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  • Anchorage Radio Memories
    Nov 2 2025
    Pictured above is Lester Peter Aloysius Snow (Gene Miner) in the KBYR radio studio.Do you remember those wonderful days when you listened to your favorite Anchorage, Alaska, radio personalities?Sometimes you listened at home. Maybe you were tuned in with your car radio. And who can forget that nifty invention called the portable transistor radio? You could take those with you just about anywhere.An anonymous reader remembers:“Sitting here with my coffee in hand, I started thinking about a long time ago.I used to wait in my bedroom until “The Scotty Ferguson Show” would come on the radio on KFQD.The music was so good, and I really got a kick out of his commercials. There was the soft drink team, whose jingle I can still sing, and there was “Gerald McBoing Boing”.I remember when his show ended, Gardner Ted Armstrong would follow. I listened to Ruben Gaines all the time; he had a way of making you feel things were good.It was a wonderful time to grow up in Alaska.”First in Anchorage and AlaskaPictured above is KFQD radio when it was located on 4th Avenue in 1924.Did You Know?When KFQD radio went on the air on May 24, 1924, it wasn’t just a first for Anchorage. They were also the first radio station in Alaska.Note:The station’s call letters. K-F-Q-D, don’t mean anything; they were assigned randomly. The Second Radio Station in AnchorageIn the photo above is the KENI radio building. The building sits on a bluff with the rear of the building overlooking Westchester Lagoon. The building is now a private residence. 24 years after KFQD began broadcasting, “Cap” Lathrop, the owner of the 4th Avenue Theatre, also built the second radio station in Anchorage, Alaska. KENI radio, which began broadcasting on May 2, 1948, from inside the 4th Avenue Theatre building. Later moving into its own building. KENI Radio and the Coke ShowIn the photo above is Ron Moore, the Royal Coachman.Did you listen to the Coke Show, hosted by Ron Moore on KENI radio? You could call in, request a song, and dedicate it to your friends.Photo courtesy of Ty Pierce.The Coke Show originated from the small radio booth you see above on the roof of the Bun Drive-In. And remember, when the cars in the parking lot would beep their horns, Ron called them “Honker Bonkers.”BONUSYou can hear the Coke Show again and Ron Moore’s Royal Coachman theme.Take a look at Anchorage Coke Show Memories and enjoy.Yes, You Can Share This EditionAnd when you do, your friends and family will be so happy that they will send you on an all-expenses-paid Alaska cruise every summer for 5 years straight… well, it could happen.Thanks for reading and listening to the Anchorage, Alaska Memories Club! This post is public, so feel free to share it.Mukluk TelegraphRemember how you could connect with Alaskans who were in remote areas? The radio station would broadcast your messages.GrandmaRobbie had a comment:“We also used the Mukluk Telegraph to contact friends who homesteaded at Sunshine near Talkeetna.”The KENI radio program, Mukluk Telegraph, was a great service for Alaska audiences.Mary of Anchorage Memories recalls that her family used Mukluk Telegraph to communicate with other family members at their commercial fishing site at Point Possession, across Cook Inlet from Anchorage.“Everyone used Mukluk Telegraph to communicate with family while we were going back and forth to our commercial fishing site during the summer. People in places like Tyonek, Chickaloon and Point Possession all relied on Mukluk Telegraph.”Because that type of radio program was such a well-received community service, other Anchorage radio stations had their own versions. North Winds on KHARJim remembers:“In 1959-1961 my father was assigned to Fort Richardson.Around dinner time there was a regular radio program, probably out of Anchorage, that preceded or followed announcements from people on the grid to homesteaders beyond routine contact.“For Bob & Sue on Triple Creek: Arrived safely, baby boy 7 lbs 6, mom doing fine. Home on the 13th.”The program that followed, something like Tales of the Tundra, Jack London-like Sourdough stories read by a man over a background of the song,Claire d’Lune or other mood music.Note:The show that followed North Winds was hosted by Rubin Gaines, a favorite Anchorage radio personality.When you listened to his radio program, you heard Ruben, a fellow named “Six-Toed Mordecai,” Mrs. Malone, Chilkoot Charlie, and a few others. Each one had a strong voice and distinct personality—and Ruben Gaines had created every one of them in his very creative mind—and brought them to life with his incredible vocal talent. As you listened to Ruben’s show, you couldn’t help but be amazed at how he seamlessly weaved his characters in and out of conversations. And speaking of conversations, his radio program “Conversations Unlimited” was heard in the afternoons on KHAR, Monday through Friday, to the absolute delight of Anchorage ...
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    7 Min.
