Thursday, February 27, 2014

Beloved Historian Barbara Sweetland Smith Inducted into Alaska Women’s Hall of Fame

by J. Pennelope Goforth

Barbara Sweetland Smith joins the honored inductees of the Alaska Women’s
Hall of Fame Class of 2014 (http://alaskawomenshalloffame.org/). The Induction Ceremony will be held Friday, February 28, at Wilda Marston Theatre at Loussac Library in Anchorage. Doors open at 5:30 p.m., program starts at 6:00 p.m., and light snacks will be served.


Last year the Alaska Historical Society passed a resolution nominating Barbara Sweetland Smith, to the Alaska Women’s Hall of Fame for her life-long work in preserving Alaska’s Russian history and culture. As a member and consultant she served in many groundbreaking capacities for the society, among them initiating the respected Alaska History journal. A friend to all researchers and historians, she spent many years preserving early Russian iconography residing in the state’s Russian Orthodox chapels and cathedrals. Her expertise and dedication helped make possible the restoration and preservation of rare icons and historic Russian Orthodox churches in the Aleutian and Pribilof islands damaged during World War II. Among other things, Smith was instrumental in securing major funding to conserve, catalog and restore icons of the Holy Ascension Church in Unalaska, perhaps the largest single collection of pre-20th century art in Alaska.

Smith also curated major exhibitions for the Anchorage Museum of History and Art: “Russian America: the Forgotten Frontier,” “Heaven on Earth: Orthodox Treasures of Siberia and North America,” and “Science Under Sail: Russia’s Great Voyages to America 1728-1867.” These popular, world-class exhibits, some of which traveled the country, portrayed how the Russian presence has shaped Alaska’s history and cultures. She was also active in advocating for private, state and federal funding and support for archives, historical programs, and museums.

As a quiet but tireless humanitarian, Barbara served as president of the Anchorage Fellowship in Serving Humanity (FISH) for 28 years, working with the Food Bank of Alaska to provide food pantries for those in need. She also served as a board member and President of Soroptimists International of Anchorage, a group dedicated to improving the lives of women and girls locally and around the world, and as a board member of the national archives of the Episcopal Church.

She passed away last year, mourned by the many who knew her, and those who were touched by her long legacy of scholarship. Read her biography at http://alaskawomenshalloffame.org/2014/01/26/barbara-sweetland-smith/

The Alaska Women’s Hall of Fame was initiated in 2008 by the Alaska Women’s Network and joined by several other women’s groups as part of the upcoming celebration of Alaska’s fifty years of statehood. This collaboration of the Anchorage YWCA, Zonta Club of Anchorage, Alaska Women’s Political Caucus, Anchorage YWCA, University of Alaska Anchorage, and Anchorage Commission on Women crafted the foundation. March was chosen as the annual date of the induction to coincide with Women’s History Month. Nominations were solicited from across the state.

On March 6, 2009, the website, which hosts the biographies of the honorees, premiered with 50 women inducted in to the Class of 2009. Among them historians, writers, community activists, Native leaders, dog mushers, lawyers, journalists, politicians, and educators. Their activities touched the lives of all Alaskans. In their various roles they helped to create the unique state we live in.

Political activist Evangeline Atwood, third-generation Alaskan born 1910, led the struggle for Alaska statehood.

Civil rights activist Elizabeth Peratrovich, born 1911, worked tirelessly to pass Alaska’s Anti-Discrimination Act in 1945, the first such law in the nation.

Historian and anthropologist Dr. Lydia Black, born in 1925 in Stalinist Russia, whose research and many popular books restored to Alaskan peoples important features of their history and culture.

Yu’pik traditional healer Rita Blumenstein, born on a fishing boat in 1936, is also a member of the International Council of Thirteen Indigenous Grandmothers.

Philanthropist Mary Louis Rasmuson, born 1911, founded the Anchorage Museum of History and Art.

