resurveys to accurately determine boundaries of unsold railroad lands and identify their boundaries. Worldcat locates 2 copies Anchorage Museum & Univ. of Calgary; See: Catalogue of the Public Documents of the Sixty-Fourth Congress Index Vol. 13 1922 p. 74; C. Albert White A History of the Rectangular Survey System 1983 p. 189. Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Surveyor General’s Office, paperback
193463562Ketchikan AK: United States Indian School ca. 1934. 4to. 59 1 leaves. With 21 leaves of plates illustrating Alaskan Native American basket weaving patterns totem pole designs and other motifs. Green colour-tinted softcovers cover art photo & illustration by Jones Yeltatazie b. 1897 famed Alaskan Haida carver uniform light interior toning underlining corrections and notes by Voget still VG- copy from the library of Frederick Voget 1913-1997 noted American anthropologist and expert on the Crow Indians. First lithoprint mimeograph edition of this very scarce cultural and ethnological history of the Tlingit Haida & Tsimshian Indigenous Peoples drawn from the oral and written accounts by Native American students at the United States Indian School in Ketchikan AK when it was still operating before World War II. Featuring extended discussions of the Alaskan Indigenous Peoples folklore cultural heritage along with illustrations and discussions of their clothing food weapons hunting fishing architecture arts paintings wood carving totem poles canoes trade religion shamanism and much more. Established originally in 1903 the United States Indian School in Ketchikan was intended to educate and assimilate Indigenous Children into mainstream Euro-caucasian culture but following the 1929 decision of Irene Jones vs. Ketchikan Bureau of Education when Judge Harding had ruled that forcing Native American children to continue to be segregated from mainstream public schools was discrimination the boarding school was closed following the 1934 Indian Reorganization Act. The building is now part of the Univ. of Alaska Southeast Ketchikan campus. This original report is quite scarce and although Harvard is the only actual copy listed in Worldcat due to improper mixing of Kirtas Technology reprints & computer copies it is difficult to discern exactly how many originals are still retained. United States Indian School, paperback
190556451Nome AK: n.p. ca. 1905. One sepia-tinted soft focus silver gelatin photo sized 3.75 x 4.75 in. mounted on gray embossed studio board NF image w/ nice bright contrast. This photo shows a group of miners lounging next to a boat on a sled in the snow by the surf in Nome Alaska during the gold rush. During the gold rush there was not harbor in Nome so all of the miners supplies and more had to be shuttled from ships anchored offshore directly onto the beach. n.p., unknown
193663942Boston: Little Brown and Co. 1936. 8vo. 6 389 1 pp. Black publisher’s cloth dark red lettering minor shelfwear w/ d.j. cover art by Anton Otto Fischer minor creasing edgewear couple slight closed tears still VG/VG copy. First hardcover edition of this Alaskan novel first serialized as “The Captive Bride†in The American Magazine. Willoughby 1886-1959 noted Alaskan author of romantic fiction and nonfiction who was bestselling author through the 1920’s and 1930’s. Little, Brown, and Co., hardcover
194550925Ottawa Canada: Photogelatine Engraving Co. Ltd. ca. 1945. Oblong 8vo. 30 pp unpaginated. 19 photo plates most full page 1 map. Gray printed softcovers lettering in blue die-cut window on front cover showing Canadian military jeep crossing the bridge with road builders in front Fine copy stapled as issued preserved in original printed mailing envelope couple minor closed tears edgewear. First edition of this scarce illustrated souvenir published by Canada celebrating the building the Alcan Highway or Alaskan Highway as it was being constructed during World War II for the War effort. The map shows projected roads from Whitehorse to Fort Norman and announced connection from Fort Nelson to Simpson Yukon Territory. Photogelatine Engraving Co., Ltd., paperback
