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Cape Pole, Alaska
・ Cape Police Memorial
・ Cape Pollock
・ Cape porcupine
・ Cape Porcupine, Newfoundland and Labrador
・ Cape Porpoise, Maine
・ Cape Portland, Tasmania
・ Cape Possession
・ Cape Post
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Cape Pole, Alaska : ウィキペディア英語版
Cape Pole, Alaska
Cape Pole is one of only two populated towns on Kosciusko Island, the other being Edna Bay, and has both year-round and seasonal residents. It was a thriving logging camp from 1954 until it was shut down by a federal court ruling in 1978.
==History==
February 24, 1944 Coast Guard Cutter McLane delivers mail to Cape Pole while on Cape Decision Patrol 〔(- Coast Guard Cutter McLane delivers mail to Cape Pole while on Cape Decision Patrol )〕
1946 Beginnings of Forest Entomology in Alaska: A Spruce Beetle Outbreak on Kosciusko Island Sets the Stage〔()〕
WWII Initially logging on Kosciusco Island was based out of Edna Bay during World War II. Large Sitka Spruce trees were in high demand for making airplanes.
February 18, 1948 Coast Guard rescue plane that was forced down during a mercy flight from Ketchikan to Cape Pole in 1948 〔(Eugene Register - February 18, 1948 - Cutter Rescues Downed Plane )〕
1949 The Cape Pole post office was established in 1949 and discontinued in 1953 (Ricks, 1965, p. 9)〔(- Alaska GenWeb Project Cape Pole )〕
1954 L.O.G. Logging established the Cape Pole logging camp in approximately 1954. The company was owned by Lawrenson, Olson and Gibbons. Lawrenson was in charge of the cutters, Ole Olson handled the logging operation. Cape Pole was one of many logging camps in the Tongass National Forest.
1962 Cape Pole is a logging community with a population of about 100 (Alaska Sportsman, 1962, no. 12, p. 28).〔(- Alaska GenWeb Project Cape Pole )〕 there was a camp in both Edna Bay and Cape Pole. The timber fallers also known as cutters were mainly based out of Edna Bay while the logging operations were based mainly out of Cape Pole.
1965/1966 L.O.G Logging sold to Alaska Lumber & Pulp. Howard Clark became manager, Matt Phillips became timekeeper at approximately that time also.
1975/1976 Telephone and Television come to Cape Pole〔(The Day - Alaskan Bush Country Given Telephone Service - May 1, 1976 )〕〔($100 Million Dollar Bush Satellite Plan Unveiled )〕
Lawrenson's wife Stella was a nurse and handled injuries that did not require a doctor. In those days the trip to town to see a doctor was a major undertaking, so most medical issues were handled by Stella.
It is not entirely clear when the earliest residents of Cape Pole first moved there, but there were people with private property before and after the logging camp times.
Cape Pole was an isolated community in Southeast Alaska. Travel to and from the community was almost exclusively by seaplane〔(Cape Pole Seaplane Base )〕 mainly out of Ketchikan, Alaska.
A cargo boat, the Island Trader,〔(- Winifred Kessler, PhD, Sam McGee Meets Club Med: New Challenges for National Forests In Alaska )〕〔(Anchorage Daily News - Dateline:Alaska - April 13, 1986 )〕 operated out of Ketchikan delivered heavier freight and sometimes vehicles. It was referred to as the "Mail Boat."
Communications were entirely by mail or radio〔(Anchorage Daily News - State Briefs - February 20, 1974 )〕 until around 1975 when the State of Alaska put in a satellite dish bringing limited television and telephone communications.〔(The Day - Alaskan Bush Country Given Telephone Service - May 1, 1976 )〕〔($100 Million Dollar Bush Satellite Plan Unveiled )〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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