DeArmond, R. N. Robert N. DeArmond Photograph Collection, ca. 1890-1972 PCA 258
12 boxes
Processed by: Jeanie Henry, 2002
Revised by: G. Kulp, M.A. Slemmons, 2004
Addition by: Gayle Goedde, July 2012
ACQUISITION:The bulk of the collection was donated to the Alaska State Library by R.N. DeArmond in 1991. Materials also were donated by DeArmond in 1982, 1989, 1990, 1993, 2000, and 2001; accession nos. 1982-004, 1989-046, 1990-072, 1991-010, 1993-032, 2000-072, and 2001-81; and, in 2009, Patricia Roppel donated DeArmond negatives and misc. photographs, accession no. 2009-48. And, in 2012, Patricia Roppel donated numerous photographs that DeArmond had given to her over the years; accession no. 2012-18. Other collections containing materials collected or by DeArmond include PCA 134, PCA 158, PCA 190, PCA 257, and MS 39.
ACCESS: The collection is available for viewing, however, the photographs may not be photocopied.
COPYRIGHT: Request for permission to publish or reproduce material from the collection should be discussed with the Librarian.
PROCESSING: R.N. DeArmond assigned inventory numbers to most items in the collection. He prepared a subject index and item-level inventories of some series, including most of the contents of Photograph Albums A-D, copy negatives and prints.
During the 2002 processing, numbers were assigned to unnumbered items begininning with #1060. Some of these items were integrated into DeArmond's original subject index. Inventories were completed for the following series: Photograph Albums, Copy Negatives and Prints, Larger Photographs, Oversize Photographs, Mounted Signed Prints, Safety Negatives, Positives, Color Transparencies, and Panoramas.
Numbers for photographs donated by Patricia Roppel and added in 2012 were put in brackets, as they were not part of the original series. One folder was added to Juneau –Buildings and was given the folder number 33a; another folder was added to Juneau – Scenes, folder 39a.
BIOGRAPHICAL NOTE Robert Neil DeArmond was born in Sitka in 1911, the son of Robert W. DeArmond who had arrived Sitka from Kansas in 1903 as the horticulturalist at the experiment station of the U.S. Department of Agriculture; and Elizabeth Davidson DeArmond who had come to Sitka in 1907 to teach in the public school. They married in 1909 and a street in Sitka is named for them.
Robert attended school in Sitka and at Tacoma, Washington, where he graduated from Stadium High School in 1930, just after the Wall Street crash that marked the beginning of the Great Depression. He worked in a salmon cannery that summer, then got his first newspaper job as a reporter for Strollers’ Weekly in Juneau. The paper was sold the following spring and the new owner became his own reporter. Jobs were scarce and in the summer of 1931 DeArmond made a rowboat trip from Sitka to Tacoma. This resulted, years later, the book, A Voyage in a Dory. He has also written or compiled several other books. From Tacoma he went on to Eugene, Oregon, and the University of Oregon.
After one year of college he returned to Sitka and for the next 12 years worked in the fishing industry at Sitka and the new settlement of Pelican. In 1935 at Sitka he married Dale Burlison, whom he had first met at Stadium High School. A son, William, was born to them in 1938, and a daughter, Jane, in 1940. In the fall of 1938 DeArmond was a member of the first crew that went from Sitka to Lisianski Inlet, Chichagof Island, to build a cold storage plant and found the town of Pelican. There DeArmond was storekeeper, bookkeeper and postmaster.
The DeArmonds and their two children remained at Pelican until the end of 1944. Anxious to get back into newspaper work, DeArmond moved his family to Ketchikan and he became a reporter on the Alaska Fishing News, which soon became the Ketchikan Daily News. From 1946 until 1953 he covered the biennial sessions of the Alaska Territorial Legislature for the Daily News, the Juneau Empire and several other papers. That took him to Juneau for two months every other year, first from Ketchikan and after 1949 from Sitka where he had become a partner in the Sitka Printing Company. At two different times, while living in Sitka, DeArmond was elected to the City Council. He became a member of the Ketchikan Igloo of the Pioneers of Alaska and in 1957 became Grand President of the organization. In April 1953 DeArmond became administrative assistant and press secretary to B. Frank Heintzleman, the former Regional Forester who had been appointed Governor of Alaska by President Dwight Eisenhower and who, with most of his staff, were actually employees of the U.S. Department of the Interior. While they lived in Juneau, Mrs. DeArmond worked for several state agencies including a new Department of Library Service. She then became librarian at the Juneau Memorial Library and held that position for 29 years. She also became known as a printmaker, particularly wood cuts and wood engravings.
Between 1957 and 1973 DeArmond worked part time as a researcher at the Alaska Historical Library in Juneau. In 1958 with Robert A. Henning he founded Alaska Northwest Publishing Co. and purchased The Alaska Sportsman (now Alaska Magazine) which he edited for some years. He also edited Alaska Journal, published by same firm. He served on the board of directors of the Alaska Historical Society and as a member of the Alaska Historical Commission.
The DeArmonds moved from Juneau back to Sitka and into the Pioneers’ Home there in 1991. He continues as a writer for The Sitka Sentinel, the Alaskan Southeaster, The Sea Chest and other publications. The two DeArmond children, after living elsewhere for many years, now also live in Sitka.
Written by R.N. DeArmond February 2003
Robert DeArmond passed away in Sitka November 26, 2010.
SCOPE AND CONTENTS NOTE The collection includes Alaskan images, ca 1890-1972, primarily photographs. Some major subjects are Juneau buildings, scenes and events; Southeast Alaska communities; modes of transportation; vessels; mining, and Alaskan individuals and groups. Other subjects include Canadian materials and other nonAlaska topics.
The Guide to the Collection includes an Index of Photographs and Negatives arranged alphabetically by subject and item-level inventories of images. All items are listed in either the Subject Index or one of the inventories. Many items are listed in both the subject index and one of the inventories.
OVERVIEW OF SERIES:
Series I
Boxes 1-2:
Photograph albums, Book A-D
Series II
Box 3:
Copy negatives and prints
Series III
Boxes 4-7:
Subject files
Series IV
Boxes 8-9:
Box 10:
Map case:
Larger photographs (larger than 8 ½" by 11" and smaller than 17" x 11")
Oversize photographs (larger than 17" x 11 ½" and smaller than 21" x 25")