Yendeiyank, also known as George Schwatka
421 km away
Group of cannery workers
460 km away
Chief Roderick
538 km away
Wait for the ferry
628 km away
Lincoln Street
663 km away
Tlingit baseball players
663 km away
Alaskan Women
663 km away
Founders and early members of the Alaska Native Brotherhood
663 km away
Lincoln Street
663 km away
two gold stampeders
716 km away
Biggest Earthquake in the US
753 km away
Alaska Natives
753 km away
The Earps rented this cabin
784 km away
Postcard of US mail leaving Seward for Anchorage
830 km away
U.S. President Warren G. Harding
898 km away
FIRST REGULAR TRAIN
1019 km away
Retrato de Moldrup Marie Baumann
1019 km away
Fishing boat “New England” covered in ice
1157 km away
STREET SCENE
1159 km away
Milking Training
1174 km away
Blackfoot tribe.
1174 km away
An American Airlines DC-3 Plane Flying Past a Stagecoach
1174 km away
subsistence harvest curing along the beachfront
1228 km away
Alaska Natives seining
1228 km away
Automobiles in mud on the Monkman Pass Highway
1234 km away
STREET SCENE
1234 km away
Moravian Mission Station
1417 km away
4th of July Parade
1496 km away
about two blocks wide and five miles long
1496 km away
Dogs pulling a rail cart
1496 km away
Wyatt Earp billed his Dexter Saloon in Nome as "the only second class saloon in Alaska".
1496 km away
Freight wagons of the W. J. Rowe Transfer Co.
1496 km away
The Dexter Saloon at left was owned by Wyatt Earp and his partner Charles E. Hoxie
1496 km away