Northwest History. Alaska. Dogs, Dog Races & Mushers.

Dogs And Plane Supplies In Gale: Five Teams Leave Tanana, Alaska, With 800 Miles Yet To Go./Swept Across Lake./Three Air-Cooled Engines Are Mounted In Big Monoplane At Fairbanks. DOGS AND PLANE SUPPUES IN GALE Five Teams Leave Tanana, Alaska, With 800 Miles Yet to Go. SWEPTACROSS LAKE Three Air-Cool...

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Bibliographic Details
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: 1926
Subjects:
ice
Online Access:http://content.libraries.wsu.edu/cdm/ref/collection/clipping/id/90448
id ftwashstatelib:oai:content.libraries.wsu.edu:clipping/90448
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection Washington State University: WSU Libraries Digital Collections
op_collection_id ftwashstatelib
language English
topic dogs
plane supplies
Tanana
Alaska
monoplane
Fairbanks
Earl Rossman
A. Malcolm Smith
Detroit arctic expedition
radio supplies
Point Barrow
Captain George Hubert Wilkins
Robert Waskey
Herbert Anderson
Nenana musher
Endicott mountains
Hot Springs
Waskey
Long lake
Palmer Hutchinson
tri-motored Fokker monoplane
snow
ice
Tolovana
Northwest
Pacific -- History -- 20th century
spellingShingle dogs
plane supplies
Tanana
Alaska
monoplane
Fairbanks
Earl Rossman
A. Malcolm Smith
Detroit arctic expedition
radio supplies
Point Barrow
Captain George Hubert Wilkins
Robert Waskey
Herbert Anderson
Nenana musher
Endicott mountains
Hot Springs
Waskey
Long lake
Palmer Hutchinson
tri-motored Fokker monoplane
snow
ice
Tolovana
Northwest
Pacific -- History -- 20th century
Northwest History. Alaska. Dogs, Dog Races & Mushers.
topic_facet dogs
plane supplies
Tanana
Alaska
monoplane
Fairbanks
Earl Rossman
A. Malcolm Smith
Detroit arctic expedition
radio supplies
Point Barrow
Captain George Hubert Wilkins
Robert Waskey
Herbert Anderson
Nenana musher
Endicott mountains
Hot Springs
Waskey
Long lake
Palmer Hutchinson
tri-motored Fokker monoplane
snow
ice
Tolovana
Northwest
Pacific -- History -- 20th century
description Dogs And Plane Supplies In Gale: Five Teams Leave Tanana, Alaska, With 800 Miles Yet To Go./Swept Across Lake./Three Air-Cooled Engines Are Mounted In Big Monoplane At Fairbanks. DOGS AND PLANE SUPPUES IN GALE Five Teams Leave Tanana, Alaska, With 800 Miles Yet to Go. SWEPTACROSS LAKE Three Air-Cooled Engines Are Mounted In Big Monoplane At Fairbanks. By Earl Rossman, Speical correspondent of The Spokesman-Review and the North American Newspaper Alliance, with advance division of Detroit arctic expedition. (Copyright, 1926, by N. A. N. A.) TANANA, Alaska, March 5.—A. Malcolm Smith, commander of the Ill-fated snow motors division of theDetroit arctic expedition, is leaving here today to carry photographic equipment, radio supplies and camp equipment to Point Barrow for Captain George Hubert Wilkins. He is accompanied by Robert Waskey, radio operator; Herbert Anderson, a Nenana musher; three Indians, and the writer. The load for Point Barrow, where the advance base for the Wilkins polar flight is to be established, is distrlbuted among 46 dogs, divided into four teams. A fifth team of eight dogs will haul, dog