  • Anchorage Mountain View Memories
    Oct 19 2025
    photo above courtesy Patricia Brown. 1940s temporary housing in Mountain View.In the 1940s, Anchorage, Alaska, was growing, and some homesteaders headed out of town to stake their claim to some land.Norman Lange was just such a homesteader. Lange headed about 3 miles northeast from Anchorage to a spot that had a perfect view of the Chugach Mountains. Lange ended up subdividing his land and naming it, appropriately, “Mountain View.”Other early homesteaders in Mountain View now have a neighborhood street named after them. Those include a Norwegian immigrant named Nels Kleven. For some reason, his street name was misspelled “Klevin.” Robert Bragaw was a territorial legislator and photographer, and Harry Bliss was a contractor. Both have Mountain View streets named after them. But more about Bragaw Street shortly.In the 1940s, construction workers and others were coming to Anchorage to build Elmendorf Air Force Base. But there was a big problem. Anchorage didn’t have enough housing to accommodate them.As a partial solution, small temporary housing structures were put up in Mountain View (pictured above).And speaking of Bragaw Street, you probably didn’t know that from 1942 until 1951, a man named John Vanover ran a 20-acre pig farm in the area.Pictured above is Brewster’s on Mountain View Drive.In 1949, Charles H. Brewster and his wife, Betty, opened the Mountain View Washaroo Laundry. But the Brewsters were ready for more, so they started selling clothing in their spare time from their log cabin home located in the Muldoon area of Anchorage.Then in 1959, the two opened the first Brewster’s Clothing Store in a small log cabin at North Bragaw and Mountain View Drive. They later expanded and became an Anchorage fixture.Yes, You Can Share this editionAnd when you do, your friends and family will send you a year’s supply of your favorite bakery item. Yummy… well, it could happen.Thanks for reading and listening to the Anchorage, Alaska Memories Club! This post is public, so feel free to share it.In the picture above is Mountain View Elementary, first opened in 1956.Mike of the Anchorage, Alaska Memories Club attended Mountain View Elementary School, and one summer, he was a pitcher for the Indians Little League team that practiced on the Mountain View Elementary School baseball field.A&W Root BeerIn 1957, the first drive-in, A&W Root Beer, opened in Anchorage. It was located in Mountain View.The location was also home to Timbo and Princess, the A&W lions.BONUSTake a look at A&W Drive-In Memories and enjoy.In the photo above, taken by Ward Wells, is Mountain View Drive on July 2, 1958.Notice the large building in the background? That’s Caribou’s Department Store.The picture above is the original Clark Junior High School.First opened in 1959, Clark Junior High School was the first junior high in Anchorage. Located on Bragaw Street, the school was named after Orah Dee Clark.Clark was the very first schoolteacher and principal hired in 1915 in the new town of Anchorage, Alaska. After Clark Junior High opened, Clark herself often visited the school, and students were able to speak with her between classes and after school.Mountain View Community CenterIn the 1960s, Mike of the Anchorage, Alaska Memories Club attended weekly square dancing get-togethers in the Mountain View Community Center. Mr. and Mrs. Topolski ran the dances.During each weekly dance, they took a short break from square dancing and played some rock and roll for the kids to dance to. Mike of the Anchorage, Alaska Memories Club even got his first announcing gig one week when he was asked to play the rock and roll records and introduce each song. “I remember playing “Harbor Lights” by the Platters. After I introduced the song and started the record, I looked down from the stage, and there were 3 or 4 girls looking up at me, all wide-eyed and smiling. Wow, my first fan club.”Then one week, a well-known KENI radio DJ named Bob Fleming was the special guest at the dance. We had a great time at that community center.In the photo above is the Anchorage teen band, the Heartbeats.All but one of the Heartbeats band members were the Apostol brothers, and their family lived in Mountain View. Both Mary and Mike of the Anchorage, Alaska Memories Club were friends of the Heartbeats.In 1966, the “Pulsating Heartbeats” released the hit record “Anne.” On the flip side of the record was “Talkin’ Bout You.”BONUSGet the story behind the Heartbeats band and hear their song, “Anne.”Take a look at In John’s Own Words and enjoy.Remember Park Lanes Bowling?Beginning in 1976, Mountain View enjoyed bowling at this Anchorage favorite.And for a short while, KTVA channel 11 broadcast the weekly TV show, “Bowling for Dollars,” hosted by Chuck Talsky and shot on location at Park Lanes. As a side note, Mike of the Anchorage, Alaska Memories Club was one of the camera operators on the show and also edited the program for ...
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    6 Min.
