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A Few of FR's Finest....Every Day....10-19, 20-05...North to Alaska!
Mama_Bear

Posted on 10/19/2005 12:02:11 AM PDT by Mama_Bear



A Few of FR's Finest....Every Day
Free Republic made its debut in September, 1996, and the forum was added in early 1997.   Over 100,000 people have registered for posting privileges on Free Republic, and the forum is read daily by tens of thousands of concerned citizens and patriots from all around the country and the world.
A Few of FR's Finest....Every Day was introduced on June 24, 2002. It's only a small room in JimRob's house where we can get to know one another a little better; salute and support our military and our leaders; pray for those in need; and congratulate those deserving. We strive to keep our threads entertaining, fun, and pleasing to look at, and often have guest writers contribute an essay, or a profile of another FReeper.
On Mondays please visit us to see photos of A FEW OF FR'S VETERANS AND ACTIVE MILITARY
If you have a suggestion, or an idea, or if there's a FReeper you would like to see featured, please drop one of us a note in FR mail.
We're having fun and hope you are!

~ Billie, Dutchess, DollyCali, Mama_Bear ~





We're
"On the Road Again"...

Please join "A Few of FR's Finest" as we make a cyber-visit to another state in this great Union of ours.

Over the past couple years each "Finest" hostess has profiled her home state for the Finest Thread. The remaining states are being presented, about one a month, in random order. We hope you are enjoying these visits to our beautiful United States. Please FReepMail me if you would like to participate in spotlighting your Fine state. I would appreciate your ideas and suggestions on what you would like to see highlighted.




These are the states
we have presented to date:

05-23-03 Alabama
06-27-03 Maryland
07-11-03 Vermont
07-25-03 Utah
08-05-03 Texas
08-22-03 Nevada
08-26-03 Wash DC
09-05-03 Tennessee
09-17-03 Florida
09-19-03 Minnesota
10-03-03 New Mexico
10-14-03 Georgia
10-17-03 Louisiana
10-22-03 Michigan
11-04-03 South Dakota
11-14-03 California
01-09-04 South Carolina

02-06-04 West Virginia
02-20-04 Oregon
03-09-04 Pennsylvania
03-30-04 Wyoming
04-13-04 Mississippi
04-27-04 Missouri
05-25-04 Indiana
07-21-04 Virginia
08-18-04 Colorado
09-29-04 Idaho
10-20-04 New Hampshire
12-07-04 Hawaii
02-09-05 Maine
03-09-05 North Carolina
04-13-05 Arizona
06-15-05 Iowa




Today we are visiting our 49th state ~
The Last Frontier!


Click above to go to the Alaska Message Board.
















Alaska's History in Brief


Russian Colonization

The disastrous voyage of Vitus Bering and Aleksey Chirikov in 1741 began the march of Russian traders across Siberia. The survivors who returned with sea otter skins started a rush of fur hunters to the Aleutian Islands. Grigori Shelekhov in 1784 founded the first permanent settlement in Alaska on Kodiak Island and sent (1790) to Alaska the man who was to dominate the period of Russian influence there, Aleksandr Baranov. A monopoly was granted to the Russian American Company in 1799, and it was Baranov who directed its Alaskan activities.

The Russian Orthodox Church and Native Alaskans

The primary goal of the Alaska mission was to convert the Native population to Orthodox Christianity. Conversion was encouraged by the Tsar, as head of the Church, and by the hierarchy. Rules for converting Natives strictly forbade using coercion. Orthodox missionaries were generally successful in their conversions, more so among the Aleuts and Eskimos than the Tlingits. Among the obstacles to conversion were the language barrier, and the shamanistic traditions of the Natives, deeply entrenched in the culture.

Today, Alaskans are proud of their Russian heritage and active Orthodox Churches are to be found in many towns.



Early Years as a U.S. Possession

In 1867, Russia sold Alaska to the United States for $7,200,000. The U.S. purchase was accomplished solely through the determined efforts of Secretary of State William H. Seward, and for many years afterward the land was derisively called Seward's Folly or Seward's Icebox because of its supposed uselessness. Since Alaska appeared to offer no immediate financial return, it was neglected. The U.S. army officially controlled the area until 1876, when scandals caused the withdrawal of the troops. After a brief period, during which government was in the hands of customs officials, the U.S. navy was given charge (1879). It was not until after the discovery of gold in the Juneau region in 1880 that Alaska was given a governor and a feeble local administration.

