Dead men tell no tales. The records they leave behind - personal papers, business correspondence, court documents, police reports, photographs, drawings - speak for them. The National Archives and Records Administration branch office in downtown Anchorage contains hundreds of boxes of material from Alaska's territorial era until the present, including records complied by major government agencies such as the Bureau of Land Management, the Forest Service, the Army Corps of Engineers, and the Alaska Railroad. A significant portion of Alaska's legal, social, and political history is in the thousands of pages stored in Anchorage. Read more here: http://www.adn.com/2014/04/07/3414430/michael-carey-keep-alaska-archives.html#storylink=cpy http://www.adn.com/2014/04/07/3414430/michael-carey-keep-alaska-archives.html http://bit.ly/1gJSpud http://bit.ly/1gJSpud+ -- Peter Kurilecz CRM CA IGP [log in to unmask] Dallas, Texas Save our in-boxes! http://emailcharter.org http://twitter.com/RAINbyte http://tech.groups.yahoo.com/group/RAINbyte/ http://paper.li/RAINbyte/rainbyte http://pinterest.com/pakurilecz/archives/ http://pinterest.com/pakurilecz/records-management/ http://www.linkedin.com/in/peterakurilecz Information not relevant for my reply has been deleted to reduce the electronic footprint and to save the sanity of digest subscribers List archives at http://lists.ufl.edu/archives/recmgmt-l.html Contact [log in to unmask] for assistance To unsubscribe from this list, click the below link. If not already present, place UNSUBSCRIBE RECMGMT-L or UNSUB RECMGMT-L in the body of the message. mailto:[log in to unmask]