Tagged: Fairbanks

Lemeta neighborhood is eclectic mix of rustic cabins and modern homes

The late 1940s through the 1950s were a tumultuous period for Fairbanks. Military personnel and civilians poured into the area at an alarming pace as the Cold War with the Soviet Union heated up...

The Fairbanks Daily News-Miner building as it looks today. The News-Miner is the oldest continually-operating paper in Alaska, beginning operations in 1903

The long history of the Fairbanks Daily News-Miner

The 1980 book “Adventures in Alaska Journalism since 1903” relates that itinerant newspaper man, George M. Hill, freighted a small press from Dawson to Fairbanks in 1903. Once in Fairbanks he established the Weekly...

St. Joseph’s Hospital served Fairbanks’ medical needs for more than 50 years

The Catholic Church sent Father Francis Monroe (Society of Jesus) to Alaska in 1894. He spent several years at missions along the Lower Yukon River before moving to the Upper Yukon after the Klondike...

Skiing at Birch Hill in Fairbanks dates back to 1930s

Skiing at Birch Hill in Fairbanks dates back to the 1930s

With skiing’s long history in Nordic countries, it is not surprising the Swedes, Norwegians, Danes and Finns entering Alaska at the turn of the 20th century brought their skiing traditions with them. According to...

Rasmuson Library at University of Alaska - Fairbanks carries on the dream of Charles Bunnell

Rasmuson Library at University of Alaska – Fairbanks carries on the dream of Charles Bunnell

The library at the University of Alaska, Fairbanks had an inauspicious beginning. According to Ted Ryberg (the university’s librarian in 1970), while the university’s predecessor, the Alaska Agricultural College and School of Mines, began...