Alaskan Liquor Company advertisement, circa 1912

The Alaskan Cafe was opened on July 1, 1909, in the Arctic Club building at the corner of Third and Jefferson in Seattle, by owners Charles Berryman and Ludovico Dallagiovanna. The image of a dog sled found in the center of the ad shown here is from stained glass piece hung over the entrance to the...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Alaskan Liquor Company
Format: Still Image
Language:unknown
Published: 1912
Subjects:
Online Access:http://cdm16786.contentdm.oclc.org:80/cdm/ref/collection/imlsmohai/id/12710
Description
Summary:The Alaskan Cafe was opened on July 1, 1909, in the Arctic Club building at the corner of Third and Jefferson in Seattle, by owners Charles Berryman and Ludovico Dallagiovanna. The image of a dog sled found in the center of the ad shown here is from stained glass piece hung over the entrance to the barroom at the Alaskan Cafe, based on a photograph of dog sled race winners in Nome. The Alaskan Liquor Company, whose Special Rye is advertised here, was managed by cafe co-owner Berryman, and located in the same building at 501 Third Avenue. The Alaskan Cafe may have been the predecessor of the Alaskan Liquor Company, as the companies appears consecutively in city directories, with no overlap. City directories list the Alaskan Liquor Company from 1912 to 1915; the store likely closed with Washington State's liquor prohibition in 1916. The original art glass mural from the Alaskan Cafe is now in the collection of MOHAI (1972.5300). Caption information source: "The Alaskan, Seattle's Newest Resort that Bids for Favor," Seattle Times, August 15, 1909, p. 24. 1 advertisement; 4 x 4 in.