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Amos Burg Papers and Photographs, 1922-1989

 Collection
Identifier: MS 236

Content Description

Working notes, photographs, maps, and periodical articles. Personal and business correspondence. Some personal photographs. Some published articles written by Burg. See Burg AV Collection also.

Dates

  • 1922-1989

EAD

MS0236

Biographical / Historical

By KIRK McALLISTER THE JUNEAU EMPIRE Friday, June 13, 1986

Amos Burg lived a life most people only dream about - explorer, adventurer, writer, filmmaker, even secret agent.

Burg, a long-time Juneau resident, died Wednesday, June 11, 1986 at the age of 84, but his exploits - the stuff of legend- are likely to be permanently etched in history.

Burg grew up in Oregon along the Columbia River and early on developed a love for rivers which would take him on treks down most of the major waterways of the West including the Columbia, Snake, Salmon, Mackenzie, Porcupine, Yukon, Colorado and Mississippi.

As a youth he worked as a merchant marine along the West Coast, sailed to Hawaii and Australia and eventually around the world, surviving a typhoon and a collision at sea.

He began his river expeditions in1920, starting on the Snake and Columbia rivers; He took time out from his adventures to attend the University of Oregon where he studied journalism, science and film making.

In 1928, Burg took a canoe down the Yukon River, filming the crossing of a half million caribou in the process. He turned the experience into a film called "Alaska Wilds'" and two for National Geographic Magazine.

In 1932, he was back in Alaska filming "Giants of the North" about the brown bears of Admiralty Island.

In 1934, in an expedition sponsored by the National Geographic Society,he took a 26-foot wooden sail boat around Cape Horn to study the people living in that stormy region.Two years later he used the same boat to explore the coast of British Columbia and Alaska.

In 1938, he took the first inflatable raft down the Colorado River while filming "Conquering the Colorado."'.

In 1939, he descended the middle fork of the Salmon River.

In 1940, he traveled to Japan, Hong Kong and Chungking where he survived 21 bombings by Japanese planes. On his return through Japan he was arrested as a spy but released.

In 1943, during World War II, he worked as a secret agent for the U.S. in Argentina and Chile.

In 1946, he bought the sailboat "Endeavour" and sailed to Alaska where he lived on the vessel for years.

From 1947-50, he made a series of 30 films for Encyclopedia Britannica

In 1955, he set up the information and education section of the Alaska Department of Fisheries (later it became the Department of Fish and Game) in Juneau and worked there until his retirement in 1974. He made 15 fish and game films during that time.

Mark Kissel, a friend and former co-worker of Burg's, said the most amazing thing about Burg was that despite his incredible exploits, he remained humble.

"Everyone who knew him had the greatest respect for him," Kissel said. "He was an amazing guy who had a very full life. What amazed me the most was he had such a fine out-look on life and always remained interested in other people not just himself. He was the closest thing to a saint I've ever seen."

Extent

26 Volumes (26 boxes)

Language of Materials

English

Related Materials

See Burg AV Collection also.

Processing Information

The Amos Burg Collection was housed in more than a dozen records cartons with little or no order with the exception of some folders which bore labels – these have been retained – and some binders which were labeled – which have also been retained. The collection was re-housed in new, acid-free folders and numbered archives boxes with descriptions of the contents of each folder. Items within each folder have been arranged chronologically. Letters written by Amos Burg or Amos and Carolyn Burg are additionally identified by having the Burg name in bold face.

Title
Finding aid for the Amos Burg Papers and Photographs, 1922-1989
Status
In Progress
Author
Processed By: Ken Nail, Jr., 2008. Revised by Anastasia Tarmann, 4/2014. ArchivesSpace Finding Aid by: Freya Anderson, 2019 May. Inventory entered in ArchivesSpace by Freya Anderson
Date
2020 January
Description rules
Describing Archives: A Content Standard
Language of description
Undetermined
Script of description
Code for undetermined script
Language of description note
English

Repository Details

Part of the Alaska State Library - Historical Collections Finding Aids Repository

Contact:
PO Box 110571
Juneau AK 99811-0571 US
907-465-2920
907-465-2925
907-465-2151 (Fax)