History; Game wardens; Law enforcement; Personnel; Poaching; Employees (USFWS)
Note: "121 mink skins illegally taken and seized by U.S. Game Management Agent Childers" in Wrangell located in Southeast Alaska. Game warden holds up mink skins.
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.
Oral history interview with Bruce Conant as conducted by Roger Kaye. Bruce was a pilot for the FWS and conducted waterfowls surveys out of Juneau, Alaska.
Seventy-five years of successful
wildlife management is the
remarkable legacy of the
Pittman-Robertson Wildlife
Restoration Act, and the cause
of our 75th celebration. Along
with the Dingell-Johnson Sport
Fish Restoration Act, it is the
foundation...
History; Biography; Fishing; Hunting; Law enforcement; Military; Wilderness; Wildlife management;
Oral history interview with Charles L. Gray. Charles L. Gray Oral History Interview 311 Slater St. Fairbanks, AK 99701 May 20, 2000 Interviewed by James G. King
History; Biography; Aquatic birds; Birds; Boats; Coastal environments; Commercial fishing; Crustaceans; Fishes; Fishing; Game wardens; Human impacts; Hunting; Indigenous populations; Islands; Law enforcement; Overfishing; Places (Human-made);...
Oral history interview with Cigar Daisey and Newman Merritt with Dave Hall as interviewer. There are two other gentleman present. They are not identified, other than the fact that one of them is referred to as “Pete”. They are from North...
Oral history interview with Cigar Daisey with Dave Hall as interviewer. [On page 5, two additional men arrive and join conversation. They are not identified. I have called them MAN who sounds older, and MAN 2, who sounds younger. They are from...
Biography; Biologists (USFWS); Employees (USFWS); History; Military; Management; Aviation; Work of the Service; Wildlife management; Collaboration; Conservation; Native Americans;
Clay Hardy oral history interview as conducted by Norman Olson. Clady Hardy also spent time at Brigantine National Wildlife Refuge, Amchika, and in Anchorage.