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  • Fall color

    Nov 9, 2023

  • 47th Oktoberfest Art Share Saturday, October 28

    Nov 2, 2023

  • Petersburg art teacher makes the most of her sabbatical

    Lizzie Thompson, Pilot writer|Nov 2, 2023

    Ashley Lohr's newest art show opens at the Clausen Museum this Friday, November 3, with a reception from 5 - 7 p.m. Her digital paintings, works on canvas and enamel earrings will be on display through November 14. This is Lohr's 14th solo exhibit at the museum since moving to Petersburg in 2008 to work as Petersburg High School's art teacher. Like getting married, earning a masters degree, and having two children - Rosie, 8, and Finn, 5 - her solo exhibits serve as mile markers in her life....

  • Yesterday's News

    Nov 2, 2023

    November 2, 1923 – The big steamer Northwestern of the Alaska Steamship Company stopped at Petersburg northbound this week and landed thirty tons of freight. Under the command of Captain Charles Glasscock she made a perfect landing without difficulty of any kind, although it has been said for years by the commanders of the larger boats that on account of the heavy tides it could not be done. The adding of the Northwestern to the boats calling at Petersburg is the direct result of action taken by the Petersburg Commercial Club over the period o...

  • Halloween trick-or-treating

    Nov 2, 2023

  • Lyric & Spirit onstage

    Nov 2, 2023

  • Yesterday's News

    Oct 26, 2023

    October 26, 1923 – Sea water burns at Prince Rupert. What might have been a serious fire causing much damage to property was narrowly averted on the waterfront yesterday afternoon, says the Prince Rupert News. Gasoline had been spilled on the surface of the water from pumping the scow at the Prince Rupert Boat House. A passer-by coming along threw a match into the water after lighting his pipe and the combustible liquid still floating immediately ignited. The flames ran up to the scow occasioning a great deal of smoke and coming perilously c...

  • Viking Swim Club auction Saturday

    Oct 26, 2023

    The Viking Swim Club (VSC) annual dinner and auction takes place this Saturday, Oct. 28. Doors open at 6:00 pm upstairs at the Elks. The event is the youth swim program’s largest fundraiser, generating around 35% of the program’s budget through the evening’s raffle and auction. The effort helps pay the salaries of the coaches, supports swim meet travel costs, and helps keep membership dues affordable. VSC is not a school district activity. It’s a three season long activity for Petersburg kids. And this year’s auction is also honoring the 50th...

  • Harbor dredge happening

    Oct 26, 2023

    Western Marine's dredging crane scrapes up sediment and hard blue clay from South Harbor and releases the clamshell claw into the collection barge. The sound echoes in the harbor. Dredging is done to remove sediment and debris that has accumulated in the harbor over time. The South Harbor dredge project commenced last winter and resumed in October after being suspended for around seven months due to environmental regulations. The project is expected to conclude at the end of the...

  • Yesterday's News News from 25-50-75-100 years ago

    Oct 19, 2023

    October 19, 1923 – The Wrangell Commercial Club voted unanimously in favor of the division of a new territory out of Southeastern Alaska and voted unanimously in favor of holding a convention at Juneau to consider the question and to make arrangements to inaugurate a campaign to bring about the division. The action of the Wrangell Commercial Club was based upon the request of the Ketchikan City Council that the people of Southeastern Alaska give serious attention to the matter of Territorial division. The Wrangell Commercial Club, acting u...

  • Bike Park project enters next phase

    Oct 19, 2023

    Brian Stoody is a bike park consultant for the Petersburg Bike Park project. He was flown in from Juneau last weekend to ensure the project continues safely on track. Stoody has past experience working on the Under Thunder city bike park in Juneau, and also as the lead designer and builder for the construction of the Eagle Crest bike trails project in Juneau....

  • Artifact Archive

    Oct 19, 2023

    Chouinard Mountaineer's Ax In 1966 Yvon Chouinard revolutionized the curved ice ax for climbing. He developed a longer shaft with a dramatically curved pick. He said, "A curve compatible with the arc of the ax's swing would allow the pic to stay better in the ice." His idea worked and began a revolution in ice ax design known as the "curve-a-lution." This mountaineer's ax was used and donated by Zac Hoyt and is currently on display in the special exhibit, "Devil's Thumb," at the Clausen Museum...

  • Stanton Gregor swearing in

    Oct 19, 2023

    Jeigh Stanton Gregor takes the oath of office on October 16 to serve on Petersburg Borough Assembly. Clerk Debbie Thompson conducted the swearing in, then Stanton Gregor took his seat at the dais for Monday evening's assembly meeting....

  • Tranquil Respite

    Oct 19, 2023

    Local painter Beth Flor's oil painting "Tranquil Respite" was selected from over 625 entries for the International Guild of Realism's Fall Online Exhibition. The juried show will feature works representing twenty countries. The paintings will be displayed on the guild's website from October 20 through December 20, 2023. Many more of Flor's oil paintings are being featured during the month of October at Firelight Gallery and Framing in downtown Petersburg....