The Gold Rush

The Klondike strike of 1896 brought a stampede, mainly of Americans, and most of them came through Alaska. The big discoveries in Alaska itself followed—Nome in 1898–99, Fairbanks in 1902. The miners and prospectors (the sourdoughs) took over Alaska.


"North to Alaska,
They're goin' North,
the rush is on!"


The steamship Portland had just pulled into Seattle, returning from the Yukon with over a ton of gold. Her arrival instantly sparked an all-out human stampede for the Yukon.
To seek their fortunes in the Yukon gold fields, prospectors had to make their way along the Inside Passage, cross the Chilkoot Mountains with a ton of supplies, build a raft or boat during the long, hard winter, and then float 550 miles down the Yukon River to Dawson. After reaching Dawson, each prospector had to stake a claim and spend countless weeks, months, or years digging his claim before panning or sluicing the dirt, hoping to strike it rich, but more likely scratching out a meager existence.

While the gold fields lay far to the north, towns like Skagway and Dyea became boomtowns almost overnight. These towns marked the start of the overland portion of the Trail of ‘98 – Alaska’s gateway to the Klondike. With numerous saloons, brothels, and a full complement of gunslingers, con men, drunkards, and outlaws, Skagway was a feral, lawless Wild West of the north.

Most of the would-be prospectors came to Alaska with little or no knowledge of mining or backcountry survival. Many soon found themselves questing no longer merely for fortune, but for their very survival. Not surprisingly, of the 100,000 who set out, only a few thousand ever reached the gold fields – and only a mere handful ever struck it rich.


~ A Historical Vignette ~

Jefferson Randolph “Soapy” Smith was a Western crook with the gift of organization. A southern charmer and a master of the bait and switch, he was a confidence man who dressed like a judge, sat on a horse like a prince, and spoke like a bishop. He honed his skills in Texas and Colorado. Gradually he gathered shills and toughs around him, and commanded his gang of “lambs” as a colonel might command a battalion. When the Klondike Gold Rush began in 1897, he knew that the tenderfeet headed for northern goldfields would be ripe for the picking, and chose raw, lawless Skagway as his headquarters. In this bleak settlement at the head of Alaska’s Lynn Canal, he constructed an empire that any Mafia don might envy. However, less than a year later, the town had had enough of Soapy. He was killed by Frank Reid, in 1898 when he was 38 years old. Soapy's life story is a rip-snorting portrait of the rise to power of a man without a conscience. It reveals the strong-arm robberies, bloody trail murders, illegitimate businesses, rigged card games, and garish, candle-lit honky-tonks of the Gold Rush.


One of Soapy's best cons involved his "telegraph office." Recent arrivals were greeted by men who offered to send telegrams to their families for only $5. Most people did not look behind the "telegraph office" to notice that the wires ended a few yards out.





Territorial Status

Juneau officially replaced Sitka as capital in 1900, but it did not begin to function as such until 1906. In the same year Alaska was finally awarded a territorial representative in Congress. A new era began for Alaska when local government was established in 1912 and it became a U.S. territory.

Statehood

In 1958, Alaskans approved statehood by a 5 to 1 vote, and on Jan. 3, 1959, Alaska was officially admitted into the Union as a state, the first since Arizona in 1912.









  • Outsiders first discovered Alaska in 1741 when Danish explorer Vitus Jonassen Bering sighted it on a voyage from Siberia.
     
  • In 1867 United States Secretary of State William H. Seward offered Russia $7,200,000, or two cents per acre, for Alaska.
     
  • On October 18, 1867 Alaska officially became the property of the United States. Many Americans called the purchase "Seward's Folly."
     
  • Joe Juneau's 1880 discovery of gold ushered in the gold rush era.
     
  • In 1943 Japan invaded the Aleutian Islands, which started the One Thousand Mile War, the first battle fought on American soil since the Civil War.
     
  • Alaska officially became the 49th state on January 3, 1959.
     
  • Alaska's most important revenue source is the oil and natural gas industry.
     
  • The state of Rhode Island could fit into Alaska 425 times.
     
  • Prudhoe Bay, on the northern Alaskan coast, is North America's largest oil field.
     
  • The Trans-Alaska Pipeline moves up to 88,000 barrels of oil per hour on its 800 mile journey to Valdez.
     
  • Most of America's salmon, crab, halibut, and herring come from Alaska.
     
  • The term Alaska native refers to Alaska's original inhabitants including Aleut, Eskimo and Indian groups.
     
