Seward harbor

On verso of image: Seward Harbor, from the town, looking [south] toward the entrance. At the right on the low land at foot of mountain is a reserve for U.S. Coaling station, and farther toward the entrance was the shipyard of the Russians from 1792 to 1834. Photo by C.L. Andrews, Seattle, Wash., 180...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Andrews, Clarence Leroy, 1862-1948
Other Authors: University of Washington Libraries, Special Collections Division
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:unknown
Subjects:
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Online Access:http://cdm16786.contentdm.oclc.org:80/cdm/ref/collection/alaskawcanada/id/804
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Summary:On verso of image: Seward Harbor, from the town, looking [south] toward the entrance. At the right on the low land at foot of mountain is a reserve for U.S. Coaling station, and farther toward the entrance was the shipyard of the Russians from 1792 to 1834. Photo by C.L. Andrews, Seattle, Wash., 1802 E. 73rd St. Seward is situated on Resurrection Bay on the southeast coast of the Kenai Peninsula, 125 highway miles south of Anchorage. It lies at the foot of Mount Marathon, and is the gateway to the Kenai Fjords National Park. Resurrection Bay was named in 1792 by Russian fur trader and explorer Alexander Baranof. While sailing from Kodiak to Yakutat, he found unexpected shelter in this bay for a storm. He named the Bay Resurrection because it was the Russian Sunday of the Resurrection. The City of Seward was named for U.S. Secretary of State William Seward, 1861-69, who negotiated the purchase of Alaska from Russia during the Lincoln administration. In the 1890s, Capt. Frank Lowell arrived with his family. In 1903, John and Frank Ballaine and a group of settlers arrived to begin construction of a railroad. Seward became an incorporated City in 1912. The Alaska Railroad was constructed between 1915 and 1923, and Seward developed as the ocean terminus and supply center. By 1960, Seward was the largest community on the Peninsula. Tsunamis generated after the 1964 earthquake destroyed the railroad terminal and killed several residents. As an ice-free harbor, Seward has become an important supply center for Interior Alaska.