  • Anchorage Visitor's Log Cabin Memories
    Oct 5 2025
    Anchorage Visitor’s log cabin, year unknown.When you had out-of-town visitors, where did you take them? It’s likely that you took Uncle Bob and Aunt Darlene to 546 West 4th. Avenue in downtown Anchorage so they could see the visitor’s log cabin.There it was (and still is), an old, sod-covered Alaska cabin, right smack dab in the middle of our city. How Alaskan.And displayed there on the ground, right beside the front door, your guests spotted that very impressive 5,445-pound Alaska copper nugget.Did You Know?The Visitor’s Log Cabin was built in Homer, Alaska, in 1954. If you’re into log cabins, you’ll be delighted to learn that this one is made of round logs with saddle-notched corners. It also features a gable roof covered with sod.Photo by Jet Lowe. Notice the downtown Woolworth’s store just across the street.The cabin was designed by an architect named Edwin B. Crittenden.Building took place in Homer at a sawmill owned by “Cap” King. Others who created the cabin include a logger from Washington state, Otis R. Russell, who had become a homesteader in Alaska’s Kachemak Bay, and Bob Cole. Both were the craftsmen who cut the logs and assembled them.After the two put the cabin together and checked everything, the cabin was then taken apart, loaded on a truck, and sent to Anchorage.Meanwhile, back in AnchorageA foundation had been laid in Anchorage, next to city hall at 4th. and F Streets.When the truck hauling the cabin arrived from Homer, the cabin was assembled on top of its new foundation, and presto, an instant visitor’s center… Alaska style.Watercolor by Alaskan Artist Cindy PendletonThe Anchorage Visitor’s Log Cabin is a part of Anchorage that many of us remember from our childhood. Others may recall the first time they saw this little gem as a grown-up coming to live in this special place called Anchorage, Alaska.Yes, You Can Share This EditionAnd when you do, your friends and family will be so happy that they will have a parade in your name, featuring you as grand marshal… well, it could happen. Thanks for reading and listening to the Anchorage, Alaska Memories Club! This post is public, so feel free to share it.BONUSThe original Anchorage City Hall was built in 1936.Now, since the Visitor’s Log Cabin sits on the lawn right next to Anchorage’s original City Hall building, we thought it would be fun to include these facts.Located at 524 West 4th. Avenue, the original City Hall was designed by Ellsworth Sedille and constructed in 1936.Did You Know it even housed a Jail?When it first opened, the building was home to the city mayor’s office, a telephone switchboard, city council chambers, the chief of police, the city engineer, the public utilities superintendent, and the city library. The building’s basement also housed three jail cells and a “tank room” for drunks, a caretaker’s apartment, as well as quarters for on-duty firefighters. Visit Anchorage MemoriesA treasure chest of great memories. Take a look at AnchorageMemories.com.From Our North Stars (that’s you)From our Anchorage Denali Elementary School Memories.Joe remembers:“I went to Denali for first grade in 1955. My teacher was Miss Rook in Room 47. Yup, I remember Dick, Jane, Sally, Spot, and Puff: “Run, Spot, run! Run, run, run!” Reading opened a whole world for me.”Claudia recalls:“I attended North Star until 3rd grade, then we moved and I attended Inlet View before going to Central Jr. High.”John tells us:“I attended kindergarten at Government Hill Elementary in 1960. For the 1st grade through the 3rd grade, I was at Elmendorf attending Aurora Elementary School.”Gary says, “She became a star”:“I went to Denali for first and second grade. In my first grade class (Mrs. Johnson was the teacher) was Rosie Hamlin.She became best known for “Rosie and the Originals - and the song Angel Baby.”Jerry and his family went there:“Tom, Jim, Jerry, Patsy, Joe & Jack Ward all went to Denali. Great memories.”Allen informs us:“I went to Willowcrest and, in 5th grade, to Northwood Elementary.”Joe attended these:“Primarily Nunaka Valley and then Chester Valley. Then, on to Clark in 1973.”Paula remembers:“Nunaka - K through 6th grade.”Melinda recalls:“From 1959 to 1963, I attended Government Hill Elementary School as we lived in Panoramic View apartments. And we all walked to school. My parents bought a new house on Abbott Loop Road, and we rode a school bus to Abbott Loop Elementary School from 1963 to 1964.”Patricia informs us:“Regarding Mt. View Elementary. I attended grade school in that same building, but it was then called Talkeetna Elementary. My second grade teacher was Mrs. Gilman of Gilman’s Bakery fame. In 4th grade, we had 44 kids with only one teacher who was with us the entire day. If my memory is correct, there was a fire in the school during the 54/55 year, and we double-shifted at Airport Heights Elementary. When our school reopened, it was renamed ...
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    4 Min.
  • Anchorage, Alaska Memories Club
    Sep 26 2025