Four-term Alaska State Representative and historian Thelma Bucholdt, born 1934, was expert on Alaskan/Filipino History writing Filipinos in Alaska: 1788-1958 and produced a documentary film on the topic.

You can read all the their inspiring biographies, along with those of all the inductees since at: http://alaskawomenshalloffame.org/alphabetical-list/

Tuesday, February 25, 2014

End of an Era for the Alaska State Museum

The Alaska State Museum will close this Friday, February 28, to make way for “Phase- 2b” of the new State Libraries, Archives and Museum (SLAM) building being constructed on the existing museum site.

The Friends of the Alaska State Museum invites the public to a farewell celebration this Friday at 5:00 p.m. The “Final Friday” will feature live music, food, a behind-the-scenes look at paintings and artifacts as they are packaged for the move, and a “museum memories timeline” with photos and blank sheets for visitors to add their own written memories. Anyone unable to visit the museum this week can share their thoughts and personal stories at: http://museums.alaska.gov/Forms/MuseumMemories

As for the SLAM project, construction photos from January 2014 can be viewed at:


Check back to the SLAM website this spring for inside-the-vault photos!

Saturday, February 22, 2014

Bristol Bay Pioneer Shipwright Charles Herrmann

by J. Pennelope Goforth

Like many Alaskan pioneers of the Bristol Bay area, Charles Herrmann came for the salmon, married for love, and stayed to build boats. Today his work lives on in the ships and the ship models he designed for Alaska Packers Association.
 
Charles Hermann on the dock at Koggiung, ca. 1950.
Photo courtesy Adelheid Herrmann
Herrmann was born in 1893 in the great port city of Kiel, in the Prussian state of Schleswig-Holstein. [1] Located on the south shore of the Baltic Sea, Kiel was one of the original ports of the Hanseatic League and the homeport of the German Royal Navy. Shipyards and docks lined the miles-long Kiel fjord from which the city spread out. At an early age, Herrmann, learned the carpentry trade and worked in the shipyard, earning his master certificate as a shipwright.

Then came the siren call. So leaving his family and friends, in 1910 he sailed for the western coast of America arriving in another busy shipbuilding port, San Francisco. He began his career as a ships carpenter for the growing Associated Oil Company of California. A manufacturer of crude oil products shipped across the Pacific and throughout the Pacific Northwest, the company ran a large fleet of tankers, barges, and tugs. Companies competed for trained capable shipwrights and he moved up the employment ladder to work for Standard Oil Company. Then came an even better offer from Alaska Packers Association that would change his life.

Running a fleet of old square-rigged sailing vessels called the ‘star fleet,’ APA was the largest manufacturer and distributor of canned Alaska salmon. The seasonal sailings of the STAR OF RUSSIA, STAR OF BENGAL, and the STAR OF FINLAND, among others, marked the beginning and the end of the Bristol Bay salmon season. Herrmann signed on as carpenter for a season. When the ship reached Koggiung on the Kvichak River, Herrmann was set to work ashore. He proved so handy maintaining the great complex of wooden buildings that comprised the cannery settlement inhabited by hundreds of workers and fishermen APA encouraged him to stay on.
 
The QUAIL in 2008, in Anacortes, formerly with the
Fremont Tugboat Company of Seattle. Photo couresty
Fremont Tugboat Company
By his third year at the Diamond ‘J’ cannery on the Kvichak River, he remained in Alaska to become the ‘winter man’, the off season caretaker. But he mainly occupied his time over the long snowy winter designing vessels.

Herrmann’s personal life blossomed as well when he met Anna Gartelman. A local Aleut woman from the thriving port village of Nushagak. In the early 1920s they married. Anna returned with him to Koggiung.

