Bill and Jean Thomas oral history interview with Roger Kaye. Note that Mr. and Mrs. Thomas were not Fish and Wildlife Service employees, but were long time residents of the Upper Porcupine and Upper Black Rivers in Alaska.
David Janes oral history interview as conducted by Dorothe Norton. Along with working at various refuges, David Janes worked out of the regional offices in Region 5 and Region 6. He retired in 1997 as a GS-12 Land Acquisition Planning Biologist...
INTERVIEW WITH ELIZABETH LOSEY BY MARK MADISON AND GEORGE GENTRY MARCH 15, 2003 MR. GENTRY: Let’s give some information to identify the tape. Give today’s date and where we’re at and that sort of thing. Today is March 15th. MS. LOSEY:...
Connecting people with nature; Environmental education; Recreation
This special edition of Fish & Wildlife News provides a glimpse of what Service employees from coast to coast are already doing to reconnect children with nature. From the Don Edwards San Francisco Bay National Wildlife Refuge, where...
Frank W. Sharp oral history interview with C.M. Mobley. Gabriel George is also present. Note that Mr. Sharp is not a retiree of the Fish and Wildlife Service, but was associated with the Hood Bay Cannery in Angoon, Alaska.
Wildlife refuges; Kodiak National Wildlife Refuge; Work of Service; Personnel; ARLIS; Alaska
Karluk Investigations 1949. Kodiak Island. "Rough country between Larsen Bay and Karluk Lake - one of the many mishaps enroute while hauling lumber for use in construction of 2-way counting weir on Karluk River."