    Why should you join the Anchorage, Alaska Memories Club?

    Here are just four good reasons:

    Reason #1:

    Mary and I are both Alaskans who grew up in Anchorage, Alaska.

    Reason #2:

    Every edition of our publication and podcast is filled with memories of the Anchorage, Alaska, you love.

    Reason #3:

    Every edition is special.

    Join Us

    So here’s your invitation to join the Anchorage, Alaska Memories Club.

    Yes, You Can Share This with friends and Family

    Thanks for reading and listening to the Anchorage, Alaska Memories Club! This post is public, so feel free to share it.

    Until Next Time

    Mike and Mary

    Anchorage, Alaska Memories Club



    Get full access to Anchorage, Alaska Memories Club at www.anchoragememoriesclub.com/subscribe
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    1 Min.
  • Anchorage Denali Elementary Memories
    Sep 21 2025
    In the photo above, Mike and Mary of the Anchorage Memories Club are standing in front of the old Denali Elementary School circa 1990s.You, and well, most all of us, remember where we attended the first grade. Mike and Mary, pictured above, have a unique memory. Both began their education as first graders in Anchorage’s Denali Elementary School. “We didn’t attend at the same time. I began some years ahead of Mary, and after the first grade, our family moved to the Mountain View area of Anchorage, where I attended Mountain View Elementary,” says Mike.In the photo above is Mary of Anchorage Memories. She is posing with her third-grade class at Denali Elementary. Her teacher (left side) is Mrs. McGraw.Fire Trucks and Ice Skates at Denali Elementary?by Mary of the Anchorage Memories ClubI was in the third grade in 1960. I was so excited on that dark, cold, crisp morning as my classmates and I stood in the playground watching the firemen. They were filling the previously prepared ice skating rink with water from the fire trucks hoses. Finally, the day came when we could ice skate. It was very cold; however, I was wearing my mittens and scarf. And after skating several times around the rink, I warmed up.I started ice skating at the age of four. I was the youngest of eight, and ice skating was a sport my mother wanted her children to do. So, I was an experienced skater and helped my classmates who had never skated before. I felt a deep sense of pride helping them.As spring came, the ice skating rink melted, and we hung up our skates. At recess time, my friends and I grabbed jump ropes and ran around in our sneakers, having loads of fun.I went to Denali Elementary School from first grade through the sixth. Walking from 2nd Ave to 9th Ave with my family and friends.Denali Elementary School was damaged in the 1964 Alaska earthquake, and all the students had to finish out the school year at Mountain View Elementary. That was the first time I rode in a school bus. We were the second shift that started around noon.I was truly thankful for the firemen and their bright red fire trucks for coming back year after year to make us a really “cool” ice skating rink.BONUSTake a look at My Green Double-Bladed Ice Skates by Mary Jane DoughertyYes, You Can Share This EditionAnd when you do share this, your friends and family will be so happy that they will gift you with the largest flat-screen TV (292 inches) for your home theatre. Wow.Thanks for reading and listening to the Anchorage Memories Club! This post is public, so feel free to share it.Mike Recalls His First Days at Denali in the 1950s.We lived on Fairbanks Street, just a couple of blocks from Denali. On my first day, Mom walked with me to school.My teacher’s name was Mrs. Rauch. She was a very nice lady.While at school, I discovered that those leather-looking airplane pilot caps were the cool thing for boys to wear to school. A little too cool in Alaska’s colder months. In the photo above is first-grade Mike, wearing his pilot hat with borrowed goggles. In the background, Mike’s dad and friends work on their race car. The hat was actually a dumb-looking skullcap with snaps to hold your goggles in place, should