A Schoolteacher in Old Alaska

A Schoolteacher in Old Alaska

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  • Author: Hannah Breece
  • Publisher: Vintage
  • ISBN: 0307490548
  • Category : Biography & Autobiography
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 339

When Hannah Breece came to Alaska in 1904, it was a remote lawless wilderness of prospectors, murderous bootleggers, tribal chiefs, and Russian priests. She spent fourteen years educating Athabascans, Aleuts, Inuits, and Russians with the stubborn generosity of a born teacher and the clarity of an original and independent mind. Jane Jacobs, Hannah's great-niece, here offers an historical context to Breece's remarkable eyewitness account, filling in the narrative gaps, but always allowing the original words to ring clearly. It is more than an adventure story: it is a powerful work of women's history that provides important--and, at times, unsettling--insights into the unexamined assumptions and attitudes that governed white settler's behavior toward native communities at the turn of the century. "An unforgettable...story of a remarkable woman who lived a heroic life."--The New York Times


A Schoolteacher In Old Alaska

A Schoolteacher In Old Alaska

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  • Author: Jane Jacobs
  • Publisher: Vintage Canada
  • ISBN: 030736707X
  • Category : Biography & Autobiography
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 337

When Hannah Breece came to Alaska in 1904, it was a remote lawless wilderness of prospectors, murderous bootleggers, tribal chiefs, and Russian priests. She spent fourteen years educating Athabascans, Aleuts, Inuit and Russians with the stubborn generosity of a born teacher and the clarity of an original and independent mind. Jane Jacobs, Hannah's great-niece, here offers an historical context to Breece's remarkable eyewitness account, filling in the narrative gaps, but always allowing the original words to ring clearly. It is more than an adventure story: it is a powerful work of women's history that provides important—and, at times, unsettling—insights into the unexamined assumptions and attitudes that governed white settlers’ behaviour toward native communities at the turn of the century.


Schoolteacher in Old Alaska

Schoolteacher in Old Alaska

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  • Author: Hannah Breece
  • Publisher:
  • ISBN: 9781299267176
  • Category :
  • Languages : en
  • Pages :


School Teacher in Old Alaska

School Teacher in Old Alaska

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  • Author: J. Jacobs
  • Publisher: Random House Value Pub
  • ISBN: 9780517197127
  • Category : Biography & Autobiography
  • Languages : en
  • Pages :


Tisha

Tisha

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  • Author: Robert Specht
  • Publisher: Turtleback Books
  • ISBN: 9780613143462
  • Category : Education
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 0

The author tells the story as told to him of Anne Hobbs, a woman who went to Alaska in the 1920's to teach, but who had trouble due to her kindness to the Indians there.


Last Letters from Attu

Last Letters from Attu

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  • Author: Mary Breu
  • Publisher: Graphic Arts Books
  • ISBN: 0882408526
  • Category : Biography & Autobiography
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 325

Etta Jones was not a World War II soldier or a war time spy. She was a school teacher whose life changed forever on that Sunday morning in June 1942 when the Japanese military invaded Attu Island and Etta became a prisoner of war. Etta and her sister moved to the Territory of Alaska in 1922. She planned to stay only one year as a vacation, but this 40 something year old nurse from back east met Foster Jones and fell in love. They married and for nearly twenty years they lived, worked and taught in remote Athabascan, Alutiiq, Yup’ik and Aleut villages where they were the only outsiders. Their last assignment was Attu. After the invasion, Etta became a prisoner of war and spent 39 months in Japanese POW sites located in Yokohama and Totsuka. She was the first female Caucasian taken prisoner by a foreign enemy on the North American Continent since the War of 1812, and she was the first American female released by the Japanese at the end of World War II. Using descriptive letters that she penned herself, her unpublished manuscript, historical documents and personal interviews with key people who were involved with events as they happened, her extraordinary story is told for the first time in this book.


Dark Boundary

Dark Boundary

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  • Author: Anne Purdy
  • Publisher: Pickle Partners Publishing
  • ISBN: 178720538X
  • Category : History
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 89

First published in 1954, this book is an intriguing glimpse into the early days of the Alaskan village of Eagle, along the Yukon River. Anne Purdy, author of bestselling book Tisha, tells the story surrounding the lives of the Eagle Village Indians. She describes the end of the Gold Rush era changes that took place in the early part of the twentieth century, painting a vivid picture of life’s struggles here and of a woman who reaches out to those in desperate need of love and care. A tale of joy and sadness, with a final twist.


Arctic Schoolteacher

Arctic Schoolteacher

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  • Author: Abbie Morgan Madenwald
  • Publisher: University of Oklahoma Press
  • ISBN: 9780806126111
  • Category : Biography & Autobiography
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 228

Tells the author's story of how she and her husband ventured to Alaska during the Depression to teach and work with the Eskimos


The Year of Miss Agnes

The Year of Miss Agnes

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  • Author: Kirkpatrick Hill
  • Publisher: Margaret K. McElderry Books
  • ISBN: 153447854X
  • Category : Juvenile Fiction
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 128

A Smithsonian Notable Book for Children A School Library Journal Best Book of the Year “Genius.” —The New York Times Book Review A beautiful repackage marking the twentieth anniversary of the beloved, award-winning novel that celebrates teachers and learning. Ten-year-old Frederika (Fred for short) doesn’t have much faith that the new teacher in town will last very long. After all, they never do. Most teachers who come to their one-room schoolhouse in remote Alaska leave at the first smell of fish, claiming that life there is just too hard. But Miss Agnes is different: she doesn’t get frustrated with her students, and finds new ways to teach them to read and write. She even takes a special interest in Fred’s sister, Bokko, who has never come to school before because she is deaf. For the first time, Fred, Bokko, and their classmates begin to enjoy their lessons—but will Miss Agnes be like all the rest and leave as quickly as she came?


The Teacher and the Superintendent

The Teacher and the Superintendent

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  • Author: George E. Boulter II
  • Publisher: Athabasca University Press
  • ISBN: 1927356504
  • Category : Education
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 437

From its inception in 1885, the Alaska School Service was charged with the assimilation of Alaskan Native children into mainstream American values and ways of life. Working in the missions and schools along the Yukon River were George E. Boulter and Alice Green, his future wife. Boulter, a Londoner originally drawn to the Klondike, had begun teaching in 1905 and by 1910 had been promoted to superintendent of schools for the Upper Yukon District. In 1907, Green left a comfortable family life in New Orleans to answer the “call to serve” in the Episcopal mission boarding schools for Native children at Anvik and Nenana, where she occupied the position of government teacher. As school superintendent, Boulter wrote frequently to his superiors in Seattle and Washington, DC, to discuss numerous administrative matters and to report on problems and conditions overall. From 1906 to 1918, Green kept a personal journal—hitherto in private possession—in which she reflected on her professional duties and her domestic life in Alaska. Collected in The Teacher and the Superintendent are Boulter’s letters and Green’s diary. Together, their vivid, first- hand impressions bespeak the earnest but paternalistic beliefs of those who lived and worked in immensely isolated regions, seeking to bring Christianity and “civilized” values to the Native children in their care. Beyond shedding private light on the missionary spirit, however, Boulter and Green have also left us an invaluable account of the daily conflicts that occurred between church and government and of the many injustices suffered by the Native population in the face of the misguided efforts of both institutions.