196257025Anchorage AK: Alaskan Publishing Co. and Graphic Arts Press 1962. 4to. 1 xiii 76 pp. Photo frontisp. 50 plates & text illustrations including 42 of Laurence paintings. Illustrated softcovers cover art of Laurence painting blue lettering plastic comb-binding as issued minor shelfwear some very minor rubbing still VG copy inscribed on verso of front cover by Jeanne Laurence b. 1887-1980 artist and widow of Sydney Laurence author of “My Life with Sydney Laurence†as gift for Loma Underwood from Margaret Krogstad w/ ALS on illustrated stationery from Margaret to Loma dated 1962. First edition inscribed of this retrospective biography and catalogue of Sydney Laurence’s 1865-1940 foremost Alaskan painter whose artwork such as Going to the Potlatch and The Vanishing Race graced travel posters and brochures to Alaska for decades. Of additional interest is the inclusion of a wide range of 28 additional Alaskan authors and writers’ poetry and short writings including Sybil London Bates -- Jack London’s daughter Frances Anater Robert Atwood Shirley Barrett Carmen Compney Jr Edythe Corbin Anne Townsend and others. Alaskan Publishing Co. and Graphic Arts Press, paperback
193156650New York: Cosmopolitan Book Corp. 1931. 8vo. viii 261 pp. plus 3 pp. publisher’s ads. Illust. title frontisp. Pictorial blue publisher’s cloth Art Deco cover art on front cover & spine in orange minor spotting soiling to fore-edges w/ d.j. Art Deco cover art of railroad construction next to a cliff of ice cover artist initials LT slight wear VG/NF copy. First edition of this third title in the Barrow Brothers Series set against the backdrop of Paul Barrows as a teenager helping to ramrod a railroad line through the Chugach Pass in the Alaskan wilderness and reach lucrative copper mines. Bechdolt 1884 was a noted Seattle author who at wrote for the Seattle PI from 1906-16 issued all five titles in the Barrows Brothers Series in 1931 but is perhaps best remembered for his Little Golden Book title “Little Boy with a Big Horn†1950. See: William Gowen Jack Bechdolt and the Barrow Brothers Series Newsboy March-April 2015 pp. 11-15. Cosmopolitan Book Corp., hardcover
194055133New York: Harper & Brothers 1940. 4to. 40 pp unpaginated. Colour and sepia-toned illusts. & plates throughout. Quarter-blue cloth over colour-illustrated boards colour-illustrated endpapers very minor edgewear minor rubbing to couple corners w/ d.j. cover art by De Witt very minor chipping head & foot of spine couple very slight closed tears VG/VG- copy. First edition stated H-P code of a bright copy of this wonderful installment in the Regions of America Series featuring Alaska relating the tales about its animals native Americans mining logging fishing and much more. De Witt 1905-1995 was a German-American artist who emigrated to the US in 1928 and a very successful book illustrator for Harper’s Regions of America series 1940-1948 The Little Golden ABC Golden Geography and the first edition of the Golden Book Encyclopedia. Harper & Brothers, hardcover
193058585Boston: W.A. Wilde Co. 1930. 8vo. xv 1 402 pp. Photo frontisp. numerous photo plates. Blue cloth gilt lettering map endpapers w/ d.j. chipping & tear head of spine upper corner front cover affecting a few letters minor scuffing couple closed tears still NF/Fair copy from the library of Wilma Burmester Bishop 1887-1969 widow of Roy T. Bishop 1881-1950 former owner of the Pendleton Woolen Mills. First edition of this anthology of stories personal accounts and historical references to Klondike Gold Rush figures Native America Eskimos traveling the Yukon River and more by this famed Alaska pioneering woman. Mary Lee Davis arrived in Fairbanks in 1917 on the steamer Alaska because her husband John had been assigned by the U.S. Geological Survey to create a mine experiment station in Fairbanks. Mary Davis purchased the famed arts & crafts bungalow built by Lucille McCarthy now known as the Mary Lee Davis House. W.A. Wilde Co., hardcover
194463533Hutchinson KS & Kodiak Alaska Territory: Carrie B. Mitchell Woman’s American Baptist Home Mission Society Alaska Steamship Co. 1944-1969. Oblong folio. 