the wearer happen to run into bug-infested skies on his way to school. Mom and Dad bought me the hat but declined the goggles. I proudly wore my hat to Denali. My taste in hats aside, I was off on a great adventure. The first grade in Anchorage, Alaska, is where I was introduced to Fun with Dick and Jane, Sally, Puff, and Spot. Those five characters would, along with Mrs. Rausch, teach me how to read and write… So I guess I have them to thank for the Anchorage Memories Club.Fun Lunch BoxesBack then, Denali didn’t have a lunchroom, so we brought our lunches from home in brown paper bags or lunch boxes. Girls often had Dale Evans, Tinker Bell, or Alice in Wonderland lunch boxes. The boys favored Roy Rogers, Peter Pan, or Superman. For the record, I was a Superman lunch box guy.RecessAfter lunch and a last gulp of hot chocolate, we headed for the playground.Of course we had oodles of fun on the swings, slide, and merry-go-round. Plus, we met kids from the other classrooms. One of the other kids, Bobby Kallander, would become my brother-in-law around 15 years later.Mike's mom just happened to take the photo above. About 14 years later, Mary was looking at the picture and said, “Hey, Mike is standing right behind my brother Bobby.”In the red circle, Mike is on the left and Bobby is on the right.Anchorage Elementary SchoolsWhat elementary school did you attend?If you lived in Anchorage, you might have attended one of the following:Mountain View Elementary first opened in 1956Northern Lights Elementary first opened in 1959Ptarmigan Elementary first opened in 1967If you don’t know, a ptarmigan is an Alaskan bird, pronounced “tar-mi-gan.” And, if your parent was in the Air Force or Army in Anchorage and serving at Elmendorf Air Force Base...
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    7 Min.
  • Anchorage Star the Reindeer Memories
    Sep 7 2025
    In the picture above is Star the Reindeer with Oro Stewart.Photo above by Albert WhiteheadDo you know the story of Star the Reindeer?To know Star, you first need to meet Ivan and Oro Stewart.The Stewarts first came to Anchorage from Kodiak in 1944 and opened Stewart’s Photo Shop. Now anyone who has ever lived in or visited Anchorage has probably at least seen Stewart’s Photo Shop at 531 W. 4th Avenue in downtown Anchorage, just across the street from the Visitor’s Log Cabin.She wanted an Alaskan PetIn 1960, Oro announced to Ivan that she wanted an Alaskan pet. At first, Ivan thought that his wife, Oro, wanted an Alaskan Husky. But what she had in mind was a reindeer.So Ivan contacted Larry Davis, a Native herder outside of Nome. Wait Just a MinuteIt was and still is illegal to own an Alaska reindeer unless you are an Alaska Native. However, there was a way around that law. A reindeer could be leased to someone.Now, before you head out to lease your very own reindeer pet, the law has been amended, and leasing a reindeer to non-Alaskan Natives is no longer allowed. Enter Star the ReindeerLarry Davis came through, and Oro happily received her leased pet reindeer.In reindeer land, most tend to be either brown or grey in color. But Oro’s reindeer looked a bit different. This reindeer had a white breast and white trim. But her most distinguishing feature was a splash of white, star-shaped fur on her face. So Oro named her reindeer “Star.” And a star she was.In the photo above is Star the Reindeer, delighting crowds in the Fur Rendezvous Parade in Anchorage, Alaska.What a HamStar the Reindeer quickly became a local celebrity, and in no time, Star’s fame had spread worldwide.In Anchorage, Star could be spotted in front of Stewart’s Photo Shop in downtown Anchorage, where Star was happy to pose for local paparazzi (news cameras). But Star wasn’t a diva. No, not Star. This celebrity reindeer was happy to pose for pictures with locals and visitors alike.Yes, You Can Share This EditionAnd when you do, your friends and family will be so happy that they will get you and a guest a ride on Santa’s sleigh, plus a photo op with Rudolph… well, it could happen.Thanks for reading and listening to the Anchorage