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121.
Crew of the British sailing vessel GLOOSCAP assembled on the deck, Washington, ca. 1904.
122.
Crew of the British sailing vessel DURHAM, Washington, ca. 1904.
123.
Crew on the deck of the sailing vessel SOKOTO, Puget Sound, Washington, ca. 1904.
124.
Crew of the sailing vessel MUSKOKA seated on deck, Puget Sound port, Washington, ca. 1904.
125.
Crew on the deck of the sailing vessel BELFORD, Washington, ca. 1904.
126.
Captain F.H. Henning and the crew of the three-masted ship STRONSA taken on deck, Puget Sound port, Washington, ca. 1904.
127.
Crew of the British sailing vessel GARSDALE, Washington, ca. 1904.
128.
Photograph of the sailing ship 'Geo. Curtis' was taken the last of may, 1918. She had left Seattle the middle of April on her usual voyage to Bristol Bay, Alaska. On board were 350 of [employees of Libby, McNeill & Libby, Chicago,] on their way to man the Libby Kitchen that in the next three months would pack the salmon brought in from the waters of Bristol Bay.
But in Bristol Bay the vessel was trapped in a big ice floe which was about 100 miles across. The was held there for over two weeks, until the weather changed, the ice broke up, and she was able to limp through the remaining ice to [the] cannery mooring in Bristol Bay.
Another vessel--the sailing ship 'Tacoma'--was crushed and sunk. All her passengers got to shore safely, after a very severe trip across the ice.
129.
Sunde & d'Evers Co., Ship Chandlers, Marine Hardware, Fishermen's Supplies, Sail Makers, Ship Riggers : the Pioneer House, Colman Dock, Seattle, Wash.
130.
Paquebots Transatlantiques: coupe longitudinale (partie), plans et elevations
131.
Cap'n Abraham Kean, with Terra Nova. Note very rough ice through which ship ploughs
132.
Lumber ship aground on Des Moines Beach (1924 or 1926 ?)
133.
Lumber ship aground on Des Moines Beach (1928?)
134.
Lumber ship aground off Des Moines (1924 to 1928?)
135.
Fish trap with fishing boats DRAYTON, SKYLARK, and BELLINGHAM alongside dock.
136.
Lake Washington Ship Canal, Hiram M. Chittenden Locks, Seattle.
137.
Lake Washington Ship Canal, Hiram M. Chittenden Locks, Seattle, June 16, 1921.
138.
Ship POLAR BEAR on drydock at Nushagak, Alaska, 1917
139.
Ship ABNER COBURN being towed to Naknek after she had been incapacitated in the Bering Sea, Alaska, May 1918
140.
Ship LLEWELLYN J. MORSE just after getting through the ice in the Bering Sea, Alaska, June 1918
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