  • Dog mushing is the official state sport. The Alaska Legislature adopted it in 1972.
     

    Click here to read about
    "The Last Great Race on Earth", the Iditarod!


  • The state motto is North to the Future.
     
  • Gold is the official state mineral. It was named the state mineral in 1968.
     
  • Alaska has been called America's Last Frontier.
     
  • Every four years Alaskans elect a Governor and a Lieutenant Governor to four-year terms.
     
  • The Alaska State Legislature is made up of a Senate and a House of Representatives.
     
  • Twenty senators are elected to four-year terms; forty representatives serve two-year terms.
     
  • Alaska's Constitution was adopted in 1956 and became effective in 1959 making it the 49th state.
     
  • Nearly one-third of Alaska lies within the Arctic Circle.
     
  • The Alaska Highway was originally built as a military supply road during World War II.
     
  • The state boasts the lowest population density in the nation.
     
  • The discovery of gold in the Yukon began a gold rush in 1898. Later gold was discovered at Nome and Fairbanks.
     
  • Alaska is a geographical marvel. When a scale map of Alaska is superimposed on a map of the 48 lower states, Alaska extends from coast to coast.
     
  • The state's coastline extends over 6,600 miles.
     
  • Alaska is the United State's largest state and is over twice the size of Texas. Measuring from north to south the state is approximately 1,400 miles long and measuring from east to west it is 2,700 miles wide.
     
  • Alaska's geographic center is 60 miles northwest of Mount McKinley.
     
  • The Tongass National Forest is the largest national forest in the United States.
     
  • 17 of the 20 highest peaks in the United States are located in Alaska.
     
  • At 20,320 feet above sea level, Mt. McKinley, located in Alaska's interior, is the highest point in North America.
     

  • Juneau is the only capital city in the United States accessible only by boat or plane.
     
  • The state's largest city is Anchorage; the second largest is Fairbanks.
     
  • The Alaska Range is the largest mountain chain in the state. It covers from the Alaska Peninsula to the Yukon Territory.
     
  • In 1915 the record high temperature in Alaska was 100 degrees Fahrenheit at Fort Yukon; the record low temperature was -80 degrees Fahrenheit at Prospect Creek Camp in 1971.
     
  • The Alaskan malamute sled dog is strong and heavily coated. It was developed as a breed by a group of Eskimos named the Malemiuts.  
  • Alaska's name is based on the Eskimo word Alakshak meaning great lands or peninsula.
     
  • Agattu, Attu, and Kiska are the only parts of North America occupied by Japanese troops during World War II.
     
  • Oil is the state's most valuable natural resource. The area includes what is thought to be the largest oil field in North America.
     
  • In 1986 Mount Augustine erupted near Anchorage.
     


The "30-30-30" Rule

Polar and Alaskan explorers cite the "30-30-30" rule,
which states that at -30°F, with winds of 30 MPH,
human flesh will freeze solid in 30 seconds!

















Alaska king crab fishing is considered to be one of the most dangerous jobs in North America. Every year, hundreds of fearless crab fishermen endure extreme weather conditions and harsh work environments with assertive hopes of catching excessive amounts of the most desirable seafood in the world- King crab!

Deep in the frigid waters of the Bering Sea lurks the highly lucrative — and yet often elusive — king crab. Each year, approximately 250 boats converge on Dutch Harbor, Alaska, awaiting the official harvesting season. It could be four days in length or as many as 12 — the fishermen won't know until the voice of the Alaska Department of Fish and Game crackles across their radios to announce the beginning and end of the fishing season.

Forty-foot waves, freezing temperatures, swinging 700-pound crab pots, a nearly 100 percent injury rate ... but also the chance to earn enough money for a family to live on for a year or more, for just a few days' work. Welcome to one of the world's deadliest jobs — that of the Alaskan crab fisherman.

So, the next time you order Alaskan King Crab at your favorite restaurant, remember the men who risked life and limb to bring this wonderful (and expensive) delicacy to your table. :-)

Read more HERE about "The Deadliest Catch".














The following websites provided information
and graphics for this presentation...


Scoundrels Gallery
Wild Things Photography
The Russian Church and Native Alaskan Cultures
The 49th State










09-27-05 ~ Hall of Fame #13

THIS WEEK'S THREADS

10-17-05 Military Monday
10-18-05 Poetry and Potpourri
at the Finest


Opinions by our own 'King of Ping'
Every Thursday at the Finest
The guy's good, folks!


