Датотека:View of Nulato and Yukon River, ca 1912 (THWAITES 329).jpeg

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English: View of Nulato and Yukon River, ca. 1912   (Wikidata search (Cirrus search) Wikidata query (SPARQL)  Create new Wikidata item based on this file)
Фотограф
John E. Thwaites  (1863–1940)  wikidata:Q46211791
 
Друга имена
John Edward Thwaites
Опис амерички postal worker и фотограф
– was employed in Alaska by the US federal government as a postal clerk for the Railway Mail Service during the early part of the 20th century, and he traveled the route from Valdez to Unalaska onboard a wood hulled mailboat delivering mail to the coastal communities; he was also an amateur photographer.
Датум рођења/смрти 1863 Уреди на Википодацима 1940 Уреди на Википодацима
Место рођења/смрти Eastwood, Ontario, Canada Мерсер Ајланд
Нормативна контрола
creator QS:P170,Q46211791
Наслов
English: View of Nulato and Yukon River, ca. 1912
Опис
English: Caption on image: Nulato, Alaska PH Coll 247.771
Nulato is located on the west bank of the Yukon River, 35 miles west of Galena and 310 air miles west of Fairbanks. It lies in the Nulato Hills, across the River from the Innoko National Wildlife Refuge. The Koyukon Athabascans traditionally had spring, summer, fall, and winter camps, and moved as the wild game migrated. There were 12 summer fish camps located on the Yukon River between the Koyukuk River and the Nowitna River. Nulato was the trading site between Athabascans and Inupiat Eskimos from the Kobuk area. Western contact increased rapidly after the 1830s. The Russian explorer Malakov established a trading post at Nulato in 1839. A small pox epidemic, the first of several major epidemics, struck the region in 1839. Disputes over local trade may have been partly responsible for the Nulato massacre of 1851, in which Koyukuk River Natives decimated a large portion of the Nulato Native population. The Western Union Telegraph Company explored the area around 1867. Nulato was a center of missionary activity, and many area Natives moved to the village after a Roman Catholic mission and school, Our Lady of Snows Mission, was completed in 1887. Epidemics took heavy tolls on Native lives after the onset of the Yukon and Koyukuk gold rush in 1884. For instance, food shortages and a measles epidemic combined to kill as much as one-third of the Nulato population during 1900. In 1900, steamboat traffic peaked, with 46 boats in operation. Through the turn of the century, two steamers a day would stop at Nulato to purchase firewood. A post office was opened in 1897. Gold seekers left the Yukon after 1906. Lead mining began in the Galena area in 1919. Nulato incorporated as a City in 1963. Today, Nulato residents are predominantly Koyukon Athabascans, with a trapping and subsistence lifestyle.
  • Subjects (LCTGM): Rivers--Alaska--Nulato
  • Subjects (LCSH): Nulato (Alaska); Cities and towns--Alaska--Nulato; Yukon River (Yukon and Alaska)
Приказано место
English: United States--Alaska--Nulato
Датум circa 1912
date QS:P571,+1912-00-00T00:00:00Z/9,P1480,Q5727902
institution QS:P195,Q219563
Пописни број
Извор
Дозвола
(Поновно коришћење ове датотеке)
Public domain

Аутор је умро 1940, па је рад је такође у јавном власништву у државама са роком ауторства за живота аутора плус 80 година или мање.


Овај рад је у јавном власништву у Сједињеним Државама зато што је објављен или регистрован у канцеларији за ауторска права САД-а пре 1. јануара 1929.

Order Number
InfoField
THW343

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