Memories Club! This post is public, so feel free to share it.Enter Albert WhiteheadAlbert worked for Ivan and Oro and his responsibilities evolved into becoming the reindeer caregiver. A position he happily continued for many years.Star Got EvictedNo, Star wasn’t playing her music too loud, and she wasn’t behind on her rent.Ivan and Oro kept Star at their home at 10th Avenue and I Street near downtown Anchorage. Then, in 1973, a change in zoning laws ordered that Star could no longer stay in her home. But Ivan and Oro appealed that Grinchy law, and Star was able to stay.Years LaterStar lived to be 23 years old. The average life span of a reindeer in the wild is 15 to 18 years.Since Star’s passing, there were six more who continued the Star the Reindeer phenomenon in Anchorage.Larry Davis, the Herder, selected every Star, except the last one, Star number seven.The End of the Star the Reindeer LineStar number seven left us in 2025. And with that, so ended the long Anchorage tradition of Star the Reindeer.Our thanks to Ivan and Oro Stewart, Larry Davis, and Albert Whitehead for bringing such joy to so many people in Alaska and all over the world. And our thanks to Star.A great Anchorage memory. From Our North Stars (that’s you)From our Anchorage Bootlegger Cove MemoriesJackie had this comment:“Very much enjoyed this edition and Maggie Wilkinson's memories. I also attended the Quonset hut school, earlier than Maggie (1953-54) and with a real teacher (Mrs. Gordon), and went on to junior high downtown where she did. Things were so different back then - and in my mind, better!”Did You Know?Mike and Mary also publish Alaska Stories twice each month.Take a look at Anchorage Stories and enjoy.Connect with Mike and MaryStar was a wonderful, unofficial mascot for Anchorage. We wonder if Star ever met Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer. Hummm?Do you have a comment?You can also reply to this email.And you can Contact Us right here. Until Next TimeMike and MaryThe Anchorage Memories Club Get full access to Anchorage, Alaska Memories Club at www.anchoragememoriesclub.com/subscribe
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    5 Min.
  • Anchorage Bootlegger Cove Memories
    Aug 24 2025
    1968 Bootlegger Cove photo by Cindy PendletonAnchorage, Alaska, was a brand-new town in 1915. And it was a company town, run by the Alaska Engineering Commission as they built the Alaska Railroad.In those days, entertainment was scarce. Two movie houses, the Empress and the Harmony theatre showed their films to packed houses.But many railroad workers, business people, and others wanted something they couldn’t have. They wanted liquor. The problem was, Anchorage was bone dry.Moonshiners Under the Northern LightsEnter shadowy figures like the Phantom Swede, Russian Jack, and others.They were known as moonshiners, and they distilled their squirrel juice, as it was called, or white mule in places hidden from authorities.Russian Jack had a homestead of sorts, located about three miles east of town, next to a spring. That area was later named Russian Jack Springs.Oh no You Don’tTo combat the manufacturing and sale of alcohol, the Alaska Engineering Commission put together strict rules about intoxicating liquors, gambling, and other vices.When land was auctioned off to begin building the new town of Anchorage, buyers had to agree that if the property was used for any of the above, the penalty was forfeiture of the lot.Even so, there was a demand for the whiskey produced by the hidden stills around Anchorage.Hey, Here’s an IdeaIn no time, local moonshiners came up with a new delivery method.Just to the south and around the bend from the mouth of Ship Creek was the mouth of Chester Creek. Because Chester Creek was relatively hidden from the prying eyes of authorities in the new townsite, moonshiners like the Phantom Swede and Russian Jack began using the area to deliver their goods.Yes, You Can Share This EditionAnd when you do, your friends and family will be so happy that they will send you to Girdwood, Alaska, for a steak dinner at the Double Musky