There is no road system than connects the canneries and villages of the Bristol Bay other than the waterways of the rivers and the bay itself. Homemade boats were the norm powered by oar and sail. The ‘tall ships’ with deep drafts of the APA fleet could not always approach the shallow tide lines where the cannery docks spilled out from the river banks. Sometimes they had to anchor several hundred yards from the beach. This transportation dilemma spawned mosquito fleets of tugs, tenders, dories, lighters, barges; all manner of craft were employed in moving people and fish and supplies throughout the busy season from ship to shore and back again.
Model of the QUAIL built in 1951 by Charles Herrmann.
Photo by J. Pennelope Goforth

Herrmann happily turned his ability to design and supervise the building of these much needed vessels to the service of APA. He built skiffs, lighters and several flat-bottomed barges. He also built a great number of the legendary double-ender sailboats and a few yachts. Almost all the prominent shipbuilders on the Pacific coast tried their hand at constructing speedy sailing yachts, mostly for fun and sport. But he is best known for the utility and timeless grace of the several tugboats he built for APA.

Tugboats were critical in towing the tall sailing ships—heavily laden with thousands of pounds of canned salmon at the end of the season—out to the open bay where they could catch a breeze. The tugs also nudged the powerless barges filled with salmon from offshore to the cannery docks where they were ‘pughed’, speared by pikes and flung on a conveyor to be cooked and canned.

APA named the larger vessels of their support fleet after birds. Two of Herrmann’s tugboats were IBIS (1935) and QUAIL (1940). The QUAIL was 72 feet long, 22 foot beam, boasted a 200hp, 325rpm Atlas-Imperial diesel engine. These engines were considered one of the most serviceable diesels ever built in the U.S. They were in demand since their introduction in 1916 powering tugboats, fishing boats and coasters. With engines in a variety of sizes (2 to 8 cylinders), their diesels became common on the West coast shore. Many engines that were built in the 1920s continued to run into 1951. [2]

He spent the following forty years as APA’s premier shipwright. He and Anna raised their family of six sons in the large village community at Koggiung, later moving to Levelock. When he retired, APA presented him with a gold and diamond company pin.
 
Close-up of model bow showing brass fittings.
Photo by J. Pennelope Goforth
However, he continued to work building model airplanes, children’s furniture like cribs, wagons, beds, even rocking horses. Houses, more skiffs, tank towers, and numerous dog sleds also occupied his time. Later in his life he built two scale models of the tugs QUAIL and IBIS. He spent about eight months working on the models in great detail with finely crafted brass fittings and intricately woven line including a tiny monkey fist, the ball-like weight that is thrown to secure the hawsers.

The IBIS, herself still reportedly working the docks in Newport, Oregon well into the 1990s. Shown here is the QUAIL, owned by Herrmann’s grandson, Gerald, and housed with his granddaughter, Bristol Bay fisherwoman and former state representative, Adelheid Herrmann. Charles Herrmann passed away on March 8, 1959. The QUAIL is still churning up a wake through Pacific Northwest waters.

[1] Herrmann Family Papers, courtesy Adelheid Herrmann.

[2] http://www.oldtacomamarine.com/atlas/index.html

Wednesday, February 19, 2014

Highliners: Boats of the Century

Alaskans traveling through Seattle the next several months -- which, let's be honest, is all of us -- should take note of an interesting exhibit on longliners and the North Pacific fisheries of the early 1900s. The Center for Wooden Boats in Seattle presents “Highliners: Boats of the Century,” an exhibit that tells the story of the historic power-schooners of Seattle’s longline fleet, many of which are 100 years old and still actively fishing. Many of the vessels operated in the Alaska halibut fishery.


The exhibit is open now and will run through Fall 2014 at the CWB’s South Lake Union location: 1010 Valley Street, Seattle.


Many of these unique vessels were built on the shores of Puget Sound, as Seattle was coming into its own as a city. Although less than 20 remain from a fleet that numbered over 150 in its heyday, the vessels and fishermen are still a vital part of Seattle’s maritime economy. In celebration of the 100-year anniversary of the Fishing Vessel Owners’ Association, several historic vessels will be moored at South Lake Union.