11.5 x 17 in. 36 pp unpaginated. on brown sack paper. With over 100 pieces of ephemera neatly affixed with tape including 6 silver gelatin photographs & RPPC’s clippings numerous ALS & TLS on letterhead some preserved in the original envelopes postcards missals programmes and more. Wooden spruce plywood post-binder sewn at gutter margin w/ cord decoupaged front cover w/ pictograms and “Story of Alaska†w/ totem pole motifs leather strap hinges held by brass brads some scuffing edgewear occasional toning scuffing to a few pieces still a VG exemplar. This intriguing scrapbook carefully documents the aspiration of Carrie Mitchell 1890-1979 to travel as a missionary to Kodiak Alaska Territory during World War II where she served as housemother to McWhinnie cottage at the Kodiak Baptist Mission School & Orphanage from 1944-1946. In classical Alutiiq Athabascan and Inupiaq societies orphans were typically adopted into wealthy Indigenous Peoples families as laborers working in return for food clothing and shelter. Often mistreated this would occasionally result in violent revenge against the tribes by the orphans. After 1893 the Kodiak Baptist Mission established their school and cottage system to educate clothe and prepare the orphans or abandoned Alutiiq children for society. Unfortunately the Baptist Mission forbade the Indigenous Peoples spiritual rituals or Russian Orthodoxy -- the predominant religious beliefs of the Kodiak area peoples and forced them to convert to Baptist beliefs. In some cases the children were forcibly removed against the will of their parents and were not orphans to receive vocational instruction and religious training at the Mission. Jan. 25 1944 Alice Crimson Executive Secretary to the W.A.B.H.M.S. wrote to Carrie how she and her staff were wondering if she would be interested “in going to Alaska as Assistant to the missionary in one of our children’s homes. It is not a managing position. It is a position of helping to make a home by assuming a share of the cooking cleaning even the washing as well as the mending of clothes. . . .†Several letters included here pass back and forth discussing Carrie’s interview her need to stay available and not travel to Texas to visit her daughter application for applying for a pass with the Headquarters Alaskan Dept. Base Echelon including fingerprint card and travel instructions. Due to wartime shortages after approval Carrie Mitchell’s travel was delayed after April 1944 because sailing times to Kodiak were curtailed but she would finally reach Kodiak AK in mid-May 1944. The grueling position had been opened because Cecile Tucker who had been housemother to McWhinnie beginning in June 1941 had decided to leave. M. Tucker regularly took care of 12-17 Alutiiq children and before being assigned to Alaska had spent 17 years working the the Mono Indigenous Peoples in the Auberry CA Baptist Mission School. Two original letters from one of Carrie Mitchell’s Indigenous charges George Yosheda 1928-2003 at McWhinnie House writes to her after leaving McWhinnie to attend school in Wrangell AK and she notes on the outside of the envelope that he was “a little homesick I think.†In his second letter from 1945 he writes about how he “can play basketball. . . if I don’t have anything to do I usually go for a walk or play the guitar.†She writes on an ALS from Enid Myers that Enid “gave up the work in Sept. 1944. That left me alone with a houseful of children until the Chandlers came. The other staff members helped me as much as they could.†By March 1946 the workload had worn her down and she wanted to retire from the position. Alice crimson writes her again that “I am very happy that you are staying in Alaska until I can find someone who will go in your place. I realize that it is difficult work physically and I think you would be wise to come out when we can replace you.†Thank you cards notices theatre programmes and several clippings concerning the 1964 Earthquake and Tsunami which struck Alaska appear within the scrapbook. See: Timothy Smith The Evangel Returns to Kodiak for the First 4th of July since Statehood July 1959 Tanignak 2020. Orphan -- Liliya’aq Alutiiq Museum Archaeological Repository 2025. Carrie B. Mitchell, Woman’s American Baptist Home Mission Society, Alaska Steamship Co., hardcover
189729536New York 1897. Broadsheet 9 1/2" x 12". With a small oval half-tone portrait. On recto at the bottom printed in red: 'Norton Hall Granville N.Y. Thursday Eve. Dec. 30 1897.' Near Fine.<br /> <br /> A rare announcement of a public entertainment-- "Not a Lecture. But a Budget of Jewels Sparkling Pathetic Humorous and Original"-- by this popular Western hero who on his first outing as a reporter in 1875 promoted the Black Hills Gold Rush. John W. Crawford 1847-1917 was a "poet-scout" who memorialized Custer and Wild Bill Hickok in verse. He "was one of the original discoverers of gold on French Creek in the Black Hills in 1876." After a stint with Buffalo Bill's Wild West Show which he left when he accidentally shot himself in the groin blaming it on Buffalo Bill's drinking he moved to New Mexico to scout for the Army against the Apache. He "did more than any other man in the Territory in bringing before the public the immense mineral wealth of New Mexico."<br /> This broadsheet not only publicizes Captain Jack's Entertainment but also promotes "The Capt. Jack Crawford Alaska Prospecting and Mining Co." Testimonials to Crawford are printed here along with an invitation for the recipient to receive a Company prospectus.<br /> OCLC 778631567 3- Yale SMU U AK as of February 2023. unknown
