The Territory of Alaska went dry based on a vote in 1916



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1947

The first Golden North Salmon Derby was established by the Juneau Sportsmens' Association.

  

  

1952

The S.S. Princess Kathleen ran aground and sank 18 miles north of Juneau, eight miles from where the Princess Sophia went down in 1918.

  

  

1969

Alaska Airlines announced the acquisition of Alaska Co., a Denver-based firm with interests in 20,000 acres of Federal land on the North Slope.

  

  

1979

The State of Alaska ran ads costing $110,000 in 32 metropolitan newspapers nationwide urging readers to "FREE ALASKA" and to oppose the Udall-Anderson D-2 lands bill.

  

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1906

The Office of the Governor of Alaska opened in Juneau after being moved from Sitka, six years after Congress authorized the move.

  

  

1938

Artist Eustace Ziegler arrived in Juneau to paint murals for the Baranof Hotel.

  

  

1969

Construction began on an access road connecting the Trans-Alaska Pipeline Terminal with the city of Valdez .

  

  

1986

The five billionth barrel of Alaskan oil left Pump Station #1 at Prudhoe Bay .

  

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1913

The First Territorial Bank of Alaska opened in Douglas.

  

  

1959

Wrangell sought state help in finding a doctor for the town after their only doctor fell ill and could not practice.

  

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1904

Nome police chief Charles Jewett was suspended from his post, accused of accepting bribes from arrestees and "fallen women without due process of law." He was reinstated after 30 minutes.

  

  

1907

The Tongass National Forest was established in Southeast Alaska.

  

  

1918

The "golden spike" was driven in the railroad that connected Seward and Anchorage.

  

  

1949

The director of the Boston Museum proposed installing a cosmic ray laboratory at 18,000-foot Denali Pass on Mt. McKinley .

  

  

1959

The Kenai Unit #1 well, a joint venture between Union Oil Co. and Ohio Oil Co., set a new Alaska record depth of 14,415 feet. The previous record had been held by Humble Oil Co.

  

  

1969

Alaska's oil lease sale pumped nine hundred million dollars into Alaska's economy as 179 tracts of potentially oil-rich North Slope lands were leased.

  

  

1969

Former State Attorney General Edgar Paul Boyko filed suit to stop the awarding of 33 of the 179 state oil-lease tracts.

  

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1865

Wilford B. Hoggatt , who became the sixth Governor of the District of Alaska, was born in Indiana.

  

  

1958

Poet Robert W. Service died in Monte Carlo at the age of 85.

  

  

1979

A patrol plane used by Rangers at the Wrangell-St. Elias National Monument was destroyed by fire. Arson was suspected.

  

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1882

Construction started on the first building on the campus of the Sheldon Jackson School in Sitka .

  

  

1900

A storm in Nome caused a million dollars in property losses along the waterfront.

  

  

1940

Artist Sydney Laurence announced he was going to die. After a shave, haircut, and a negotiation of a painting deal, he admitted himself to the Anchorage Hospital and fulfilled his prediction.

  

  

1969

Valdez celebrated as the Alaska Maru arrived with the first shipment of Trans-Alaska Pipeline pipe from Japan.

  

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1905

Fire destroyed 43 business buildings in Nome .

  

  

1906

The steamer Oregon was wrecked at Cape Hinchenbrook, at the entrance to Prince William Sound all 121 aboard were saved.

  

  

1913

Concrete is poured for the first story of Juneau's first City Hall. The Alaska Office Building now sits at that location.

  

  

1955

In a special election, Alaskans sent 55 delegates to a Constitutional Convention .

  

  

1979

Anchorage's teacher strike ended after a week when an acceptable negotiation plan was agreed to and signed by Judge Victor Carlson.

  

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1834

Alfred P. Swineford , Alaska's second Governor, was born in Ohio.

  

  

1871

A 32-ship whaling fleet from New England was abandoned at Wainwright Inlet when ice cut it off from open water. The 1200 crewmembers used whale boats to reach safety at Icy Cape. No lives were lost.

  

  

1884

Alaska's first governor, John Kinkead , appointed by President Chester Arthur, arrived in Sitka to take up his duties.

  

  

1884

The first meeting of the Presbytery of Alaska was held in Wrangell .

  

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1885

Alfred P. Swineford took office as the second Governor of the District of Alaska.

  

  

1913

Cordova residents formed the Alaska Good Roads Club with the goal of promoting a road from Fairbanks to Chitna.

