Box PCA 328
Container
Contains 158 Results:
[Pederson's Dairy, truck making hay.]
Item — Box: PCA 328
Identifier: PCA0328-4-8
Scope and Contents
From the File:
Albert Pederson came to Juneau in the late 1890s from Bodo, Norway, with the intention of starting a dairy. In 1902, he sent for his wife, Jensine Danielsen Pederson and their son, William. Albert worked as a longshoreman and caretaker of the Evergreen Cemetery until 1910. In 1907, Albert and Jensine established a 160-acre homestead about ten miles from Juneau on the northwest side of the Mendenhall River. The family moved to the valley in 1910 and built their first home which was a...
Dates:
Majority of material found within circa 1890-1950
[Pederson home under construction.]
Item — Box: PCA 328
Identifier: PCA0328-4-9
Scope and Contents
From the File:
Albert Pederson came to Juneau in the late 1890s from Bodo, Norway, with the intention of starting a dairy. In 1902, he sent for his wife, Jensine Danielsen Pederson and their son, William. Albert worked as a longshoreman and caretaker of the Evergreen Cemetery until 1910. In 1907, Albert and Jensine established a 160-acre homestead about ten miles from Juneau on the northwest side of the Mendenhall River. The family moved to the valley in 1910 and built their first home which was a...
Dates:
Majority of material found within circa 1890-1950
[Charles and Flora Rudy, Pederson's dairy.]
Item — Box: PCA 328
Identifier: PCA0328-4-10
Scope and Contents
[Rudys at Mendenhall Glacier, per Jim Geraghty]
Dates:
Majority of material found within circa 1890-1950
[Pederson dairy.]
Item — Box: PCA 328
Identifier: PCA0328-4-11
Scope and Contents
From the File:
Albert Pederson came to Juneau in the late 1890s from Bodo, Norway, with the intention of starting a dairy. In 1902, he sent for his wife, Jensine Danielsen Pederson and their son, William. Albert worked as a longshoreman and caretaker of the Evergreen Cemetery until 1910. In 1907, Albert and Jensine established a 160-acre homestead about ten miles from Juneau on the northwest side of the Mendenhall River. The family moved to the valley in 1910 and built their first home which was a...
Dates:
Majority of material found within circa 1890-1950
[Pederson's dairy.]
Item — Box: PCA 328
Identifier: PCA0328-4-12
Scope and Contents
From the File:
Albert Pederson came to Juneau in the late 1890s from Bodo, Norway, with the intention of starting a dairy. In 1902, he sent for his wife, Jensine Danielsen Pederson and their son, William. Albert worked as a longshoreman and caretaker of the Evergreen Cemetery until 1910. In 1907, Albert and Jensine established a 160-acre homestead about ten miles from Juneau on the northwest side of the Mendenhall River. The family moved to the valley in 1910 and built their first home which was a...
Dates:
Majority of material found within circa 1890-1950
[Opening of bridge (Pederson's dairy).]
Item — Box: PCA 328
Identifier: PCA0328-4-13
Scope and Contents
[Numerous cars in yard after Mendenhall bridge first opens, per Jim Geraghty]
Dates:
Majority of material found within circa 1890-1950
[Pederson home under construction, Pederson's dairy.]
Item — Box: PCA 328
Identifier: PCA0328-4-14
Scope and Contents
From the File:
Albert Pederson came to Juneau in the late 1890s from Bodo, Norway, with the intention of starting a dairy. In 1902, he sent for his wife, Jensine Danielsen Pederson and their son, William. Albert worked as a longshoreman and caretaker of the Evergreen Cemetery until 1910. In 1907, Albert and Jensine established a 160-acre homestead about ten miles from Juneau on the northwest side of the Mendenhall River. The family moved to the valley in 1910 and built their first home which was a...
Dates:
Majority of material found within circa 1890-1950
[Pederson Dairies.]
Item — Box: PCA 328
Identifier: PCA0328-4-15
Scope and Contents
From the File:
Albert Pederson came to Juneau in the late 1890s from Bodo, Norway, with the intention of starting a dairy. In 1902, he sent for his wife, Jensine Danielsen Pederson and their son, William. Albert worked as a longshoreman and caretaker of the Evergreen Cemetery until 1910. In 1907, Albert and Jensine established a 160-acre homestead about ten miles from Juneau on the northwest side of the Mendenhall River. The family moved to the valley in 1910 and built their first home which was a...
Dates:
Majority of material found within circa 1890-1950
[Pederson Family, farm house.]
Item — Box: PCA 328
Identifier: PCA0328-4-16
Scope and Contents
From the File:
Albert Pederson came to Juneau in the late 1890s from Bodo, Norway, with the intention of starting a dairy. In 1902, he sent for his wife, Jensine Danielsen Pederson and their son, William. Albert worked as a longshoreman and caretaker of the Evergreen Cemetery until 1910. In 1907, Albert and Jensine established a 160-acre homestead about ten miles from Juneau on the northwest side of the Mendenhall River. The family moved to the valley in 1910 and built their first home which was a...
Dates:
Majority of material found within circa 1890-1950
Folder 5: Smith Family-Juneau Dairy
File — Box: PCA 328
Identifier: PCA0328-Folder5
Scope and Contents
Leephonse Hober Smith was born in Fairfax, Virginia in 1888. His father, John Smith installed pasteurization equipment in the Washington D.C. dairies. By February of 1907, 19-year old Lee Smith worked his way from San Francisco to Juneau aboard a lumber schooner. By 1911, after working for several Juneau gold mining companies, Smith and his partner James Bannigan, purchased property from Nicholas Wagner, which included the Chicken Ridge Dairy, several cows and a strip of land in the...
Dates:
Majority of material found within circa 1890-1950