feed as far as the foothills of the Endicott mountains. This team is driven by the native from whom Smith rented it. Aside from dog feed, the load carried north weighs 2500 pounds. "Waskey, Anderson and I arrived at Hot Springs Tuesday night after a 50-mile trip by dog team. While crossstruck a 60-mile gale. My dogs and I were blown ha)f way across the lake, but after a struggle I managed to unharness the team and crawl to the, edge of the ice. Smith, fearing that I had met some mishap, backtracked with Waskey. The three of us pushed on to Long lake, where all three of our teams were rolled across the ice by the wind. It is 800 miles from here to Point Barrow. Smith has told Captain Wilkins, commander of the expedition, that he could make it in 27 days from Tolovana, which is 100 miles behind us. He has told us that we must throw ourselves against a gee-pole 16 hours a day if we are to keep that promise. Mount Three Engines. By Palmer Hutchinson, special correspondent of The Spokesman-Review and the North American Newspaper Alliance with the Detroit arctic expedition. (Copyright, 1926, by N. A. N. A.) FAIRBANKS, Alaska, March 5. -- By working long after dark yester day and starting again at dawn today, the members of the flying divi sion of the Detroit arctic expedition finished mounting the three air-cooled engines in the tri-motored Fokker monoplane this forenoon and so put themselves 48 hours ahead of their assembly schedule. The single-engined monoplane, ready for the first test flight, stands outside the hangar in which the larger ship is taking form. In the meanwhile a battalion of citizen volunteer from the town set to work today with mattocks and axes to clear the flying field of brush so as to increase its straightaway length, while others drove horse-drawn drags and tractor-drawn rollers up and down the field, packing down the snow in the hope that the expedition's planes will be able to take off and land without skis.
format Text
title Northwest History. Alaska. Dogs, Dog Races & Mushers.
title_short Northwest History. Alaska. Dogs, Dog Races & Mushers.
title_full Northwest History. Alaska. Dogs, Dog Races & Mushers.
title_fullStr Northwest History. Alaska. Dogs, Dog Races & Mushers.
title_full_unstemmed Northwest History. Alaska. Dogs, Dog Races & Mushers.
title_sort northwest history. alaska. dogs, dog races & mushers.
publishDate 1926
url http://content.libraries.wsu.edu/cdm/ref/collection/clipping/id/90448
long_lat ENVELOPE(-60.000,-60.000,-64.167,-64.167)
ENVELOPE(-82.800,-82.800,-79.783,-79.783)
ENVELOPE(13.758,13.758,66.844,66.844)
ENVELOPE(59.326,59.326,-67.248,-67.248)
geographic Arctic
Detroit
Fairbanks
Pacific
Rossman
Sion
Wilkins
geographic_facet Arctic
Detroit
Fairbanks
Pacific
Rossman
Sion
Wilkins
genre Arctic
Barrow
Point Barrow
Alaska
genre_facet Arctic
Barrow
Point Barrow
Alaska
op_source Northwest History. Alaska. Box 8
op_relation nwh-sh-8-2-10
http://content.libraries.wsu.edu/cdm/ref/collection/clipping/id/90448
op_rights http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/CNE/1.0
Copyright not evaluated. Contact original newspaper publisher for copyright information.