Inn… well, it could happen.Thanks for reading and listening to the Anchorage Memories Club! This post is public, so feel free to share it.Anchorage’s Early DaysCan you imagine Anchorage in those early days?A mass of people drawn to the frontier of Alaska. A tent city on the banks of Ship Creek, and a new town coming to life.Today, the names of people and places, like Russian Jack and Bootlegger Cove, are all that remain. A gentle reminder of how a town called Anchorage, Alaska, came to be.BONUSMemories of Bootlegger CovePhoto courtesy of Maggie Wilkinsonby Maggie WilkinsonFrom 1956 to 1959 I lived in this little log cabin in Bootlegger Cove, Anchorage, Alaska.It was a momentous time in my life, a time of transition. I was 10 when we moved into the garage apartment in the alley and 13 when we moved to a bigger home because our family was growing.I went to fifth grade in 1956 in a Quonset hut on the Park Strip, where my teacher was a butcher from the neighborhood grocery store. There were many more students in Anchorage than there were teachers, so the Anchorage School District hired anyone who applied. It was a very difficult year for me.But things turned around because in 1957, in the sixth grade, I went to the brand-new Inlet View School, and my teacher was a man who made an extra effort to learn about each of his students. He gave me my nickname of “Maggie,” and that made a very positive difference in my life. I felt seen, recognized, and understood.In 1958, I was in the 7th grade at what is now the location of the Performing Arts Center.My mother fell in love with and married my stepfather. He was a pilot for Reeve Aleutian Airways, and we were all very proud of him. Life was good. I had a new bike, and I made a little extra money from mowing lawns for $1.00/hr (I later learned to charge by the lawn instead of by the hour!) My best friend lived a block away, and she had a TV that we watched every day after school.In 1959, when I was in 8th grade, my little sister Betsy was born, and I didn’t know how my life could get any better. The summers lasted forever, and joy filled every day of my life. All of this and more happened in that little log cabin more than 65 years ago.Recently, my dogs and I walked at ”Betsy’s Park” (Elderberry Park), and then we walked to the log cabin, which is very close by.I spent a little time there, remembering how I played marbles and jumped rope in the alley, picked pussy willows in the spring, and I got a Chesapeake puppy (named Cinnabar). Many days were spent climbing high up in the cottonwood trees, chasing the train, and getting the engineer to blow the train whistle.I climbed on icebergs on the mudflats in the winter, played kickball at the park in the summer, and had to be home when the sun touched Susitna’s tummy. I remember riding my bike so fast down the 5th Avenue hill and then pedaling hard back up to do it all again. In the winter, we rode our sleds down the hill and swept the sand off it after the sanding truck went by. In the summer, we jumped over the water spraying from the water truck that came...
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    8 Min.
  • Anchorage Fishing Memories
    Aug 10 2025
    The photo above is Ship Creek.Summer in Anchorage means fishing along the banks of Ship Creek, Campbell Creek, and many of the lakes in town.Dolly Varden and rainbow trout are plentiful in the waters around Anchorage.With visions of Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry Finn, it was fun to pack a snack, grab your fishing gear, and head out to spend some time at your favorite fishing hole.She Caught Her First FishMike of the Anchorage Memories Club has this fishing memory he will never forget.