Image for Steaming to the north  : the first summer cruise of the U.S. Revenue Cutter Bear, Alaska and Siberia, 1886

Steaming to the north : the first summer cruise of the U.S. Revenue Cutter Bear, Alaska and Siberia, 1886

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On a rugged frontier where the ocean was king, most laws came from those who ruled the sea-and few ships policed the western Arctic like the revenue cutter Bear.

Commissioned into the organization that would eventually become the US Coast Guard, the Bear patrolled and charted the waters of Alaska and Siberia, bringing medical care, saving lives, and dealing out justice when needed.

The ship's crew and famous captain, the fiery Michael Healy, looked out for Natives and Americans alike in a time when Alaska was adjusting to its new status as a US territory.

Steaming to the North follows the Bear from May to October 1886 as it takes its first summer cruise from San Francisco up to Point Barrow and back again.

This is the first book to exhibit the photographs taken by 3rd Lt.

Charles Kennedy of New Bedford, introducing rarely seen photos of the last sail-and-steam whaling ships, capturing early interactions of Natives with white whalemen and explorers, and showing lives otherwise lost to time.

Essays follow the logbook of the cruise and allow readers to vividly ride alongside the crew on a history-making voyage.

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£46.00
Product Details
University of Alaska Press
1602232385 / 9781602232389
Hardback
15/11/2014
United States
English
200 pages : illustrations (black and white)
21 x 26 cm