193339433Seattle: Alaska Steamship Company 1933. 1933. 10 3/4" x 7 3/4" in colorful pictorial wrappers showing a husky on the left side and a colorful totem pole on the right side of the cover panel. 40 pp. illustrations map. Romantic depiction of Sailing Sheltered Seas to the Land of the Midnight Sun. Descriptions of what the tourist can expect to see while cruising through the Inside Passage to Ketchikan Wrangell Juneau the Gastineau Channel Skagway Sitka Cordova the Columbia Glacier Valdez Seward Fairbanks etc. Much information about traveling the famous "Golden Belt Line Tour" via the Alaska Railroad. Listing of 6 cruises and tours for the summer season lasting from 11-23 days. Inside rear wrapper is a pocked containing a 22" x 32" color map of Alaska showing the various routes. Map has splitting at some folds and with 1/4" x 1/2" chip missing at one fold. Illustrations of various scenes printed in green red pink or burnt orange at bottom of every page to include illustrations of Victoria the Grenville Channel Chief Shake's House Alaska-Juneau gold mining company Lake Eyak Kennecott interiors of various cabins etc. Black and white photographs opposite each page of text to include photos of the various ships' interiors and exteriors Fairbanks Seward Child's Glacier Mount Fairweather Chilkoot Ketchikan etc. Wrappers lightly soiled with rubbing to spine light chipping to bottom edge and foxing to rear wrapper. Very good. Filled with information this is a nicely produced booklet. Alaska Steamship Company, 1933. unknown
192437246N.P.: Petersen & Co. 1924. 1924. First edition. 26 1/2" x 31 1/2" sheet folded to 24 panels each 9" x 4" and with colorful pictorial cover. Illustrations some in color and color map. 12 panels give an overview of visiting Alaska the last frontier. Discusses what one can expect to see while cruising through Alaska as well as the cities to be visited to include various fishing villages icebergs Indian villages totems mining villages Ketchikan Wrangell Petersburg the Taku Inlet Juneau Skagway Prince William Sound etc. Also offers information on a Prince William Sound Cruise heading to Cordova the Valdez Basin Latouche Seward Anchorage etc. Finally discusses the construction of the Copper River & Northwestern Railway and goes on to describe the trip from Cordova and up the Copper River to Chitinn Kennecott and onto the Bering River with its coal fields past the Childs and Miles Glaciers and to Abercrombie Canyon. Obverse 12 panels offers a map of Alaska and the routes with 4 black and white photographs of scenery at both the top and the bottom of the sheet. Inset is an 8" x 3 1/4" map of Alaska Railroad from Seward to Fairbanks. A second map 11" x 8" of the Copper River and Northwestern Railway showing Copper River Region in Alaska Prince William Sound The Fairbanks Stage Road Government Telegraph Line and Tributary Territory is inset. Also includes passenger ticket from Seattle aboard the S.S. Yukon dated July 17 1924 as well as the passenger list of the cruise. Passenger list entitled "Radio News" is printed on newspaper 16" x 17" and folded to 4 panels. Rear panel of passenger list offers a "directory of progressive Alaskan business houses." Passenger listed is tanned and chipped along edges without impacting any text. Brochure is worn at folds has light wear to the extremities and with a 1/4" hole to cover panel. Brochure very fragile at bottom fold across entire sheet but still attached. A very interesting item. Good. Petersen & Co., 1924. unknown
