Legislature(2019 - 2020)GRUENBERG 120
02/18/2020 03:00 PM House STATE AFFAIRS
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Audio | Topic |
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Start | |
SB144 | |
HB74 | |
HB239 | |
Adjourn |
* first hearing in first committee of referral
+ teleconferenced
= bill was previously heard/scheduled
+ teleconferenced
= bill was previously heard/scheduled
+ | SB 144 | TELECONFERENCED | |
+= | HB 74 | TELECONFERENCED | |
*+ | HB 239 | TELECONFERENCED | |
+ | TELECONFERENCED |
SB 144-ESTABLISH JUNE 7 AS WALTER HARPER DAY 3:03:37 PM CO-CHAIR KREISS-TOMKINS announced that the first order of business would be SENATE BILL NO. 144, "An Act establishing June 7 of each year as Walter Harper Day." 3:03:52 PM SENATOR CLICK BISHOP, Alaska State Legislature, relayed a brief account of Walter Harper's accomplishments as the first person to reach the summit of Denali [Mountain] at the age of 20, on June 7, 1913. He left Fairbanks by dog team, arrived in Nenana, and was joined by Hudson Stuck, Harry Karstens, and Robert Tatum. With them were Johnny Fred and Esaias George, who provided support. "Everything they had was what they brought with them." They encountered a myriad of obstacles and bad luck; they lost most of their gear in a fire. The group was able to reach the summit; Karstens and Stuck claimed that if it hadn't been for Walter Harper, they would have never summited. SENATOR BISHOP continued by saying that Walter Harper met his future wife while recovering from typhoid fever in a hospital in Fort Yukon; she was a nurse; they fell in love and were married. They were bound for the Lower 48 on the Princess Sophia when it ran aground [in the Lynn Canal on October 25, 1918]. He was on his way to medical school so that he could return and practice medicine in Fort Yukon. He and his wife perished with the rest of the passengers aboard the steamer. They are buried in the Evergreen Cemetery in Juneau. 3:09:02 PM DARWIN PETERSON, Staff, Senator Click Bishop, Alaska State Legislature, paraphrased from his written testimony, which read: • Walter Harper's name is permanently stamped in Alaska history because he was the first person to reach the summit of Denali on June 7, 1913. • SB 144 proposes to honor this great Alaskan by th designating June 7 of each year as Walter Harper Day. • There were six people on the expedition team: (None of these men had technical climbing experience on a mountain like Denali. Prior to 1913, there were 11 unsuccessful attempts to summit Denali.) o Hudson Stuck (expedition leader) 50 years old. The Episcopal Archdeacon of the Yukon. o Harry Karstens (expedition leader) 35 years old. He was an accomplished outdoorsman, a miner, a packer, and a guide. He later became the first superintendent of Denali National Park from 1921 to 1928. o Robert Tatum 21 years old. Robert was a theology student from Knoxville Tennessee who was working at the Episcopal mission in Tanana when Hudson Stuck invited him to join the expedition. o Walter Harper 20 years old. He was Stuck's prot?g?. o Johnny Fred and Esiais George were two 17 year old boys from St. Mark's Episcopal Mission in Nenana. They were selected by Hudson Stuck to accompany the team to base camp, haul supplies and hunt for food. Neither Johnny nor Esiais would join the rest of the team on the ascent. The plan was for Esiais to return to Nenana with one dog team while Johnny stayed in base camp. • Stuck, Karstens and Harper launched the expedition from St. Mathews Church in Fairbanks on March 13. They traveled by dog sled to Nenana where they met up with the rest of the team Robert Tatum, Johnny Fred and Esaias George. On April 11, they had their base camp set up and started planning their ascent. • The team had shuttled 3,000 lbs. of equipment and supplies in backpacks and would continue moving a cache of gear, including several cords of firewood, from camp to camp up the mountain. • They estimated that in ascending the 20,000 foot peak, the men climbed 60,000 feet altogether. • On May 2nd, they had relayed their cache to the midway point of Muldrow Glacier at 10,800 feet when disaster struck. They lost a great deal of their gear, including tents, clothes and food when their cache caught fire. (A match tossed by Karstens or Stuck after smoking their tobacco pipes). • Despite the setback, they continued climbing and on th June 7, Walter became the first human to set foot on the summit of Denali with the other three members of the expedition arriving after him. • Stuck concluded that Walter could have climbed another 10,000 feet based on his condition at the summit. Harry Karstens referred to Walter as "fearless" and Stuck attributed a great deal of their success to Walter's exceptional stamina and his ability to always maintain complete self-composure in the face of any hardship. • As extraordinary as this achievement was, it's not the only reason we should celebrate Walter Harper. • Born in Tanana in December 1892, Walter was the youngest of eight children. His mother was Jenny Albert, a Koyukon Athabascan and his father was Arthur Harper, an Irishman who emigrated in 1847. • Arthur was a well-known prospector and trader in the Yukon basin. In fact, his widespread prospecting, numerous discoveries and his prolific letter writing to outsiders about the gold prospects in the Yukon won him the recognition as the discoverer of gold in the region and he was credited with starting the Klondike Gold Rush. • But Walter never knew his father personally because his parents split up when he was two years old. It was Walter's mother, Jenny, who had the greatest impact on his formative years. She raised Walter in the Athabascan traditional way of life and he spoke the Koyukon-Athabascan language. • When Walter met Archdeacon Stuck at a fish camp in 1909, he began attending school at the St. Mark's mission in Nenana. He was 16. • Being so impressed with Walter's ability, Stuck hired him the next year when he was 17 years old to be his winter trail guide, riverboat pilot and interpreter throughout his missionary travels along the Yukon. • The Archdeacon tutored Walter and in the proceeding years, Walter seamlessly integrated into his father's Western culture without forfeiting an ounce of his mother's Athabascan heritage. • After the Denali expedition, in the fall of 1913, Walter traveled outside with Stuck to continue his formal education in Massachusetts where he attended the Northfield Mount Hermon preparatory school through 1916. That same year he returned to Alaska to continue working with Archdeacon Stuck in preparation for college. • In 1917, Walter became ill with Typhoid fever. While he was recovering in the Fort Yukon mission hospital, he fell in love with his nurse Frances Wells, who st devoted herself to his care. On September 1, 1918, they got married in Fort Yukon. • Seven weeks later, the newlyweds boarded the Princess Sophia in Skagway bound for Seattle with their final destination being Philadelphia so Walter could attend medical school. After which, the couple planned to return to Alaska so Walter could serve his people as a medical missionary. • Sadly, their future dreams were never realized because they both died along with the rest of the passengers when the Princess Sophia ran aground in the Lynn Canal th on October 25, 1918. • After their bodies were recovered, Walter and Frances were buried beside each other in the Evergreen Cemetery here in Juneau. • Walter's untimely death denied Alaska the legacy of a respected Elder a full life would surely have provided. • However, we feel strongly that passing SB 144 is a fitting tribute to honor this great Alaskan who lived his life with excellence, integrity and resilience. • In fact, Congress saw the wisdom in honoring the accomplishments of Walter Harper. In 2013, Congress passed the Denali National Park Improvement Act that included a bill sponsored by Senator Lisa Murkowski, naming the Talkeetna Ranger Station after Walter Harper. Anyone who intends to climb Denali must first stop at the Walter Harper Ranger Station to get their permit. 3:16:01 PM CO-CHAIR FIELDS expressed his appreciation for the proposed legislation. REPRESENTATIVE STORY stated that naming a day for Walter Harper would ensure that Alaska's youth and current and future residents know about a short-lived but powerful life. [SB 144 was held over.]