Thwaites, John E. (John Edward), 1863-1940
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person
Thwaites, John E. (John Edward), 1863-1940
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Name :
Thwaites, John E. (John Edward), 1863-1940
John E. Thwaites
Name Components
Name :
John E. Thwaites
Thwaites, John Edward, 1863-1940
Name Components
Name :
Thwaites, John Edward, 1863-1940
Thwaites, Jack, 1863-1940
Name Components
Name :
Thwaites, Jack, 1863-1940
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Biographical History
John Edward Thwaites was born in Eastwood, Ontario, Canada, in 1863. The family moved to Michigan around 1871. In 1885, Thwaites married Carrie Warne, and the two worked as schoolteachers in Michigan until Thwaites's ill health led the couple to relocate to Florida. Unable to establish a viable career as a teacher, Thwaites applied at the Florida Southern Railroad for a position as a federal Railway Mail Service clerk in 1895. In 1901 he was transferred to Spokane to work for the Rocky Mountain Division of the Great Northern Railway. After his involvement in several train wrecks and derailments, Thwaites decided to apply for a less dangerous position in Alaska. He was assigned the "ship service mail route" from Valdez to Unalaska in 1905, primarily aboard the SS Dora of the Northwestern Steamship Company. From 1905 to 1912 Thwaites delivered mail to the coastal communities of Southwestern Alaska. Thwaites was also an amateur photographer. Using a Kodak camera popular for producing postcards, Thwaites documented his experiences in southeastern Alaska, photographing native Alaskans, small towns, and scenes of life in Alaska. Thwaites also photographed maritime disasters, including the wreck of the SS Farallon at Illiamna Bay in 1910. Thwaites was transferred to the Seward-Seattle mail route in 1914, delivering mail by dogsled to the Yukon-Kuskokwin region. He began operating a photography business out of Seward, moving the business to Ketchikan after his retirement in 1919. After selling his business in 1932, he and his second wife moved to Mercer Island, Wash., where Thwaites died in 1940.
Photographer and mail clerk, John E. Thwaites, was born around 1863 probably in Michigan. He came to Alaska in 1905 with the postal service. In 1906, he became a mail clerk aboard the mail steamer, S.S. Dora, where he worked for seven years. The S.S. Dora was based in Sitka and made monthly runs from April through October to Alaskan villages from Yakutat to Unalaska. He also served on the Mariposa and the Farallon. Thwaites was on the Farallon in January, 1910, when it wrecked in Illiamna Bay and he, along with 30 others, had to survive a month on the beach before being rescued. Thwaites took hundreds of photographs while working at sea. In 1909, he married Isabelle Morse. They lived in Seward until April of 1919, when they settled in Ketchikan and ran a photograph studio and curio shop. In 1932, ill health forced his retirement. They moved to Bell Island hot springs and then to Mercer Island, Washington, where he died August 3, 1940. Thwaites' ashes were carried north on the steamer, Aleutian, and scattered in the Tongass Narrows.
John Edward Thwaites was born in Eastwood, Ontario, Canada in 1863. The family moved to Michigan around 1871. In 1885, Thwaites married Carrie Warne, and the two worked as schoolteachers in Michigan until Thwaites' ill health led the couple to relocate to Florida. Unable to establish a viable career as a teacher, Thwaites applied at the Florida Southern Railroad for a position as a federal Railway Mail Service clerk in 1895. In 1901 he was transferred to Spokane to work for the Rocky Mountain Division of the Great Northern Railway. After his involvement in several train wrecks and derailments, Thwaites decided to apply for a less dangerous position in Alaska. He was assigned the "ship service mail route" from Valdez to Unalaska in 1905, primarily aboard the SS Dora of the Northwestern Steamship Company. From 1905 to 1912 Thwaites delivered mail to the coastal communities of Southwestern Alaska.
Thwaites was also an amateur photographer. Using a Kodak camera popular for producing postcards, Thwaites documented his experiences in Southeastern Alaska, photographing native Alaskans, small towns, and scenes of life in Alaska. Thwaites also photographed maritime disasters, including the wreck of the SS Farallon at Illiamna Bay in 1910.
Thwaites was transferred to the Seward-Seattle mail route in 1914, delivering mail by dogsled to the Yukon-Kuskokwin region. He began operating a photography business out of Seward, moving the business to Ketchikan after his retirement in 1919. After selling his business in 1932, he and second wife moved to Mercer Island, Washington, where Thwaites died in 1940.
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External Related CPF
https://viaf.org/viaf/33831021
https://www.worldcat.org/identities/lccn-n2003029489
https://id.loc.gov/authorities/n2003029489
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Languages Used
Subjects
Alaska
Alaska Natives
Ships
Dora (Ship)
Eskimos
Farallon (Ship)
Indian children
Indians of North America
Lighthouses
Mail steamers
Photographs
Shipwrecks
Shipwrecks
Shipwrecks
Steamboats
Volcanoes
Volcanoes
Volcanoes
Nationalities
Activities
Occupations
Photographers
Photographers
Legal Statuses
Places
Ketchikan (Alaska)
AssociatedPlace
Bering Sea
AssociatedPlace
Alaska Peninsula (Alaska)
AssociatedPlace
Alaska
AssociatedPlace
Savoonga (Alaska)
AssociatedPlace
Alaska
AssociatedPlace
Alaska--Gambell
AssociatedPlace
Alaska, Southeast
AssociatedPlace
Bering Sea
AssociatedPlace
Gambell (Alaska)
AssociatedPlace
Alaska--Savoonga
AssociatedPlace
Alaska
AssociatedPlace
Bogoslof Volcano (Alaska)
AssociatedPlace
Alaska--Aleutian Islands
AssociatedPlace
Convention Declarations
<conventionDeclaration><citation>VIAF</citation></conventionDeclaration>