Alaska: The Canary in the Coal Mine for Climate Change
Apr
18
7:00 PM19:00

Alaska: The Canary in the Coal Mine for Climate Change

How can current and historical records help us better understand the differences between these terms, the roots of climate change as seen in Alaska, and what we may see in the future? This program will feature four panelists: Rick Thoman, Ken Tape, Jackie Qataliña Schaeffer and Molly McCammon. The panel will discuss the topic at hand and take questions from both a live and online audience.

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Conservation and Development: Can They Co-exist?
Mar
21
7:00 PM19:00

Conservation and Development: Can They Co-exist?

During this program, the panel will focus on what Alaska’s history can teach us about the relationship between economic growth and our interests in stewarding Alaska’s lands and waters for present and future generations. The program will feature four panelists: Jen Rose Smith, James Magdanz, Courtnay Carothers and Bathsheba Demuth. The panel will discuss the topic at hand and take questions from both a live and online audience.

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The Alaska Railroad in Song and Story
May
22
7:00 PM19:00

The Alaska Railroad in Song and Story

Celebrate the Centennial of the Alaska Railroad with an evening of instrumental music, songs, and stories. The program draws inspiration from this year’s Official Alaska Railroad Print: Art Chase’s Alaska Railroad:100 Years Strong and will integrate stories of the nine evolving railroad engines with live music performance, archival recordings, and projected images.

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The History and Evolution of Chugach State Park
Feb
16
7:00 PM19:00

The History and Evolution of Chugach State Park

Fifty-two years ago, Anchorage’s Chugach State Park was formally established in 1970 after Alaska Governor Keith Miller signed the legislation creating the park into law. With a half million acres, it is the third largest state park in the United States. Join the Cook Inlet Historical Society for a panel discussion on Chugach State Park’s past, present and future legacy.

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History from Dogsled: The Yukon and the Stakes of Telling the Past
Oct
6
7:00 PM19:00

History from Dogsled: The Yukon and the Stakes of Telling the Past

This talk looks at the intertwined, co-dependent lives of people, dogs, and salmon along the nineteenth century Yukon for examples of how to tell more capacious, polyvocal narratives—and the stakes of doing so for and about Alaska, a place where the politics of who speaks the past has bearing on present conflicts over land, meaning, and the possibilities of the future.

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The Alaska Music Archives: Connections to the Past, Directions for the Future
Sep
15
7:00 PM19:00

The Alaska Music Archives: Connections to the Past, Directions for the Future

Join audio engineer and preservationist Kurt Riemann for a discussion about Alaska’s rich music history and the need to conserve and make available irreplaceable historical and cultural audio resources. Learn about the mechanics of preservation, sample audio from incredible performances, and hear a few wild stories lifted from the recordings and the accompanying program material.

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The Cannery Caretakers
May
19
7:00 PM19:00

The Cannery Caretakers

In 2015 Bob King and Katie Ringsmuth embarked on a journey to Bristol Bay to preserve the history of the Diamond NN Cannery at South Naknek, Alaska, resulting in the seven-year public history endeavor called The NN Cannery History Project. Uncovered along the way was the story of the Cannery Caretakers, which looks at cannery work from the perspective of village residents.

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ANCSA
Oct
21
7:00 PM19:00

ANCSA

Fifty years ago, the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act of 1971 (ANCSA) marked a shift in the Congressional approach to federal policy for Indigenous communities. The landmark passage of ANCSA created visionary for-profit corporations tasked with promoting the social, cultural, and economic advancement of their Alaska Native people and communities in perpetuity. Join the Cook Inlet Historical Society for a panel discussion on ANCSA’s past, present and future legacy.

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Otterly Crazy: The Inside Story of the Exxon Valdez Oil Spill Sea Otter Rehabilitation Project
May
20
7:00 PM19:00

Otterly Crazy: The Inside Story of the Exxon Valdez Oil Spill Sea Otter Rehabilitation Project

Despite massive publicity in 1989, the sea otter “rescue” effort has received scant attention in later retrospectives examining the Exxon Valdez oil spill in Prince William Sound. Over the years a mythology has grown up, portraying the wildlife rehabilitation project as a futile, expensive publicity stunt. In this talk, Shana Loshbaugh describes the history of the project, including information about conflicts among Exxon, agencies, and staff factions with agendas as disparate as embezzlement and animal rights.

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The 100th Anniversary of Anchorage's First Classical Music Concert
Apr
11
4:00 PM16:00

The 100th Anniversary of Anchorage's First Classical Music Concert

In the spring of 1921, ordinary people did something extraordinary: united by a desire to create art and entertain, early Anchorage residents produced Anchorage’s first full-length classical concert, A Longfellow Evening, at the Empress Theatre. On the exact centenary, Anchorage Festival of Music Artistic Director Laura Koenig presents the story behind the concert and the remarkable biographies of the original performers told through newly discovered historical images, archival documents and family recollections.

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The Adventures of Nellie Frost on Turnagain Arm, 1895-1901
Mar
18
7:00 PM19:00

The Adventures of Nellie Frost on Turnagain Arm, 1895-1901

Nellie Frost followed her husband from San Jose, California, to Sunrise City in 1897, the second year of the gold rush that brought an estimated 10,000 people to Turnagain Arm 20 years before Anchorage began. Written and edited from one hundred-year-old historic documents and through narratives told to her daughter Dorothy Frost, Gold Rush Wife chronicles Nellie’s experiences in a northern gold rush that predated the more famous stampede to the Klondike. Nellie’s story provides insight into the rich social life of an isolated, predominately male mining camp. It is that rare narrative of a woman’s experiences, in her own words, of life in a remote mining camp in the late 1890s.

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The Sinking of the Good Ship Dora
Jan
21
7:00 PM19:00

The Sinking of the Good Ship Dora

The staunch little steamer Dora served in Alaskan waters her entire career: delivering the mail, transporting food and goods from Southeast Alaskan ports all the way to Bristol Bay and rescuing hundreds lost at sea. This talk will be a celebration of her life and a commemoration of her tragic sinking one hundred years ago.

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The Spanish Flu in Southwest Alaska: Bristol Bay and Unalaska
Oct
15
7:00 PM19:00

The Spanish Flu in Southwest Alaska: Bristol Bay and Unalaska

We’re proud to have a duo of historians discuss the flu pandemic of 1919. Tim Troll will first share a brief film, Bristol Bay Remembers: The Great Flu of 1919, and photographs from the U.S. Revenue Cutter Unalga that responded first in Unalaska and later in Bristol Bay. From there, Katie Ringsmuth will discuss how Bristol Bay was the last manifestation of the Spanish influenza outbreak in Alaska.

View a recording of this event here.
Password: CookInlet618

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We’re Saving It for You: The Value and Importance of Archives and Museums in Alaska
Jun
18
7:00 PM19:00

We’re Saving It for You: The Value and Importance of Archives and Museums in Alaska

Join us on Facebook for a virtual Cook Inlet Historical Society lecture.

Local archivists and museum curators give an overview of their respective institutions archival, manuscript and museum holdings related to Alaska and the Circumpolar North.

View a recording of this event here.
Password: CookInlet618

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Ed Wesley and Cal Williams | A Celebration of Black History in the Last Frontier
Feb
20
7:00 PM19:00

Ed Wesley and Cal Williams | A Celebration of Black History in the Last Frontier

The Cook Inlet Historical Society celebrates Black History Month with talks on the role that African Americans have had in Anchorage, across Alaska, and the nation.  Community activists and historians Ed Wesley and Cal Williams will speak on different aspects of this history.  There will be a display and a book giveaway at this event.

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