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Free Republic; Miscellaneous; Political Humor/Cartoons; US: Alaska
KEYWORDS: alaska; finest; friends; fun; military; surprises; tribute; veterans
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To: thackney; Mama_Bear
MamaBear, what a great tour you've given us of this North Country. So much of it I've never heard about - just knew that it's awfully COLD up there and the days are LONG! (I know - depending on the season):)

Friends of ours just returned from an Alaskan cruise - they LOVED it!

Absolutely gorgeous photos you're posting, thackney!

21 posted on 10/19/2005 7:06:58 AM PDT by Billie
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To: Mama_Bear; ST.LOUIE1; DollyCali; dutchess; Aquamarine; The Mayor; deadhead; Diver Dave; GailA; ...




"Tuktu picked his spear from the sledge and shuffled up the hill. On low ground the snow was too powdery for igloo-building, but higher up it was rammed tight by the wind. One of the waiting women cracked a fifty-foot walrus-hide whip over the restless dogs. The other followed with her black eyes the squat dwindling figure with the right arm that stabbed so steadily into the deepening drift. Presently Tuktu lifted his hand. The dogs picked up their pointed ears an hurled themselves forward. The women stumbled alongside the jerking sledge. A long day was nearly done, and they were very weary.

Tuktu swung his dag into the snow and cut out a block. It was two feet long, fifteen inches high, ten inches thick, and slightly tapering. Then he cut another and another. In a little while there were enough to make the bottom ring of an igloo.

The white pit sank as the igloo rose. Nowrak and Ungluck watched and shivered while they plastered the chinks. This was always the coldest part of the day. The dogs lay motionless. They knew nearly as much as Tuktu. At the end of it all, the builder thrust up the key block, dropped it neatly into place, and hewed his way out through the bottom course."

(excerpt)


~ arcticwebsite.com/ eskimoBaffin.html ~



22 posted on 10/19/2005 7:12:19 AM PDT by Billie
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To: Mama_Bear


Thank you Mama Bear for the great thread :-)


23 posted on 10/19/2005 7:18:30 AM PDT by Deetes (God Bless the Troops)
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To: Mama_Bear

Oh, Mama, everything on this thread is sooooo wonderful! I love the orca graphic and really everything! We took a cruise to Alaska and it was so beautiful. I loved orca watching and Juneau, Sitka and the Mendenhall glacier. Taking a helicopter and landing on the Mendenhall glacier was one of the highlights of my life! I am looking forward to an all-girl cruise with you, Babychick, Gran Bear soon! Smoochies!


24 posted on 10/19/2005 7:32:04 AM PDT by scubachick ((aka Mama_Bear's niece bear))
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To: Billie; dutchess; LadyX; GodBlessUSA; Mrs.Nooseman; Mama_Bear; ST.LOUIE1; Aquamarine; Diver Dave; ..



[click on the picture]

America rise up and fly
On eagle's wings into the sky!
We must live because they died...
AMERICA RISE UP AND FLY.

by Texas Songwriter...
aka Jeff Russell
from "America Come Home Today"



25 posted on 10/19/2005 8:01:58 AM PDT by luvie (The love of freedom is the mightiest force of history...GWBush 10-06-05 (Water Bucket Brigade))
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To: LUV W
This is such a beautiful table Luv! Have a wonderful day!

I would have wrote this ealier but it took me 5 minutes just to get to my comment page. This is frustrating posting like this. HUGS!

26 posted on 10/19/2005 8:18:55 AM PDT by GodBlessUSA (US Troops, past, present and future, God Bless You and Thank You! Prayers said for our Heroes!)
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To: Billie
You do realize igloos come in different styles, don't you?


27 posted on 10/19/2005 8:22:02 AM PDT by thackney (life is fragile, handle with prayer)
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To: GodBlessUSA

Did you listen to his song! He is an awesome songwriter/singer, in my opinion!


28 posted on 10/19/2005 8:25:25 AM PDT by luvie (The love of freedom is the mightiest force of history...GWBush 10-06-05 (Water Bucket Brigade))
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To: thackney
Only in Alaska, Igloo Condo's
29 posted on 10/19/2005 8:27:24 AM PDT by thackney (life is fragile, handle with prayer)
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To: LUV W

Hi Luv
No, I haven't heard his song. I'll check with you later so I can hear it.

I give up. Too slow with posting etc. Figures, the morning I have to spend is FR is slow. LOL!
See you later!