  • Spooky season

    Oct 12, 2023

    Jon Hammer, in costume as Jack Skellington, brings the creepy Halloween vibe to opening weekend of the 7th annual Pumpkin Patch hosted by Anchor Properties. Face painting and fall season fun are all part of the festivities, which will be open throughout October with times and details listed on the Anchor Properties Facebook page....

  • Yesterday's News News from 25-50-75-100 years ago

    Oct 12, 2023

    October 12, 1923 – Work has been started on the erection of a Catholic Church on the recently purchased property on Third Street, opposite the little school house. The new structure will cost between three and four thousand dollars when completed, according to a statement made by Father Gallant, of Skagway, who is here overseeing the work of the erection. Arrangements for the erection of the building were completed some time ago and the lumber arrived last week from Wrangell. Father Gallant stated that, for the time being at least, the work o...

  • Fire prevention week at Good Beginnings

    Oct 12, 2023

    Josh Rathmann and Ryan Welde visited Good Beginnings for Fire Prevention Week. The students got to explore the ambulance and learn about fire safety. From L-R Kaili Simbahon, Tomi Taylor, Cameron Versteeg, Flora Smith, Maeve Uppencamp, Josh Rathmann, Ryan Welde, Levi Clemens and Hayley Short....

  • SOUPerheroes show up for Empty Bowls event

    Oct 12, 2023

    Local nonprofit Humanity In Progress hosted their second annual Empty Bowls event Saturday evening at the Sons of Norway Hall, where 167 community members gathered for soup, silent dessert bidding, live music, and to support people in Petersburg experiencing food insecurity through proceeds raised during the event. Passing last year's 124-person attendance record in under an hour, "SOUPerheros" who spent $10 for their pick between nearly 30 different soup options, bid on a multi-table spread of...

  • Yesterday's News

    Oct 5, 2023

    October 5, 1923 – The Alaskan products from the date of purchase of the Territory by the United States until January 1, 1923 aggregated in value of $1,113,355,813, scoring to figures recently compiled by Seattle authorities. Products of the fisheries and allied industries during the entire period exceeded those of the mines by about $2,000,000. The value of the products of the salmon fisheries leads all other Alaskan exports for the period covered, being almost one-half billion dollars. Gold is in the second place, approximately $130,000,000 l...

  • Standing ovation for Mike Block Trio

    Oct 5, 2023

    Petersburg Arts Council and the Petersburg Rotary Club presented a fusion bluegrass performance in Wright Auditorium on Thursday. The visiting trio, led by internationally acclaimed cellist Mike Block, kicked off their Alaska tour in Petersburg, and were warmly appreciated by a sizable audience. The Petersburg Arts Council continues their mission to bring quality live music from around the world to Petersburg with another performance coming soon. The group Lyric and Spirit - a trio of vocalists...

  • Killer whales freed after 6 weeks trapped in lake near Coffman Cove

    Anna Laffrey, Ketchikan Daily News|Oct 5, 2023

    A team in Coffman Cove helped set free two killer whales that had been trapped in Barnes Lake on northeast Prince of Wales Island since mid-August for six weeks, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. The orcas presumably stranded themselves by chasing prey into the lake during a high-tide cycle. Transient, or Bigg’s, killer whales are a genetically and culturally distinct population of orcas that live in the Pacific Northwest and feed primarily on marine mammals, according to NOAA. Barnes Lake has two entrances f...

  • Fall color naturally dyed

    Oct 5, 2023

    An artists' reception took place on Friday evening at Firelight Gallery and Framing for the new art show featuring the linocut, acrylic, and multimedia works of Cindi Lagoudakis and the natural dye work of Karen Dillman, pictured right....

  • Artifact Archive

    Oct 5, 2023

    Industrial sewing machines, also known as cobblers or "shoe patchers," were used to repair such things as shoes, harnesses, leather bags and for furrier's work. Renowned for its mechanical ingenuity and enduring design, the Singer 29-4 was released in the 1890s. Its top-feed mechanism represents a pivotal era in the evolution of sewing machines as it enabled the work to be moved in any direction, allowing the operator to reach deep into the toe of a boot and to easily sew through layers of...

  • Witnessing the aurora

    Sep 28, 2023

  • Yesterday's News News from 25-50-75-100 years ago

    Sep 28, 2023

    September 28, 1923 – Testifying in her action for divorce in Judge Hall’s court, Mrs. Otto Burkhardt branded her husband, Frederick Otto Burkhardt, the wealthy Alaska salmon packer, as an arsonist and testified that he purposely set the fires which destroyed the cannery at Chilkoot in 1919 and for which $290,000 insurance money was collected [$5,206,870 today]. Her testimony reads as follows: “I followed him down from the house to the cannery. He did not see me or know that I was there. I watched him go in and, from one end of the canne...

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