_version_ 1766330345944252416
spelling ftwashstatelib:oai:content.libraries.wsu.edu:clipping/90448 2023-05-15T14:58:16+02:00 Northwest History. Alaska. Dogs, Dog Races & Mushers. Spokesman Review 1926-03-05 Dogs And Plane Supplies In Gale: Five Teams Leave Tanana, Alaska, With 800 Miles Yet To Go./Swept Across Lake./Three Air-Cooled Engines Are Mounted In Big Monoplane At Fairbanks. 1926-03-05 http://content.libraries.wsu.edu/cdm/ref/collection/clipping/id/90448 English eng nwh-sh-8-2-10 http://content.libraries.wsu.edu/cdm/ref/collection/clipping/id/90448 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/CNE/1.0 Copyright not evaluated. Contact original newspaper publisher for copyright information. Northwest History. Alaska. Box 8 dogs plane supplies Tanana Alaska monoplane Fairbanks Earl Rossman A. Malcolm Smith Detroit arctic expedition radio supplies Point Barrow Captain George Hubert Wilkins Robert Waskey Herbert Anderson Nenana musher Endicott mountains Hot Springs Waskey Long lake Palmer Hutchinson tri-motored Fokker monoplane snow ice Tolovana Northwest Pacific -- History -- 20th century Text Clippings 1926 ftwashstatelib 2021-07-26T19:18:12Z Dogs And Plane Supplies In Gale: Five Teams Leave Tanana, Alaska, With 800 Miles Yet To Go./Swept Across Lake./Three Air-Cooled Engines Are Mounted In Big Monoplane At Fairbanks. DOGS AND PLANE SUPPUES IN GALE Five Teams Leave Tanana, Alaska, With 800 Miles Yet to Go. SWEPTACROSS LAKE Three Air-Cooled Engines Are Mounted In Big Monoplane At Fairbanks. By Earl Rossman, Speical correspondent of The Spokesman-Review and the North American Newspaper Alliance, with advance division of Detroit arctic expedition. (Copyright, 1926, by N. A. N. A.) TANANA, Alaska, March 5.—A. Malcolm Smith, commander of the Ill-fated snow motors division of theDetroit arctic expedition, is leaving here today to carry photographic equipment, radio supplies and camp equipment to Point Barrow for Captain George Hubert Wilkins. He is accompanied by Robert Waskey, radio operator; Herbert Anderson, a Nenana musher; three Indians, and the writer. The load for Point Barrow, where the advance base for the Wilkins polar flight is to be established, is distrlbuted among 46 dogs, divided into four teams. A fifth team of eight dogs will haul, dog feed as far as the foothills of the Endicott mountains. This team is driven by the native from whom Smith rented it. Aside from dog feed, the load carried north weighs 2500 pounds. "Waskey, Anderson and I arrived at Hot Springs Tuesday night after a 50-mile trip by dog team. While crossstruck a 60-mile gale. My dogs and I were blown ha)f way across the lake, but after a struggle I managed to unharness the team and crawl to the, edge of the ice. Smith, fearing that I had met some mishap, backtracked with Waskey. The three of us pushed on to Long lake, where all three of our teams were rolled across the ice by the wind. It is 800 miles from here to Point Barrow. Smith has told Captain Wilkins, commander of the expedition, that he could make it in 27 days from Tolovana, which is 100 miles behind us. He has told us that we must throw ourselves against a gee-pole 16 hours a day if we are to keep that promise. Mount Three Engines. By Palmer Hutchinson, special correspondent of The Spokesman-Review and the North American Newspaper Alliance with the Detroit arctic expedition. (Copyright, 1926, by N. A. N. A.) FAIRBANKS, Alaska, March 5. -- By working long after dark yester day and starting again at dawn today, the members of the flying divi sion of the Detroit arctic expedition finished mounting the three air-cooled engines in the tri-motored Fokker monoplane this forenoon and so put themselves 48 hours ahead of their assembly schedule. The single-engined monoplane, ready for the first test flight, stands outside the hangar in which the larger ship is taking form. In the meanwhile a battalion of citizen volunteer from the town set to work today with mattocks and axes to clear the flying field of brush so as to increase its straightaway length, while others drove horse-drawn drags and tractor-drawn rollers up and down the field, packing down the snow in the hope that the expedition's planes will be able to take off and land without skis. Text Arctic Barrow Point Barrow Alaska Washington State University: WSU Libraries Digital Collections Arctic Detroit ENVELOPE(-60.000,-60.000,-64.167,-64.167) Fairbanks Pacific Rossman ENVELOPE(-82.800,-82.800,-79.783,-79.783) Sion ENVELOPE(13.758,13.758,66.844,66.844) Wilkins ENVELOPE(59.326,59.326,-67.248,-67.248)