30 posted on 10/19/2005 8:29:54 AM PDT by GodBlessUSA (US Troops, past, present and future, God Bless You and Thank You! Prayers said for our Heroes!)
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To: thackney

Okay, it is not actually a Condo...

Had it ever opened, the Igloo City Resort at Mile 188.5 Parks Highway surely would have attracted travelers interested in an offbeat place to stay between Anchorage and Fairbanks. Imagine the appeal: Tourists could have returned home and bragged to friends that they had slept in a real Alaska igloo.

Sadly, the faux-ice igloo's owners ran out of money before the hotel was complete. Today the half-built white hulk sits abandoned next to the rest of the "resort" - two small cabins, a wash house, a gas station and a convenience store.

"It's just a landmark, aging not very gracefully," said Machel Hill, the resort's manager.

http://www.juneauempire.com/stories/050403/out_touriststops.shtml


31 posted on 10/19/2005 8:29:54 AM PDT by thackney (life is fragile, handle with prayer)
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To: thackney

love your additions to our thread! you fit right in & hope you will visit again (even when we have "other" topics)

I recall in several movies beautiful ICE hotels.. is there one in Alaska? I also recall the fun scene of Superman's ice "home" & always wondered if that was shot in alaska


32 posted on 10/19/2005 8:31:36 AM PDT by DollyCali (Don't tell GOD how big your storm is -- Tell the storm how B-I-G your s God is!)
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To: Billie
Brrrrr! I'd rather live in New Orleans.
33 posted on 10/19/2005 8:33:03 AM PDT by Temple Owl (ueuu)
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To: DollyCali
I recall in several movies beautiful ICE hotels.. is there one in Alaska?

They've built one in Chena Hot Springs near Fairbanks in recent years. I don't know if they are going to build it again this year.


34 posted on 10/19/2005 8:44:15 AM PDT by thackney (life is fragile, handle with prayer)
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To: Deetes
North to Alaska !!! Wait I'm alredy here :)

You are? Are you WAY up north in Alaska, or down in the "balmy" south?

It's a beautiful state you live in, for sure. I've been as far north as Juneau, so I can't really say I have experienced Alaska, except through the internet and Michener's "Alaska" novel. But, from what I have seen of it, it is breathtaking.


Wild Things Photography ~ John Hyde

35 posted on 10/19/2005 8:44:37 AM PDT by Mama_Bear (If God brings you to it, He will bring you through it.)
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To: thackney

In Alaska the Cold War was often just that - as this recruiting poster indicates. The aircraft in the background is the C-123 Provider, one of the largest aircraft ever to be ski-equipped for landing on ice and snow.


36 posted on 10/19/2005 8:48:10 AM PDT by thackney (life is fragile, handle with prayer)
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To: thackney

I didn't realize they needed to be rebuilt yearly! golly! Just assumed they were far enough north to be year round. Economically don't know how they do that without charging 100K /night for a room! thanks for pix


37 posted on 10/19/2005 8:51:30 AM PDT by DollyCali (Don't tell GOD how big your storm is -- Tell the storm how B-I-G your s God is!)
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To: ST.LOUIE1
Good morning, wolfie!

OUTSTANDING! As usual. : )

Thanks. You are always so complimentary of what I do. :-)

Hey, would these guys be part of your family? A wild bunch, they are. LOL.


Wild Things Photography ~ John Hyde

SMOOOOOOOOOOOCH!!!

Is it just my computer, or is FR slow as molasses in Alaska today? :-(

38 posted on 10/19/2005 8:57:58 AM PDT by Mama_Bear (If God brings you to it, He will bring you through it.)
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To: Species8472; Victoria Delsoul

I love that moose picture!

Let me guess: they're all facing EAST because they're "mooselims".

[ducking under desk to evade hurled objects]


39 posted on 10/19/2005 8:58:49 AM PDT by HKMk23 ("In a land of moral imbeciles, I knew I could be king." -- Aaron Tonken, Celebrity Manipulator)
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To: DollyCali
I didn't realize they needed to be rebuilt yearly! golly! Just assumed they were far enough north to be year round.

Even the far North Slope thaws every year. You have to get some elevation to stay frozen every year, like in my picture of Denali, taken this past Memorial Day.

In Eagle River, my home just North of Anchorage, the snow has started again in the mountains, the snow line is about 3,000 as of yesterday.

40 posted on 10/19/2005 9:02:54 AM PDT by thackney (life is fragile, handle with prayer)
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