Seattle Chamber of Commerce. Alaska Bureau
On 17 Apr. 1882, twenty-six leading Seattle citizens and businessmen organized the Seattle Chamber of Commerce with the intent of protecting local interests. The Chamber initially focused its efforts on the fight to obtain rail facilities for Seattle, but reorganized in 1910 to broaden its scope, taking the name "New Seattle Chamber of Commerce." Among the goals of the new Chamber, addressed by its various committees, were "to promote the growth and development of the State of Washington, the territory of Alaska and the Pacific Northwest." The new Chamber installed several new bureaus; its Board of Trustees unanimously adopted the resolution creating the Alaska Bureau, introduced by the committee on Alaskan affairs, on 7 Nov. 1911. According to the text of the resolution, signed by Bureau chairman J.E. Chilberg, the purpose of the Bureau was the "encouragement and promotion of the development of Alaska," by working for legislation and appropriations to improve the land and water transportation facilities of Alaska, as well as to "disseminate the truth about Alaska" in order to promote the territory's development. To this end, the bureau created promotional materials, including albums and exhibits. One such exhibit, in 1913, highlighting Alaska's resources, was shipped by the Alaska Bureau to Washington to be installed in connection with an educational campaign carried on in the interest of pending legislation for railroad construction by the government. The Alaska Bureau seems to have been disbanded in the early 1920s, though the Chamber's Alaska Committee continued to function, and is still part of the Seattle Chamber of Commerce today. The Bureau was chaired by a number of individuals over the years, including Scott Cordell Bone, (circa 1913-1915), who became the tenth Territorial Governor of Alaska (1921-1925).
From the description of Alaska Bureau photograph albums, 1897-1925. (Unknown). WorldCat record id: 154690981
On April 17, 1882, 26 leading Seattle citizens and businessmen organized the Seattle Chamber of Commerce with the intent of protecting local interests. The Chamber initially focused its efforts on the fight to obtain rail facilities for Seattle, but reorganized in 1910 to broaden its scope, taking the name “New Seattle Chamber of Commerce.” Among the goals of the new Chamber, addressed by its various committees, were “to promote the growth and development of the State of Washington, the territory of Alaska and the Pacific Northwest.”
The new Chamber installed several new bureaus; its Board of Trustees unanimously adopted the resolution creating the Alaska Bureau, introduced by the committee on Alaskan affairs, on November 7, 1911. According to the text of the resolution, signed by Bureau chairman J.E. Chilberg, the purpose of the Bureau was the “encouragement and promotion of the development of Alaska,” by working for legislation and appropriations to improve the land and water transportation facilities of Alaska, as well as to “disseminate the truth about Alaska” in order to promote the territory’s development. To this end, the bureau created promotional materials, including albums and exhibits. One such exhibit, in 1913, highlighting Alaska’s resources, was shipped by the Alaska Bureau to Washington to be installed in connection with an educational campaign carried on in the interest of pending legislation for railroad construction by the government. The Alaska Bureau seems to have been disbanded in the early 1920s, though the Chamber’s Alaska Committee continued to function, and is still part of the Seattle Chamber of Commerce today.
The Bureau was chaired by a number of individuals over the years, including Scott Cordell Bone, (circa 1913-1915), who became the tenth Territorial Governor of Alaska, (1921-1925).
From the guide to the Alaska Bureau Photograph Albums, 1897-1925, (Museum of History & Industry Sophie Frye Bass Library)
Role | Title | Holding Repository | |
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creatorOf | Seattle Chamber of Commerce. Alaska Bureau. Alaska Bureau photograph albums, 1897-1925. | Museum of History and Industry | |
creatorOf | Seattle Chamber of Commerce. Alaska Bureau. Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition scrapbooks, circa 1906-1909. [microform]. | University of Washington. Libraries | |
creatorOf | Alaska Bureau Photograph Albums, 1897-1925 | Museum of History & Industry Sophie Frye Bass Library | |
creatorOf | New Seattle Chamber of Commerce. Alaska Bureau. Alaska Bureau scrapbooks, 1908-1920. | University of Washington. Libraries | |
creatorOf | Andrews, Clarence Leroy, 1862-1948. C.L. Andrews scrapbook, 1921-1933. | University of Washington. Libraries | |
creatorOf | Seattle Chamber of Commerce. Alaska Bureau. Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition scrapbooks, circa 1906-1909. | University of Washington. Libraries |
Role | Title | Holding Repository |
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Filters:
Relation | Name | |
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associatedWith | Alaskan Engineering Commission. | corporateBody |
associatedWith | Andrews, Clarence Leroy, 1862-1948. | person |
associatedWith | Case & Draper. | corporateBody |
associatedWith | Case, W. H. 1868-1920. | person |
associatedWith | Copper River and Northwestern Railway. | corporateBody |
associatedWith | Curtis & Miller. | corporateBody |
associatedWith | Hegg, Eric A., 1867-1948. | person |
associatedWith | Hunt, P. S. 1866-1917. | person |
associatedWith | Lomen Bros. | corporateBody |
associatedWith | New Seattle Chamber of Commerce. Alaska Bureau. | corporateBody |
associatedWith | White Pass & Yukon Route (Firm) | corporateBody |
Place Name | Admin Code | Country | |
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Alaska Peninsula | |||
Whitehorse (Yukon) | |||
Kenai Peninsula (Alaska) | |||
Seward (Alaska) | |||
Matanuska River Valley (Alaska) | |||
Valdez (Alaska) | |||
Susitna River Valley (Alaska) | |||
Anchorage (Alaska) | |||
Sitka (Alaska) | |||
Whitehorse (Yukon) | |||
Wrangell (Alaska) | |||
Juneau (Alaska) | |||
Metlakatla (Alaska) | |||
Aleutian Islands (Alaska) | |||
Juneau (Alaska) | |||
Ketchikan (Alaska) | |||
Sitka (Alaska) | |||
Wrangell (Alaska) | |||
Aleutian Islands (Alaska) | |||
Anchorage (Alaska) | |||
Matanuska River Valley (Alaska) | |||
Nome (Alaska) | |||
Fairbanks (Alaska) | |||
Fairbanks (Alaska) | |||
Alaska Peninsula (Alaska) | |||
Seward (Alaska) | |||
Valdez (Alaska) | |||
Alaska | |||
Susitna River Valley (Alaska) | |||
Nome (Alaska) | |||
Metlakatla (Alaska) | |||
Nenana (Alaska) | |||
Skagway (Alaska) | |||
Ketchikan (Alaska) | |||
Skagway(Alaska) | |||
Kenai Peninsula (Alaska) | |||
Nenana (Alaska) |
Subject |
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Alaska |
Animals |
Coal mines and mining |
Coal mines and mining |
Commercial buildings |
Dwellings |
Fisheries |
Fishing industry |
Glaciers |
Glaciers |
Gold mines and mining |
Gold mines and mining |
Hunting |
Indians of North America |
Indians of North America |
Industries |
Leaves |
Lumber trade |
Mines and mineral resources |
Mountains |
Place marketing |
Railroad construction & maintenance |
Railroads |
Railroads |
Rivers |
Salmon canning industry |
Salmon canning industry |
Shipwrecks |
Volcanoes |
Occupation |
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Activity |
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Corporate Body
Active 1906
Active 1909