New prohibition law asked for Alaska. Washington D.C, Historic Reproduction
Snapshots of the Past
- SKU:
- AMZ-SOTP-HAR-98654
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- description:
- Historic Framed Print, New prohibition law asked for Alaska. Washington D.C., 17-7/8" x 21-7/8", Image: 16" x 20"
Beautiful historic reproduction print from the Library of Congress collections.
Created 1937 February 2 Title from unverified data
This rare historical print captures New prohibition law asked for Alaska. Washington D.C in remarkable detail. Sourced directly from the Library of Congress, it represents an authentic piece of documented history.
Library of Congress record: Created 1937 February 2 Title from unverified data on the negative or negative sleeve. Gift; Harris & Ewing, Inc. 1955. General information about the Harris & Ewing Collection is available at New prohibition law asked for Alaska. Washington D.C. Consumption of liquor by Indians in Alaska under the present law was legalized murder" made increasingly bad because they were unable to judge its quality, was told to the Senate Indian Affairs Committee today. Prominent Alaskan officials and Indian educators appeared before the committee to urge that a new prohibition law be enacted by Congress to spply in Alaska. In the picture, left to right: Senator Elmer Thomas, Chairman of the Committee; Claude M. Hirst, Director of the Office of.
The framed print arrives ready to hang; the unframed option suits custom framing. A conversation-starting piece for home, office, or as a meaningful gift. Free shipping on all US orders (domestic 48 states