Saturday, February 15, 2014

Fairbanks Event – Lecture by Ray Bonnell, Wednesday 2/19

The Tanana-Yukon Historical Society presents “Drawing History,” a lecture by Fairbanks artist and writer Ray Bonnell.

Wednesday, February 19
7:00 p.m.
Pioneer Museum at Pioneer Park
Fairbanks
Free and open to the public
 
"Wickersham House" by Ray Bonnell
Scattered across the Interior are scores of historic and culturally important sites. Although some of these sites are being preserved, many are fading away—the result of development, vandalism, accidents and time. And just as the sites are fading away, so too is memory of them, as the old-timers who lived this history die or move away.

Ray Bonnell has been tramping the back roads and trails of Eastern Interior Alaska for 30 years, documenting (through photos, sketches and notes) its mining camps, homesteads, cemeteries and other historic sites. His goal has been to record a “snapshot in time” of these sites before accidents, development, time, and vandals erase them from the landscape.

Ray will talk about how he finds his subjects; where and how he locates information about them; and, finally, a bit about the process of funding and publishing his drawings.


For more information about this and other lectures sponsored by the Tanana Yukon Historical Society, please call 488-3383, or e-mail <tyhs@alaska.net>.

Tuesday, February 11, 2014

Anchors of Anchorage: Dastardly Deed Strands Schooner COURTNEY FORD

By Pennelope Goforth

Kedge anchor with 5-foot shaft from the
ill-fated COURTNEY FORD now resting
in front of Anchorage City Hall.
Photograph by J Pennelope Goforth.

The iron kedge anchor of the COURTNEY FORD now lies in state in a large flower pot at the entrance to city hall in downtown Anchorage, Alaska. It is one of several anchors placed around the city that are the subjects of this series. The significance of the tragic story of how the anchor came to rest in this unlikely spot over fifty years ago is pretty much long forgotten by all but the saltiest Alaskans. It is a tragic story of sailor and ship, both in their prime, doomed by the act of a ‘dastardly miscreant.’  The steadfastness of Seaman William Ode, his devotion to duty as watchman of the stranded COURTNEY FORD made national headlines in 1903.

The shallow tidewaters of the head of Cook Inlet was a convenient place to anchor up for deep draft vessels. They would off-load their cargos of passengers and freight via flat-bottomed barges and lighters to the trading village of Knik, farther northeast toward the headwaters of the Knik River, or to the silted banks of Ship Creek. In time this practice gave the city of Anchorage its name.

Like many ships sailing Alaskan waters in the late 18th century, the COURTNEY FORD was designed and built by master shipwright Captain Matthew Turner at his shipyard in San Francisco Bay in 1883. An early pioneer in the northern cod fishery, Captain Turner parlayed his knowledge of weather and currents and ship handling in those stormy waters into crafting vessels made to survive the worst storms of the North Pacific. [1] Turner’s passion was sailing yachts, sleek hulled boats built for speed. He was wildly successful in combining the grace and speed of a yachting craft with the yeoman elements of the workboat. The schooner COURTNEY FORD was such a vessel.
 
The schooner COURTNEY FORD, c. 1892, with a full cargo
and deck load of lumber. Note the anchor secured to her
port bow. Photographer unknown.
The two-masted 400+ ton vessel was 146 feet long, a spacious 34 feet in the beam and a 12-foot draft. [2] This translates into a cargo capacity of a half a million board feet of lumber or 300 gross tons of break-bulk goods like sugar, wheat, and fruit, all common trade goods of the day. Sailed by a crew of eight to ten, the COURTNEY FORD was loaded with lumber within days of launching.

Shipping Intelligence reported in the newspapers at ports of call note the movements of the COURTNEY FORD’s busy career hauling fruit from Suva and Fiji to San Francisco, dry goods and materials to Tahiti, and sugar cane from Honolulu, Hawaii. She chartered out on her mainstay coastwise trade: hauling lumber on numerous voyages from the Puget Sound sawmill towns to growing towns and cities all along the Pacific seaboard from Alaska to California.

