TABLE OF CONTENTS
Foundations of a Dialogue John Muir in Glacier Bay III Preserving a Laboratory and a Landscape The Campaign for a National Monument
IV Alaska Brown Bears and the Extension of the Monument Public Concern for the Alaska Brown Bear Planning and Improvisation in Wartime The Mixed Economy of the Tlingits VII Private Interests and a Second Boundary Adjustment Administrative Development
A Growing Staff IX Mining, Wilderness, and National Park Status A New Phase of Mining X An End to Native Seal Hunting Biological and Aesthetic Objections To Seal Hunting XI The Limits of Ecosystem Management Preservation and Ecological Change XII Protecting the Humpback Whales Cruise Ships Reconsidered XIII Creating A Wilderness Park Alsek River Float Trips Historical Development of the Commercial Fishery Subsistence, ANILCA, and Glacier Bay Conclusion: Converging Issues, Diverging Solutions
Appendix B: Area Managers Appendix C: Visitation Statistics Appendix D: List of Management Plans Appendix E: 50 Key Research Studies and Policy Decisions Index (omitted from online edition) LIST OF MAPS Map 2. Hoonah Territory as shown by Haas and Goldschmidt, 1946 Map 3. National Monument Boundary Changes, 1924-1925 Map 4. National Monument Boundary Changes, 1939-1955 Map 5. Newmont Plan for Mining Development Map 6. Glacier Bay Boundary Changes, 1977-1980 Map 7. Alsek River and Dry Bay LIST OF TABLES Table 2. Food Harvested by Hoonah Tlingits, 1943 and 1945 Table 3. Stored Food in Hoonah, 1941 Table 4. Seal Kills and Bounty Payments, 1931-1945 LIST OF PHOTOGRAPHS Indigenous Peoples Photo 1. Hunya [Hoonah] Sealer's Camp, Glacier Bay, 1899.Photo 2. The Native fishing village of Hoonah as it appeared c. 1898-1907. Photo 3. Hunya [Hoonah] Seal Hunters, Glacier Bay, 1899. Sightseers and Scientists Photo 4. Russell Island (at that time glacier-bound) and the Fairweather Range, drawn by J. A. Fraser in 1879 from a sketch by John Muir.Photo 5. John Muir's Glacier Bay cabin, 1890, showing Muir and field school from Case School of Applied Sciences in Cleveland. Photo 6. Steamer Queen at Muir Glacier, c. 1890. Photo 7. Author Dave Bohn and ecologist William S. Cooper at Glacier Bay, June 1966. Photo 8. Glaciologist William O. Field, Jr. at Glacier Bay in 1966. Preserving Glacier Bay Photo 9. Joe and Muz Ibach in front of their Lemesurier Island cabin, 1954.Photo 10. The Ibach mining camp on Reid Inlet, 1964. Photo 11. Abraham L. Parker's shack at the LeRoy Mine, September 1966. Photo 12. Stanley (Buck) Harbison's homestead cabin, Dundas Bay, July 1967. Photo 13. The Yakobi at Reid Inlet, 1940. Photo 14. Kenwood Youmans and Joe Ibach at Ibach's homestead on Lemesurier Island, c. 1956. Enlargement of the Monument Photo 15. Carl Swanson's cabin on Strawberry Island, 1965.Photo 16. Senator Ernest Gruening, Huntington S. Gruening, and W. Howard Johnson (USFS), June 1966. Early Park Development Photo 17. The Nunatak as seen from the cabin on the island west of NPS headquarters.Photo 18. The Nunatak II, shown in Auke Bay (near Juneau), November 1966. Photo 19. Glacier Bay Superintendent Leone Mitchell (left) and Interior Secretary Stewart Udall, July 1965. Photo 20. The Nunatak III as seen in March 1974. Photo 21. Aerial photo of NPS headquarters complex, looking south, during the mid-1970s. Photo 22. Aerial photo taken over Bartlett Cove, September 1984. Founding the Modern Park Photo 23. Glacier Bay Lodge under construction, August 1965.Photo 24. Glacier Bay Lodge, May 1966, just prior to its opening. Photo 25. Glacier Bay Lodge and Outer Dock, looking east, June 1971. Photo 26. Naturalists exiting from the Princess Patricia, June 1971. Photo 27. An NPS patrol boat is seen alongside the cruise ship Prinsendam, July 1976. Photo 28. The Seacrest tourboat at Plateau Glacier, Wachusett Inlet, July 1966. Photo 29. Monument visitors given an orientation at Gustavus Airport, 1976. Photo 30. NPS naturalist Bruce Paige, shown at an August 1979 public meeting. Photo 31. NPS Superintendent Robert Howe at Ripple Cove, January 27, 1967. Mining, Wilderness, and National Park Status Photo 32. Transfer between NPS boat and amphibious plane, Glacier Bay National Monument, during Advisory Board trip to Alaska, July 31, 1965.Photo 33. George Hartzog and Melvin Grosvenor at Glacier Bay, 1965. Photo 34. Drill site on east side of Muir Inlet, August 1966. Photo 35. NPS planning officials aboard the Nunatak II, August 1967. Creating a Wilderness Park Photo 36. Goose Cove Ranger Station, June 1971.Photo 37. Tatshenshini-Alsek river information sign, 1985. Photo 38. Superintendent Mike Tollefson, June 1986. Photo 39. Superintendent Marvin Jensen, September 1994. Commercial and Subsistence Fishing Photo 40. An NPS employee speaks with a Hoonah fisherman, Bartlett Cove, July 1966.Photo 41. A beach-anchored set net at Dry Bay. Photo 42. Fish processing operation at Dry Bay, July 1979.
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