Clark Gruening was born in San Francisco, California, the son of Huntington Sanders "Hunt" Gruening, the second-born and (after 1955) only surviving son of Ernest Gruening, who at the time of Clark's birth was governor of the Territory of Alaska.
After World War II service in the U.S Navy, SC-500 was selected for transfer to the Soviet Navy in Project Hula – a secret program for the transfer of U.S. Navy ships to the Soviet Navy at Cold Bay, Territory of Alaska, in anticipation of the Soviet Union joining the war against Japan.
Alaska | Northern Territory | Australian Capital Territory | Anchorage, Alaska | Indian Territory | Alaska Highway | Fairbanks, Alaska | New Mexico Territory | Utah Territory | Alaska Railroad | Nome, Alaska | Arizona Territory | Palmerston, Northern Territory | Northwest Territory | Washington Territory | Katherine, Northern Territory | Dakota Territory | Juneau, Alaska | Skagway, Alaska | University of Alaska Fairbanks | Trans-Alaska Pipeline System | Territory of Hawaii | Nebraska Territory | Kwantung Leased Territory | Colorado Territory | Wisconsin Territory | territory | Duntroon, Australian Capital Territory | Alawa, Northern Territory | Yuendumu, Northern Territory |
Alberta Daisy Schenck Adams (June 1, 1928 – July 6, 2009) was a teenage civil rights activist in the struggle for equality by the indigenous peoples in the United States Territory of Alaska.
While in the far north, Whymper served on the Vancouver Island Exploring Expedition, the Western Union Telegraph Expedition (1865), spending the winter of 1866 at Nulato, Alaska with W.H. Dall and travelling up the Yukon River to Fort Yukon, where he witnessed the first American flag being raised over the new territory of Alaska.