The 1880s were a boom time for America’s western littoral, especially Alaska. The Morning Oregonian of 1887 carried a detailed article on the front page of the March 26 edition about the Scandinavian Packing Company of Astoria. It chartered the COURTNEY FORD to transport $50,000 of canning equipment, machinery and construction supplies to build their new cannery in the burgeoning salmon packing industry. In a follow-up article the next day, again on the front page, the Oregonian reported that about 100—30 construction workers and cannery supervisors along with 70 Chinamen men—would be shipped up with the supplies. [3]

The COURTNEY FORD had her share of hard knocks, grazing rocks in uncharted Alaskan waters and getting dismasted in North Pacific storms. In 1901, northbound out of Everett in Puget Sound for Unga Island with gold mining supplies and equipment for the Apollo Mine she was caught in a typhoon in the Gulf of Alaska. Shipping Intelligence in the San Francisco Call of October 1 reported that she was ‘bespoken’ (sighted and hailed by a passing ship) by the U.S. Army Transport ROSECRANS seventeen days out of Port Townsend with ‘foretopmast and foretopgallant mast carried away.’ Enough sail remained for her to limp into Unga, effect repairs and get under way again. No big deal for the stalwart ship and her seasoned crew.

However, the following year headed south in ballast out of St Michael for Port Townsend what began as a common stranding quickly turned into a calamity. From the beginning of the voyage the compass headings had been squirrelly, at odds with the daily navigational sightings. Captain N. E. Burgeson and his crew were well seasoned, sailing in good weather and bad. But this autumn voyage found them literally lost in the pernicious fog common to the Aleutian Islands in summer and fall. Thinking the lookout had spotted Akun Island, with the fairway through Unimak Pass off the port bow, Capt. Burgeson ordered the sails let out for a bit more speed. Still, he would have noticed the lack of the immense current generated in the waters of the pass.

The night was dark compounded by fog swirling in squally breezes out of the west.
They heard the roar of breakers before sighting a faint white line of foaming waves through the fog dead ahead. Startled, Burgeson ordered the men to wear ship (turn her away from the wind). But before the crew even reached the rigging the COURTNEY FORD slammed by a williwaw went hard aground past the breakers and stranded herself high on the beach. The impact flung two men off the deck to their immediate deaths in the pounding waves. Burgeson was dumbfounded. No way should there have been a sandy beach on their plotted course.

Suspecting the compass he tore apart the binnacle (housing for the compass) that sits in front of the ship’s wheel. To his disgust and rage he discovered small pieces of iron had been inserted into the space around compass, causing it to give grossly inaccurate readings. He laid it to ‘the dastardly work of some miscreant’ who had it in for the ship or the crew while at St. Michael. [4]

Fearing the ship might breakup, as morning dawned grey and raining he ordered the crew to set up camp where they remained for a week hoping to spot a passing ship for assistance. By now they reckoned the beach was actually the long spit-like Glen Island fronting Izembek Lagoon on the Alaska Peninsula. The Aleut village of Morzhovoi was somewhere nearby and traffic out of the busy post salmon season of Bristol Bay might come close enough to Amak Island in the distance to see their signals. The mate and several men rowed the ship’s skiff to search for the village. The second of the tragic loss of lives happened when the skiff capsized in the surf, drowning two more sailors.

They got lucky when a passing vessel spied their signal fire. Burgeson assigned Seaman William Ode to remain with the COURTNEY FORD while he and the remaining crew went for help.

What happened to the rescue effort is about as foggy as the night they stranded. Some reports say the owner of registry was C. L. Hooper & Co. of San Francisco. But Burgeson wrote in the wreck report that the owner was the Pacific Shipping Co. of San Francisco and more importantly, she was uninsured. In ballast, no cargo to sell for salvage and no insurance money for her value as a vessel, it appears that no efforts were made to rescue Seaman Ode and the vessel.

