Bahai Library Online

Tag "Alaska, USA"

tag name: Alaska, USA type: Geographic locations
web link: Alaska,_USA
related tags: United States (USA)
referring tags: Aleutian Islands, AK; Anchorage, AK; Baranof Island, AK; Barrow, AK; Fairbanks, AK; Haines, AK; Juneau, AK; Kodiak Islands, AK; Kotzebue, AK; Nome, AK; Skagway, AK; St. Lawrence Island; Unalaska, AK; Wrangell, AK

"Alaska, USA" appears in:

1.   from the main catalog (9 results; less)

  1. John E. Kolstoe. Alaskan Bahá'í Community: Its Growth and Development: The Formative Years: To 156 B. E. (1999) (1999). Compilation of historical materials on the Faith in Alaska up through the late 1990s.
  2. Earl Redman. Betty Becker, Valiant Servant Pioneer (2017). The story of a Bahá’í from Kansas who moved first to Alaska to spread the Bahá’í Faith there and then to Chile. Link to document offsite.
  3. Amine de Mille. Emogene Hoagg: Exemplary Pioneer (1973-10). Biography of travel-teacher and translator of the Writings into Italian.
  4. Peter Terry. Henrietta Emogene Martin Hoagg: Short Biographical Monograph (1997). Biography of a travel-teacher, translator of the Writings into Italian, and the first pioneer to Italy. She had a great impact on her fellow believers during her lifetime, but is little-recognized today.
  5. Shoghi Effendi. High Endeavors: Letters to Alaska (1976).
  6. Paula Bidwell, comp. Native Bahá'ís: Bios of past and contemporary Bahá'ís of native ancestry (2014). Links to photographs and information from the 1910s to the present about Native Bahá'ís, both from the United States, Canada, Hawaii, and Alaska, and indigenous Bahá'ís elsewhere around the world.
  7. Universal House of Justice. Ridván 1996 (Four Year Plan) - To the Followers of Bahá'u'lláh in North America: Alaska, Canada, Greenland and the United States: Bahá'í Era 153 (1996). Country-specific portion of the annual message to the Bahá'ís of the world: North America.
  8. William Sears. Talk "Arise" at Anchorage Conference (1976-07). Address to the International Teaching Conference, Anchorage, July 1976.
  9. Joyce Baldwin. Walking the Spiritual Path with Both Feet Planted Firmly on the Ground (2016). Overview of the life of a Bahá'í native from indigenous-Tsimshian ancestry, who pioneered to Alaska and a reserve in Washington, and member of the LSA of Arcata, California. Includes reflections on teaching to Natives.

2.   from the Chronology (18 results; less)

  1. 1905-00-00 — Agnes Alexander arrived in Alaska, the first Bahá'í travelling teacher to visit the territory. [BBRSM:107]
  2. 1915-06-16 — Miss Margaret Green of Washington DC arrived in Alaska, the first known resident Bahá'í. She settled in Juneau from 1915 to 1918 and worked as a public librarian. [NSA site]
  3. 1926-01-00
      Orcella Rexford and her husband Dr Gayne Gregory (the first to accept the Faith in Alaska) went to Haifa on pilgrimage and were technically the first from Alaska to do so. They were in the process of moving from Alaska to the Continental USA. [SETPE1p112-113 ]
    • See BW11p495-498 for for details of the life of Orella Rexford.
  4. 1939-00-00 — Honor Kempton opened a bookshop lending library, calling it "The Book Cache". [Bahá'í News No 131 November 1939 pg3]
  5. 1939-00-00 — Miss Janet Whitenack, relocated from New York to Alaska, became the first person to declare in Alaska. She had studied the Cause previously in New York. The young woman was a graduate of Syracuse University. [Bahá'í News No 131 November 1939 p4]
  6. 1943-09-04 — The first local spiritual assembly in Alaska was established at Anchorage.
  7. 1949-00-00 — Agnes Harrison (née Parent), an Athabascan, became a Bahá'í in Alaska, the first Native Alaskan to accept the Faith in the country.
  8. 1952-11-12
      Dagmar Dole, pioneer to Alaska and Denmark, passed away in Glion, Switzerland.
    • Shoghi Effendi said she was the 'first to give her life for the Cause in the European project'. [BW12:702; ZK66–7]
    • For her obituary see BW12:701–2.
    • See also Bahá'í Chronicles and Find a Grave.
  9. 1954-00-02 — The first Tlinget from Alaska to become a Bahá'í, Eugene King, enrolled.
  10. 1954-05-01 — Elinore Putney arrived in the Aleutian Islands and was named a Knight of Bahá'u'lláh. [BW13:449]
  11. 1956-00-00 — The first Tlinget to become a Bahá'í in Alaska, Joyce Anderson Combs, enrolled.
  12. 1957-04-21
      The National Spiritual Assembly of Alaska was formed and incorporated immediately upon formation. [HE31]
    • This was the first time a political entity (i.e. the United States) was subdivided to form a national spiritual assembly. [BW13:270]
    • In 1927 the National Spiritual Assembly of the United States and Canada resolved, in their Declaration of Trust and By-law of the National Spiritual Assembly, to exclude Alaska and Hawaii and all United States trusts and territories including Puerto Rico from their jurisdiction. [Constitution of the National Spiritual Assembly of the Bahá'ís of the United States]
    • Picture.
  13. 1958-00-00 — The first Aleut to become a Bahá'í, Vassa Lekanoff, enrolled in Unalaska.
  14. 1959-00-02 — The first Inuit in Alaska to become a Bahá'í, William Wiloya, enrolled in Nome.
  15. 1974-00-00 — The first Native Council took place in Haines, Alaska, attended by 50 native Bahá'ís.
  16. 1974-04-21 — The first local spiritual assembly of Kotzebue, an Iñupiat Eskimo community situated north of the Arctic Circle, was formed.
  17. 1976-01-10 — The most northerly-located local spiritual assembly in the world was formed in the Iñupiat community of Barrow, Alaska.
  18. 1976-07-23
      An International Teaching Conference was held in Anchorage, Alaska, attended by 1,005 Bahá'ís. [BW17:81]
    • For the message of the Universal House of Justice see BW17:130–1.
    • For pictures see BW17:110, 113, 116–17.
 
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