Anchorage Museum On July 15, 1923, President Warren Harding hammered a golden spike into train tracks in central Alaska. It was the ceremonial final piece of the Alaska Railroad, which connected ...
Known as Alaska’s Golden Spike, the object represented ... It was loaned to President Warren G. Harding to use at a ceremony marking the completion of the railroad on July 15, near the city ...
The city of Anchorage thanked him for his work by presenting him the golden spike. He sent it back from Seattle for the ceremony featuring President Warren G. Harding. On July 15, 1923 ...
I’LL CHECK IN ON THEM, MAKE SURE THEY’RE DOING IT RIGHT. President Warren G. Harding drove a golden spike into the final coupling of the Alaska Railroad more than a century ago, a ceremonial act that ...
U.S. Army Col. Frederick Mears, the project's lead engineer, was honored with the golden spike by the city of Anchorage. On July 15, 1923, President Warren G. Harding attended a ceremony near Nenana, ...
This image provided by Christie's Images shows a golden spike driven by President Warren G. Harding in Nenana, Alaska, just days before he died in office, which marked the completion of the Alaska ...
The Golden Spike used to symbolically finish construction of the Alaska Railroad in 2023 is seen in this undated photo. President Warren Harding hammered the spike in a ceremony in Nenana.
It was a ceremonial spike meant to symbolize the completion of the Alaska Railroad. In 1923, President Warren G. Harding opened the railroad in Nenana by driving the spike into the track. Harding was ...
0.33% copper, 0.04 g/t gold over 11.15 m (hole GR-24-003, 69.85m to 81.0 m) – Including, 1.29% copper, 0.19 g/t gold over 1.50 m (69.85m to 71.35m) – and 1.37% copper, 0.02 g/t gold over 0.50 ...