What is known for sure is the story of how Ode made it to the end. As duty required of the watchman, he kept a log book with daily entries beginning October 4, 1902, with the departure of his crewmates and Burgeson. “Boys left at 10 a. m. Took my stuff back to the schooner and pumped her out. Wind northwest.” [5]

On October 23, 1902, Burgson and his four remaining crewmen arrived aboard the CENTENNIAL at the Seattle docks. Nothing was heard of the COURTNEY FORD or Seaman Ode until eight months later. Captain Lundquist of the steamer ST PAUL southbound out of Nome, which arrived in Seattle in late June, had obtained the log William Ode kept. The news reports of Seaman Ode’s log rocked the country, making the front pages and the headlines of the New York Times in addition to the Oregon and California papers.
 
Front page of the San Francisco Call, July 3, 1903, with artist's drawing of
the COURTNEY FORD and lonesome depictions of Seaman Ode.
Ode noted the daily tasks of pumping out the ship, gathering driftwood for fires, shooting ducks for food. Battered by winds of hurricane force and howling williwaws Seaman Ode’s makeshift shelter on the ship was smashed. He writes that he can pump her out no more. In a snow squall he attempts to hike out across Glen Island to find the village of Morshovoi.

“November 24—Left schooner. Came about six miles away from schooner and at 5 p.m. was swamped by breakers. Could not return, as beach was too steep.

“November 25—Had a terrible night, which I spent outside. Lay under quilt and oil coat. Turned back.”


Ode doggedly built another shelter from ship’s timbers and sails in the undamaged galley of the ship, making use of the stove and the last of the provisions from the pantry.

“December 1—My twenty-seventh birthday. Carried fifteen barrels of water.”

Christmas came and went. Ode and the COURTNEY FORD were solidly iced in, shrouded in drifts of snow.


“January 3—Wind west…foxes came alongside during the night making terrible noise.”

By month’s end Ode notes with some surprise how weak he has become and can no longer leave the ship to gather firewood or water. His legs and arms swelled painfully from rheumatism. He suspects he also has scurvy by now.

“January 28—I have still a little hope left, but very little. I don’t expect the captain will send help, because they think I am safe in Morshovoi, but the winter came a few weeks too early. If it was not for the snow I could try once more to get away but in the condition I am now I could not travel a mile. Then I can hardly lift my legs high enough to get out the hold with a piece of firewood.”

The next few days he becomes unable to put on his boots and notes that his belly and chest have also swollen up. The shelter is chilled and damp from the rain.

“February 19—One month since I laid up with the schooner. Life is sweet, but death is sweeter in a case like this. I have nothing but cold scraps and snow water. Today I ate some dried apples and a piece of ice. I can make no more fire, as I can’t stay up that long.”

The last entry is faint, the letters shaky: “Death at last. Four months alone.”

Sixty years later, the timbers of the COURTNEY FORD were still visible on Glen Island. Cold Bay resident Mike Uttecht Sr. often visited the scene, which was not far from one of his hunting camps. He salvaged the anchor and displayed it not far from the airport. He told a good story about the COURTNEY FORD, probably cadging many a drink and dinner in the Volcano Room for those weathered in as a result. Eventually, when Mike passed, Bob and Tilley Reeve ‘inherited’ it. Recognizing its place in Alaska maritime history, the Reeve family brought the anchor to Anchorage. They presented it to the municipality, which installed it prominently by the south entrance. It is a fitting tribute to the dedication to duty of Seaman William Ode.

(The author gives a loud shoutout to Mike Burwell for his invaluable collection of Alaska ship wreck material: Couldn’t have written it without you, mate!)

--
[1] Turner papers J. Porter Shaw Library, San Francisco, CA.
[2] US Customs Wreck Report filed at San Francisco 1902.
[3] Morning Oregonian, page 1, March 30, 1887.
[4] San Francisco Call, July 3, 1903.

[5] Ibid.