File:Yakutat harbor showing the steamer ADMIRAL EVANS docked at left near Yakutat Cannery and the Yakutat and Southern Railway tracks (AL+CA 1016).jpg
Yakutat_harbor_showing_the_steamer_ADMIRAL_EVANS_docked_at_left_near_Yakutat_Cannery_and_the_Yakutat_and_Southern_Railway_tracks_(AL+CA_1016).jpg (768 × 488 pixels, file size: 60 KB, MIME type: image/jpeg)
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Summary edit
English: Yakutat harbor showing the steamer ADMIRAL EVANS docked at left near Yakutat Cannery and the Yakutat and Southern Railway tracks in foreground, 1923 ( ) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Photographer |
English: Shoki Kayamori |
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Title |
English: Yakutat harbor showing the steamer ADMIRAL EVANS docked at left near Yakutat Cannery and the Yakutat and Southern Railway tracks in foreground, 1923 |
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Description |
English: Caption on image: Yakutat Handwritten on verso of image: Yakutat Cannery 1923. Yakutat + Southern R[ailwa]y. in foreground. Photo by Shoki Kayamori Admiral Evans was a Pacific Steamship Company steamer built in 1902, and was originally named the Buckman. Filed in Alaska--Cities/Location--YakutatShoki Kayamori, who was born in Tokyo in 1877, arrived in Yakutat in 1912 as a seasonal worker at the Libby McNeil cannery. He decided to make his home in Yakutat and eventualy became a watchman and a customer service clerk at the cannery's store. A confirmed bachelor, Kayamori led a quiet and private life and turned to photography as an avocation. When the U.S. began the relocation of Japanese Americans in 1941 Kayamori became distressed and committed suicide at his home. His collection of approximately 700 photographs was preserved and donated to the Alaska State Library in 1976. [Source: Spartz, I. and Inouye, R. (1991). Shoki Kayamori: Amateur Photographer of Yakutat 1912-41. Alaska History 6(2), pp 31-36. ] The BUCKMAN was built in 1902. She was 253 feet long and about 2,000 tons (p. 112). A legendary sea gull, known because of a tinkling sound a metal band on its leg made, was killed when the WATSON was sending ball scores to the BUCKMAN. The gull, weighing in at 28 pounds with a wingspan of 6 feet, 3 inches, was electrocuted on the wireless antenna of the WATSON (p. 156-7). Pirates attempted to rob the BUCKMAN in late August of 1910, but were unsuccessful. The captain and one of the pirates were killed, and the other went insane during his trial in Seattle (p. 178). She was renamed the ADMIRAL EVANS after an overhaul in 1913 (p. 216), and was finally sold for scrap in 1937 (p. 458). [Source: Gordon Newell, ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle: Superior Publishing Co, 1966).
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Depicted place | Yakutat City and Borough, Alaska | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Date |
1923 date QS:P571,+1923-00-00T00:00:00Z/9 |
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Dimensions |
height: 3.5 in (88.9 mm); width: 5.5 in (13.9 cm) dimensions QS:P2048,3.5U218593 dimensions QS:P2049,5.5U218593 |
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Collection |
institution QS:P195,Q219563 |
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Permission (Reusing this file) |
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Order Number InfoField | AWC1431 |
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current | 15:48, 4 April 2019 | 768 × 488 (60 KB) | BMacZeroBot (talk | contribs) | Automatic lossless crop (watermark) | |
15:48, 4 April 2019 | 768 × 518 (64 KB) | BMacZeroBot (talk | contribs) | (BOT) batch upload |
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