TEN-YEAR-OLD GREG AND FIVE-YEAR-OLD SHELDON FLEMING DRESSED FOR CHURCH, ANCHORAGE (1963) by Anchorage Museum, Samuel Fleming Collection, B2021.2Anchorage Museum
JOY
TEN-YEAR-OLD GREG AND FIVE-YEAR-OLD SHELDON FLEMING DRESSED FOR CHURCH, ANCHORAGE, 1963
Anchorage Museum, Samuel Fleming Collection, B2021.2
JOY
Black individuals who settled in Alaska built durable cultural institutions, churches, and businesses. Beyond recognizable modes of activism and resistance to discrimination, the presence of joy shared among friends, colleagues, and families is a testament to the love within Alaska’s Black communities.
These images capture subtle and routine moments of joy, from an evening date night to purchasing a new car or a first home. They showcase outdoor recreation and organized sports, weekends at the Alaska State Fair and Sunday morning worship. In sum, they present a history defined as much by intimate connections, familial bonds, and celebratory gatherings as struggles for justice.
ED AND FRANCES WESLEY WITH THEIR BABY DAUGHTER, CHAIRITA, IN FRONT OF THE ARMSTRONG APARTMENTS IN DELTA JUNCTION, 1973
Anchorage Museum, Ed Wesley Collection, B2021.004.121
Black home ownership in Anchorage was generally restricted to a few neighborhoods until the passage of the Fair Housing Act in 1968. These included Eastchester Flats, Fairview, and Green Acres. Here, a family completes the paperwork to settle in Willow Park, one of Anchorage’s few public housing developments available to Black families. The Alaska Housing Authority purchased a corner of the Cemetery Reserve to develop into the Willow Park Apartments, just east of downtown.
ALASKA SPOTLIGHT, ANCHORAGE INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT, 1955
Anchorage Museum, Ward Wells Collection, B1983.91.C1655.3
This photo was published in an April 1955 issue of Alaska Spotlight. It shows two hunters getting out of small plane. The Alaska Spotlight was the first and largest statewide newspaper dedicated to Black issues in Alaska. It was published by George Anderson from 1952 to 1969.
In 1938, Carl Stotz founded the first organized baseball league for pre-teen boys in his hometown of Williamsport, Pennsylvania. Little League came to Anchorage in May of 1951, sponsored by the Mt. McKinley Lions Club. Games were played at the fields at 9th & C Street, still in existence today.
Shiloh Baptist Church (1954) by Anchorage Museum, Ward Wells Collection, B1983.91.C1317Anchorage Museum
Church
Shiloh Baptist Church, 1954
Anchorage Museum, Ward Wells Collection, B1983.91.C1317
The Black Church embodies the intersection of joy, activism, and community. Arguably, no other single institution has played such a leading role in the struggle for Black freedom as the Church. Black individuals worship in thousands of churches throughout the nation; there they articulate the struggles of daily life, organize in the face of discrimination, celebrate the joy of community, and share a sense of belonging. Anchorage’s Black churches have long been pillars of strength and vibrancy.
Notable Anchorage places of worship include Shiloh Baptist Church, Greater Friendship Baptist Church, the New Hope Baptist Church, and the First Christian Methodist Episcopal Church, among others. Faith remains central to the lives of many Black Alaskans.
Clarence Harris stands in front of the Greater Friendly Temple Church of God in Christ in East Anchorage, founded in 1953 and still in operation today.
ORCHESTRA FOR THE ALASKA DAY DANCE, MCKINLEY PARK HOTEL (1948) by Anchorage Museum, Alaska Railroad Photograph Collection, B1979.2.73Anchorage Museum
ORCHESTRA FOR THE ALASKA DAY DANCE, MCKINLEY PARK HOTEL '48
Anchorage Museum, Alaska Railroad Photograph Collection, B1979.2.73
CREATIVE EXPRESSION
When jazz legend Billie Holiday visited Alaska in 1954, she was among many iconic Black performers who made their way north to perform in the territory and then state during the postwar decades. In fact, Anchorage’s Eastchester Flats neighborhood was the nation’s northernmost Black community with a cluster of Black owned businesses and clubs. Performers like Holiday, T-Bone Walker, Jimmy Rushing, and others were known to play deep into the night before a diverse audience.
Holiday’s trip to Alaska came towards the end of her career after she had gained considerable fame and was generally recognized as among the most talented vocalists in the history of American music.
To see more historic photographs of the Black performing artists who have visited Alaska, visit Roscoe's Restaurant at 120 E. 6th Avenue, next door to the Anchorage Museum.
JUNETEENTH PAMPHLET, ANCHORAGE, 1995
Anchorage Museum, Ed Wesley Collection, B2021.004.43
Each year, Alaskans join millions around the country on June 19, or Juneteenth, to recognize Black freedom. The roots of the holiday reach back to the Civil War’s conclusion in 1865. Over two years after Abraham Lincoln issued the Emancipation Proclamation, Union soldiers marched on Galveston, Texas, to spread word of liberation and an end to the war to those still enslaved.
In the 156 years since, Juneteenth has emerged as an occasion to celebrate freedom, gather with friends for a BBQ, or convene at Anchorage’s downtown Park Strip or other locations to enjoy a day of festivities.
Motorhome of Adonia and George Harrison (1981) by Anchorage Museum, Ed Wesley Collection, B2021.004.271 Anchorage Museum
BLACK LIVES IN ALASKA: JOURNEY, JUSTICE, JOY
For more about Black Lives in Alaska, visit the online exhibition: https://www.anchoragemuseum.org/exhibits/black-lives-in-alaska-journey-justice-joy/
For more about Black Lives in Alaska: Journey, Justice, Joy, please visit the online exhibition: https://www.anchoragemuseum.org/exhibits/black-lives-in-alaska-journey-justice-joy/
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