Northwest History. Alaska. Floods & Flood Control.

New Floods Sweep Down Yukon River. New Floods Sweep Down Yukon River FAIRBANKS, Alaska, May 18. (/P)—Fresh floods in the JTukon river basin washed through Nenana and Fort Yukon today and drove residents from their homes and places of business. Several feet of water flowed through Fort Yukon, a tradi...

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Language:English
Published: 1937
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Online Access:http://content.libraries.wsu.edu/cdm/ref/collection/clipping/id/91515
id ftwashstatelib:oai:content.libraries.wsu.edu:clipping/91515
record_format openpolar
spelling ftwashstatelib:oai:content.libraries.wsu.edu:clipping/91515 2023-05-15T18:45:55+02:00 Northwest History. Alaska. Floods & Flood Control. Wenatchee Daily World 1937-05-18 New Floods Sweep Down Yukon River. 1937-05-18 http://content.libraries.wsu.edu/cdm/ref/collection/clipping/id/91515 English eng nwh-sh-10-1-50 http://content.libraries.wsu.edu/cdm/ref/collection/clipping/id/91515 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/CNE/1.0 Copyright not evaluated. Contact original newspaper publisher for copyright information. Northwest History. Alaska. Box 10 flood Yukon River Fairbanks Alaska Fort Yukon Nenana trading post Porcupine rivers Tanana river Alaska railroad Indians fur trading centers miners fishermen natives Northwest Pacific -- History -- 20th century Text Clippings 1937 ftwashstatelib 2021-07-26T19:18:40Z New Floods Sweep Down Yukon River. New Floods Sweep Down Yukon River FAIRBANKS, Alaska, May 18. (/P)—Fresh floods in the JTukon river basin washed through Nenana and Fort Yukon today and drove residents from their homes and places of business. Several feet of water flowed through Fort Yukon, a trading post 150 miles northeast of here at the junction on the Yukon and Porcupine rivers. It has a few hundred permanent residents. 350, of which most are Indians. The residential district of Nenana, 50 miles southwest of here, lay deep in the overflow of the Tanana river which covered the lower part of the town with 14 feet of water at the crest. Water ran through the business section and railroad yards. Nenana's population is less than 1,000. Estimates of property damage were unavailable at either place. Radiophone reports from Fort Yukon and Nenana mentioned no fatalities. Nenana is the connecting line for steamers that go north on the Yukon and Alaska railroad south. Fort Yukon's population is 350, of which most are Indians. The settlement is one of Alaska's largest fur trading centers, with a transient population of natives, trappers, fishermen and miners. Sweeps Fort Water swept into Fort Yukon Saturday night as the Yukon river ice broke. The flood carried away one cabin, loose equipment and fences and sent most of the population to boats, higher ground or buildings of more than one story. The Nenana flood flollowed closely the one which spread through three-fourths of Fairbanks last week, as the ice-gorged Tanana and Chena rivers left their banks. Text Yukon river Alaska Yukon Washington State University: WSU Libraries Digital Collections Fairbanks Pacific Yukon
institution Open Polar
collection Washington State University: WSU Libraries Digital Collections
op_collection_id ftwashstatelib
language English
topic flood
Yukon River
Fairbanks
Alaska
Fort Yukon
Nenana
trading post
Porcupine rivers
Tanana river
Alaska railroad
Indians
fur trading centers
miners
fishermen
natives
Northwest
Pacific -- History -- 20th century
spellingShingle flood
Yukon River
Fairbanks
Alaska
Fort Yukon
Nenana
trading post
Porcupine rivers
Tanana river
Alaska railroad
Indians
fur trading centers
miners
fishermen
natives
Northwest
Pacific -- History -- 20th century
Northwest History. Alaska. Floods & Flood Control.
topic_facet flood
Yukon River
Fairbanks
Alaska
Fort Yukon
Nenana
trading post
Porcupine rivers
Tanana river
Alaska railroad
Indians
fur trading centers
miners
fishermen
natives
Northwest
Pacific -- History -- 20th century
description New Floods Sweep Down Yukon River. New Floods Sweep Down Yukon River FAIRBANKS, Alaska, May 18. (/P)—Fresh floods in the JTukon river basin washed through Nenana and Fort Yukon today and drove residents from their homes and places of business. Several feet of water flowed through Fort Yukon, a trading post 150 miles northeast of here at the junction on the Yukon and Porcupine rivers. It has a few hundred permanent residents. 350, of which most are Indians. The residential district of Nenana, 50 miles southwest of here, lay deep in the overflow of the Tanana river which covered the lower part of the town with 14 feet of water at the crest. Water ran through the business section and railroad yards. Nenana's population is less than 1,000. Estimates of property damage were unavailable at either place. Radiophone reports from Fort Yukon and Nenana mentioned no fatalities. Nenana is the connecting line for steamers that go north on the Yukon and Alaska railroad south. Fort Yukon's population is 350, of which most are Indians. The settlement is one of Alaska's largest fur trading centers, with a transient population of natives, trappers, fishermen and miners. Sweeps Fort Water swept into Fort Yukon Saturday night as the Yukon river ice broke. The flood carried away one cabin, loose equipment and fences and sent most of the population to boats, higher ground or buildings of more than one story. The Nenana flood flollowed closely the one which spread through three-fourths of Fairbanks last week, as the ice-gorged Tanana and Chena rivers left their banks.
format Text
title Northwest History. Alaska. Floods & Flood Control.
title_short Northwest History. Alaska. Floods & Flood Control.
title_full Northwest History. Alaska. Floods & Flood Control.
title_fullStr Northwest History. Alaska. Floods & Flood Control.
title_full_unstemmed Northwest History. Alaska. Floods & Flood Control.
title_sort northwest history. alaska. floods & flood control.
publishDate 1937
url http://content.libraries.wsu.edu/cdm/ref/collection/clipping/id/91515
geographic Fairbanks
Pacific
Yukon
geographic_facet Fairbanks
Pacific
Yukon
genre Yukon river
Alaska
Yukon
genre_facet Yukon river
Alaska
Yukon
op_source Northwest History. Alaska. Box 10
op_relation nwh-sh-10-1-50
http://content.libraries.wsu.edu/cdm/ref/collection/clipping/id/91515
op_rights http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/CNE/1.0
Copyright not evaluated. Contact original newspaper publisher for copyright information.
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