191739706Chicago: Poole Bros. 1917. 1917. ALASKA. 27" x 32" sheet folded to 48 panels measuring 9" x 4" each two panel constitute cover and are not numbered. 22 numbered panels with text and illustrations some color of the area. On opposite side of text are 24 panels depicting a large map of Alaska showing the Alaska Steamship Co. routes table of distances from Seattle to various points in Alaska. Large map is bordered on top and bottom sides by photographs of the various areas in Alaska. Inset is a smaller map 11" x 8" of the Copper River & Northwestern Railway and The Alaska Railroad showing Copper River Region in Alaska Prince William Sound The Richardson Automobile Highway Mt. McKinley National Park Government Telegraph Line and Tributary Territory. Brochure touts the wonders of Alaska to include information on its glaciers it cities its mountains etc. Information offered on Golden Belt Line Tour and the Prince William Sound Cruise. Photographs of the Alaska Steamship Company's fleet as well as photos of the interior of the ship and information on the accommodations. Minor wear to covers and lightly rubbed else a near fine bright clean copy. Poole Bros. 1917]. unknown
191740778N. P.: Poole Bros. 1917. 1917. ALASKA. 27" x 32" sheet folded to 48 panels measuring 9" x 4" each two panel constitute cover and are not numbered. 22 numbered panels with text and illustrations some color of the area. On opposite side of text are 24 panels depicting a large map of Alaska showing the Alaska Steamship Co. routes table of distances from Seattle to various points in Alaska. Large map is bordered on top and bottom sides by photographs of the various areas in Alaska. Inset is a smaller map 11" x 8" of the Copper River & Northwestern Railway and The Alaska Railroad showing Copper River Region in Alaska Prince William Sound The Richardson Automobile Highway Mt. McKinley National Park Government Telegraph Line and Tributary Territory. Brochure touts the wonders of Alaska to include information on its glaciers it cities its mountains etc. Information offered on Golden Belt Line Tour and the Prince William Sound Cruise. Photographs of the Alaska Steamship Company's fleet as well as photos of the interior of the ship and information on the accommodations. Minor wear to the folds light soiling and with previous owner's name stamped on cover panel. Very good. Poole Bros., [1917]. unknown
192952116Los Angeles: Press of Schwabacher-Frey Company 1929. 1929. First edition. 11 1/4" x 8 1/2" in simulated leather and embossed pictorial boards with color vignette of Big Bear Valley stamped on front cover and with gilt lettering and woodcraft borders. Sewn with gold silk braid at spine. Decorative endpapers with slot on front pastedown for ownership certificate not present but tipped-in design for Cambria Pines cabin design with floor plans. Color illustrated vignette title. Color text illustrations. Photo illustrations. Decorative borders. Pictorial map by Graysons of Los Angeles. Color illustrated calendar dial with borders on final leaf preserving the original glassine flyleaves. A beautifully produced brochure detailing the amenities for both members and investors in the Peter Pan Woodland Club. Harry Kiener formed the Big Bear Land & Water Company to develop mountain properties in the east valley area of Big Bear City in 1925. In 1927 he contracted with Los Angles truck-body builder Guy Maltby to build a wooden power boat to be used on Big Bear Lake. While delivering the boat Maltby became fascinated with the project and formed the Bear Valley Milling and Lumber Company to build the Peter Pan Lodge along with over 600 surrounding homes in Big Bear City. This lodge was massive with five stories and included a golf course landscaping tennis courts swimming pool movie theater and for nearly two decades was used for parties dances and even Hollywood films. Sadly it burned to the ground on June 18 1948 and even though the smaller Peter Pan Lodge building was moved to the site it never recaptured the spirit and elegance of the original resort. Light soiling to bottom corners of pages along with faint tears to upper fore-edge of free front end paper and with slight creasing and with faint pencil annotations on front pastedown. Very good. Press of Schwabacher-Frey Company, 1929. hardcover
192952115Seattle: North Pacific Gravure Co. 1929. 1929. First edition. 11 1/4" x 8 1/4" in pictorial wrappers printed in brown ink. Mt. McKinley ink on front wrapper and map of Alaska showing Golden Belt Line and Copper River-Keystone Canyon Line on rear wrapper. 32pp. Foreword. Illustrations. Photo illustrations and photo plates for the Alaska Line steamships. Photographs include steamships scenic landscapes Native American crafts interior and exterior views of the S.S. Yukon S.S. Alaska and the S.S. Aleutian cabin rooms dining saloon and shipboard activities as well as birds-eye views over Ketchikan Wrangell Juneau Cordova ay Kennecott etc. Tiny crease to top edge of corner and with minimal shelf wear. Very good plus. North Pacific Gravure Co., 1929. unknown