“There I was, fishing from the banks of Campbell Creek. I was suddenly aware of a lady and her young daughter. It was the girl’s birthday, and her mom had given her one of those little ice-fishing poles as a gift. I watched as the happy young girl put her line in the water. It was obvious that she didn’t know how to fish. So, I offered her some help.There were some trout in a likely spot in the creek, so I told her to cast her line in that direction. Then I showed her how to hold her line and wait for a nibble.Within moments, a nice-sized fish was on her line. I then coached her by telling her how to land her fish. The girl was delighted and had a huge smile on her face as she stood there, holding her fish. Then she looked up at me with big eyes and a smile to match and said, “This is my first fish. Thank you, I’ll never forget you.”Over the years, I’ve remembered that precious moment on the banks of Campbell Creek. I never knew her name, but I’ll never forget her.”Old proverb:"Give a person a fish and you feed them for a day. Teach a person to fish, and you feed them for a lifetime."Did You Know?Ship Creek is considered the only urban king salmon fishery in the world. Ship Creek is so named for the safe anchorage provided for ships near the mouth of the creek.The Dena’ina called Ship Creek “Crying Ridge Creek.”Yes, You Can Share This EditionIt's easy.And when you do, your friends and family will be so happy that they will give you a life-time pass to fish every day of the week if it pleases you… well, it could happen.Thanks for reading and listening to the Anchorage Memories Club! This post is public, so feel free to share it.In the picture above is Campbell CreekThis Anchorage creek is named after Sir Joseph Campbell, who explored the area between 1785 and 1792.While Ship Creek, mentioned earlier, is the largest waterway in Anchorage, Campbell Creek is the second-largest. The One That Got AwayMike of the Anchorage Memories Club was fishing in Campbell Creek one afternoon near a beaver dam and has this memory:“I had my line in the water in a likely spot near a beaver dam. But not having any nibbles or strikes for a while, I started to pull my line out of the water. Suddenly, I had a huge, strong strike. For a moment, I panicked because I thought I had accidentally hooked a beaver. But seconds later, a rather large rainbow trout took off from where my line had been and shot across the stream like it was jet propelled. The rainbow darted and dashed about in the water, obviously upset at the surprise of my hook.I quickly got a bigger hook and put my line back in the water.But the large rainbow trout would have none of it. Talk about the fish that got away.”Sport Fishing Changed in the 1950sDid you know that sport fishing technology made some significant changes in the 1950s?Fiberglass rods and synthetic line were made available. Before those changes, if you fished, you were using a cane pole (a large stalk of bamboo) with a string line.The Territorial Department of Fisheries was created in Alaska in 1949. In 1951, the Department of Fish and Game was created.Fish Were Jumping Over the NetsMary of the Anchorage Memories Club has this special fishing memory.“My summers were spent at our families commercial fishing village at Point Possession, just across Cook Inlet from Anchorage.One of the great things about summer in Alaska is all the daylight. That was very helpful when the fish run was on. I remember watching in awe as fish jumped over our net.My mother Feodoria, two uncles; five brothers; and two sisters all had jobs to do when the fish were running and our nets were full.When the tide went back out, and the run was over, we had to pick the fish out of our nets. And you had to be careful not to mangle the fish, because each one was worth money. It was a lot of responsibility for us as youngsters.The sharp teeth of the dog fish would get wrapped around the net. It was also challenging to get the humpies through the small holes of the net. And I remember the silver salmon were so shiny, and wow, the kings were so long.It wasn’t all work at our commercial fishing site. Summers included taking a break by roasting hot dogs and marshmallows over the beach campfire and listening to Anchorage radio.” Oh the MemoriesAs you fished along the banks of your favorite stream or lake in and around Anchorage, it was quiet, relaxing, and fun.There you were, surrounded by Alaska’s glorious nature in full ...
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