  

  

1959

The Bureau of Land Management paid Alaska nearly $4.4 million as the state's share of oil and gas lease revenue on public lands in Alaska.

  

  

1959

Everett Benson was convicted in Spokane, Washington on five counts of grand larceny in connection with the financing of an Alaskan mine venture.

  

  

1986

The five billionth barrel of oil to travel down the Trans-Alaska Pipeline arrived in Valdez .

  

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1901

Professor Leonard , the aeronaut, performed acrobatic feats on a horizontal bar suspended from a large balloon over the Bering Sea near Nome .

  

  

1925

The Southeast Alaska Fair opened in the Arctic Brotherhood Hall in Juneau.

  

  

1947

Bidding was opened by the U.S. Forest Service on 1.5 billion cubic feet of timber in the Ketchikan area. This was part of a plan to establish 5 or 6 large paper mills in Alaska.

  

  

1974

The U.S. Army provided Kodiak with 3 emergency generators to give the Kodiak Electric Association a chance to repair broken equipment.

  

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1848

Thomas Cale, who served as the second delegate in Congress from Alaska, was born in Vermont.

  

  

1868

The Alaska Commercial Company was incorporated in San Francisco, California.

  

  

1873

Thomas Riggs , Governor of the Territory of Alaska from 1918 to 1921, was born.

  

  

1934

Fire swept through Nome, virtually destroying the town.

  

  

1964

A $6 million contract was signed to reconstruct the Alaska Railroad facilities in Seward that were damaged by the Good Friday earthquake. It was the largest single earthquake reconstruction contract.

  

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1913

Anthony J. Dimond was appointed U.S. Commissioner at Chisana, the start of a long career of public service.

  

  

1922

The University of Alaska - Fairbanks opened.

  

  

1929

Ground was broken in Juneau for the Federal and Territorial Building, now the State Capitol.

  

  

1939

The Book Cache Lending Library and Bookstore, run by Miss Honor Kempton, opened in Anchorage.

  

  

1948

Eielson Air Force Base , near Fairbanks, was formally dedicated.

  

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1903

The daily Fairbanks News was established. It later combined with the Fairbanks Miner.

  

  

1949

Colonel Brent Balchen, an Arctic aviation pioneer and his crew flew a U.S. Air Force transport plane 3700 miles from Anchorage to Oslo, Norway in a record-breaking 22.5 hour non-stop flight.

  

  

1963

Shell Oil Company announced a major oil discovery in Cook Inlet.

  

  

1969

The U.S.S. Manhattan, an ice breaking tanker on an experimental voyage through the Northwest Passage from the east coast of the U.S., took delivery of one barrel of North Slope crude oil off Prudhoe Bay. Humble Oil hoped ice breaking oil tankers could take North Slope crude to market.

  

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1949

Ketchikan residents were advised to boil their water because of bacterial contamination due to early September's heavy rains.

  

  

1959

Anchorage's 5-digit telephone number system changed to the metropolitan 7-digit system.

  

  

1979

The Department of Immigration announced that only 4,365 vehicles entered Alaska in August, the lowest number since record keeping began in 1966.

  

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1891

The first Siberian reindeer were released on Unalaska and Amaknak Islands by the Revenue Cutter Bear.

  

  

1949

An Anchorage burglar with a sweet tooth broke into a car spurning everything except a box of candy.

  

  

1959

The commander of the Alaska Communication System called Alaskans "the talkingest people in the world," making more long distance calls and talking longer than people outside the state.

  

  

1970

Denali State Park was established.

  

  

1979

Three and one half pounds of cocaine were seized at the Anchorage International Airport in what was then the largest such seizure.

  

  

1979

The Federal Government OK'ed a plan to shift Juneau's time zone from Pacific to Yukon Time, effective April 27, 1980.

  

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1898

The Discovery claim was staked on Anvil Creek, touching off the Nome Gold Rush.

  

  

1959

David L. Luce, a California official, was named Administrative Director of the newly formed Alaska State Court System.

  

  

1959

The Matanuska Valley Chamber of Commerce asked the state's Planning Commission to study the proposed relocation of the state capital.

  

  

1969

The oldest Russian Church in Alaska, the Church of the Holy Resurrection, in Kodiak was rededicated.

  

  

1969

Hawaiian legislators voiced concern over a possible tidal wave caused by the Atomic Energy Commission's planned nuclear tests in the Aleutian Islands.

  

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