1917List3507Alaska 1917. Photo album measuring 7 ¼ x 11 ½ inches containing 187 photos 2 unaffixed and five loose real photo postcards with a contemporaneous newspaper clipping. Photos approximately 3 x 4 inches with generally excellent contrast and in Near Fine condition. Overall excellent to Near Fine. A photo album belonging to brothers Ruben 1892–1984 and Daniel 1895–1969 Diener documenting their 1916–1917 journey to the Territory of Alaska. The newspaper clipping reproduces a letter from Dan Diener describing their time there:<br /> <br /> “I went with an old prospector to try and locate a lost mine. We found it but there was not enough gold to pay for mining it so in that respect our trip was a failure. . I lived in a tent with a small sheet iron stove during all this time and strange as it seems it was fairly comfortable. . One day I walked or snowshoed 30 miles for my mail when the thermometer was 58 below. . But the hardships were sweetened at times with the most beautiful scenery man can imagine.†March 1917<br /> <br /> The Dieners’ trip took them to Alaska’s southern coast to Ketchikan Cordova Valdez and Seward. There are some identifiable ships including the Admiral Farragut the Mariposa shortly before its sinking and the wreck of the James Drummond in British Columbia.<br /> <br /> Subjects include Chief Johnson’s totem pole in Ketchikan erected in 1902 in honor of Chief Gut Wain George Johnson; d. 1938 of the Gaanaxadi clan of the Tongass tribe—a real photo postcard from Kasaan shows many brightly colored totem poles along the shore with dilapidated wooden houses behind them—boats filled with fish outside the Carlisle Packing Company in Cordova and a real photo postcard of a man and dog captioned “READY FOR THE SUMMER TRAIL / SEWARD ALASKA†on the back of which Ruben Dieners has written:<br /> <br /> “Oct 9 1916. Here you are. This is Judge Hildreth of whom we have written you. Our best friend here and hereafter. We are going prospecting with him next spring. The dog in the picture carry’s fifty pounds. Brother Ruben.â€<br /> <br /> H.H. Hildreth was a district court commissioner in Seward editor of the Alaskan newspaper in Sitka and The Alaska Prospector in Valdez and secretary of the Matanuska Mining Company. <br /> <br /> The shots of towns show the development of the region: in some an area of forest has been recently cleared and stumps of trees might surround a few small wooden houses or platforms where houses are to be erected; while others show towns with telegraph lines graded dirt roads with sidewalks dense housing and railroad and tram lines. Two shots from Seward show the paved sidewalk of its main street with a hotel and bars and a dog team waiting outside the hardware store. As Dieners wrote they lived in a tent and several photos show the outside of the quarters: two semi-permanent canvas tents next to a wide wooden walkway. Others show men presumably the brothers snowshoeing hiking and riding in a canoe; and of course many are scenery shots of forests waterfalls and snowcapped mountains.<br /> <br /> Of interest to historians of post-gold rush Alaska. unknown
1917List1730Chicago: Poole Brothers 1917. Folding map measuring 38 ½ x 26 ¾ inches. Tape repairs to verso some tears at folds and edges still bring and attractive good to very good overall with excellent restoration potential. A map of the canneries in Alaska British Columbia and Washington operated by the Deming and Gould Company who were influential in the growth of the Alaskan salmon trade. The map’s date of printing 1917 suggests that perhaps it was related to the war effort as salmon demand increased during this period. The Demings based in Chicago were influential in the growth of the salmon trade in Alaska and the Pacific Northwest founding Pacific American Fisheries Inc. in 1899 and continuing in various iterations until their sale of the firm in 1934 due to president E.B. Deming’s ailing health. The map shows seventeen different canneries several on the Alaska peninsula and the one in Bellingham. We find no record of this imprint only a later and small version held at the University of Washington. Poole Brothers unknown