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Seward and Peninsula
The Inupiat people are the Inuit people of Alaska's Northwest Arctic and North Slope boroughs and the Bering Straits region, including the Seward Peninsula.
The Eskimo languages of Alaska are called Inupiatun, but the variants of the Seward Peninsula are distinguished from the other Alaskan variants by calling them Qawiaraq, or for some dialects, Bering Straits Inupiatun.
* Seward Peninsula
* The Seward Peninsula in Alaska
The Sterling Highway, the road that is the artery of the Kenai Peninsula, opened in 1950 and subsequently the Seward Highway opened in 1951.
Lowell Point is a census-designated place ( CDP ) in Kenai Peninsula Borough, Alaska, United States, just outside of Seward.
Golovin is on a point of land between Golovnin Bay and Golovnin Lagoon on the Seward Peninsula in western Alaska.
Around 1890, John Dexter established a trading post that became the center for swapping prospecting information for the entire Seward Peninsula.
Nome has a seaport, used by freight ships and cruise ships, located at 64 ° 30 ’ N and 165 ° 24 ’ W on the southern side of the Seward Peninsula in Norton Sound.
Wales is located on the westernmost point of the American mainland, Cape Prince of Wales, on the western tip of the Seward Peninsula.
It is located on a sandy spit on the Seward Peninsula where the Inmachuk River flows into Kotzebue Sound, southwest of Kotzebue.
Two years later subsidized air travel between the Alaska Railroad and Seward Peninsula was initiated.
Under Section 10, the land north and west of the PYK Line – which included the entirety of Alaska's North Slope, the Seward Peninsula, most of the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta, the western portions of the Alaska Peninsula, and the Aleutian and Pribilof Islands — would be part of the new state, but the President would be granted emergency powers to establish special national defense withdrawals in those areas if deemed necessary.
On the North American side, burbot range eastward from the Seward Peninsula in Alaska to New Brunswick along the Atlantic coast.
:::: Qawiaraq ( Seward Peninsula )
Response of Nesting Lapland Longspurs Calcarius-Lapponicus to Burned Tundra on the Seward Peninsula Alaska USA.
The level of Lake Washington dropped ; the Black River, which formerly ran out of the south end of the lake, dried up completely, and Seward Island became the Seward Peninsula, now the site of Seward Park.
The level of Lake Washington dropped ; the Black River, which formerly ran out of the south end of the lake, dried up completely, and Seward Island became the Seward Peninsula, now the site of Seward Park.
* Seward Peninsula, Alaska

Seward and Western
Secretary of State William H. Seward, the primary architect of American foreign policy during the war, intended to maintain the policy principles that had served the country well since the American Revolution — non-intervention by the United States in the affairs of other countries and resistance to foreign intervention in the affairs of the United States and other countries in the Western hemisphere.

Seward and Alaska
Secretary of State Seward negotiated the treaty for the purchase of Alaska from Russia on April 9, 1867 for $ 7. 2 million.
The most positive accomplishment during his Administration was the purchase of Alaska from Russia, though this was probably due more to the efforts of William H. Seward than President Johnson.
* 1867 – Alaska is purchased from Russia for $ 7. 2 million, about 2 cent / acre ($ 4. 19 / km² ), by United States Secretary of State William H. Seward.
* March 30 – Alaska is purchased for $ 7. 2 million from Alexander II of Russia, about 2 cent / acre ($ 4. 19 / km² ), by United States Secretary of State William H. Seward.
When asked what he considered to be his greatest achievement as Secretary of State, Seward replied " The purchase of Alaska — but it will take the people a generation to find it out ".
In 1967, a century after the Alaska Purchase, the actor, Joseph Cotten, portrayed Seward in " The Freeman Story ", a part of his NBC anthology series, The Joseph Cotten Show.
Statues of Seward are located in Seward Park in Auburn, in Madison Square Park in New York City, on the grounds of the Z. J. Loussac Public Library in Anchorage, Alaska, and in Volunteer Park in Seattle.
Bust depicting William H. Seward in Seward, Alaska.
* Seward, Alaska
* Alaska Route 9 and a portion of Alaska Route 1 are named the Seward Highway
The Alaska Department of Corrections operates the Spring Creek Correctional Center near Seward and the Wildwood Correctional Complex near Kenai.
Winning the contest in 1927, the design of Benny Benson, a 13-year-old Alaska Native residing at the Jesse Lee Home for Children in Seward, was chosen to represent the future of the Alaska Territory.
Land access to this area is by either the Alaska Railroad or the Seward Highway.
The only road access is a short, rough gravel road from Seward near the Alaska SeaLife Center along a thin strip between the mountains and Resurrection Bay.
In 1920, the Alaska Railroad built its Willow station house at mile 185. 7 along the tracks leading from Seward to Fairbanks.
Skagway was one of the few towns in Alaska ( along with Petersburg and Seward ) to endorse the 1939 Slattery Report on Alaskan development through immigration, especially of Jews from Germany and Austria.

Seward and where
He smiled, but now that he knew where the elder Seward was, he did not intend to go.
The trip continued to Fairbanks ( July 15 ) where it was decided ( July 16 ) that the President and his wife would return to Seward ( July 17 ) via the railroad.
In 1859, confident of gaining the presidential nomination and advised by his political ally and friend Thurlow Weed that he would be better off avoiding political gatherings where his words might be misinterpreted by one faction or another, Seward left the country for an eight-month tour of Europe that included a visit to Syria, where Ayub Beg Tarabulsy gave him several Arabian horses.
Larsen passed her certification exam in 1923 and spent her first year working at the Seward Park Branch on the Lower East Side, where she had strong support from her white supervisor Alice Keats O ' Connor, as she had from Rose.
The cylinder of serum was sent by train from the southern port of Seward to Nenana, where it was passed just before midnight on January 27 to the first of twenty mushers and more than 100 dogs who relayed the package from Nenana to Nome.
US 83 enters the Sunflower State in Seward County, approximately four miles south of Liberal, where it intersects US 54.
He completed his high school education at Seward Park High, where his yearbook noted: " A future Rembrandt … or perhaps a comedian?
Seward, who worked as a doctor in an insane asylum — where one of the patients, the incurably mad Renfield, secretly serves Dracula — contacts Van Helsing about Lucy Westenra ’ s peculiar loss of blood.
There they were turned away by a doctor who was attending to Seward, and they ran to the White House, where they heard the news that Lincoln had been shot.
Instead, they begin with Mile 37 ( km 59 ), continuing the milepost numbering of the Seward Highway where the two highways intersect near Tern Lake.
It is located where the Kiwalik River flows into Kotzebue Sound on the Seward Peninsula, south of Kotzebue.
The Iditarod Trail was a trail that connected a point north of Seward, Alaska, where a forerunner of the Alaska Railroad ended, through Iditarod, Alaska and then to Nome.
Seward attended college in his hometown of Las Vegas for the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, where he played four years for the Rebels and became a member of the Sigma Alpha Epsilon Fraternity.

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