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Dateline 1947 – Point Barrow, Alaska
Written by Thomas Remington as told by Sy
Powell
More times than not, people all over the world spend
much of their daydreaming hours only wondering what
it would be like to fly to the moon, sail around the
world, shake hands with a famous person or saw
lumber in the tiny Maine town called Washington.
HUH??
Sy Powell, who now resides in Scarboro, Maine, is a
native Mainer and is one of those people who have
had adventures some of us can only dream of. Why is
it though that when we are experiencing something
that so few will ever be fortunate to experience, we
often fail to realize what is actually happening? We
are in some kind of denial or perhaps it seems so
surreal that reality never actually sets in.
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How I hooked up with Sy Powell is a bit of a fluke
but as with everything, I am a firm believer that
everything happens for a reason. Sy emailed me a
couple of months ago trying to contact Joe Perham,
noted Maine humorist. I built and maintain Joe’s
website and when Sy emailed the webmaster at Joe’s
site, he thought he would be reaching Joe.
Some confusion reared its head and it wasn’t too
long before I realized that being a middleman in
this attempt to communicate with Joe was only
creating more confusion. I gave Sy some addresses
and telephone numbers and suggested he contact Joe
directly. |
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Somewhere in the middle of the bedlam, Sy realized
that I was also a part of Maine Hunting Today. In an
email to me from Sy apologizing for bothering me, he
began to send me some old photos he had of some
hunting trips he took with the Eskimos while living
in Alaska back in the late 1940s.
It took little more to pique my interest and I
relayed to Sy that I was interested in telling his
story and sharing his photos. This is his brief
biography of some of the adventures Sy has
undertaken of the course of many years and I thank
him for being willing to share.
Sy Powell was a member of the United States Air
Force during World War II. The Air Force had sent
him to Tech School to study flight weather. Upon
completion of his studies, he was given orders to
the Island of Shemya near the far end of the
Aleutian Islands. Attu is the last major island in
the chain of the Aleutians and the Island of Shemya
sits just east of Attu.
Sy was not at Shemya for very long. The Air Force
was sending soldiers home as the war had ended.
Early in 1947, Sy returned to Washington, Maine
where his father was running a small sawmill and
dabbling in antiques and second hand junk in an
attempt to eke out a living. Having spent that
entire summer working in the sawmill, Sy realized he
was not cut out to be a “lumberjack” as he calls it.
In the fall of 1947, Sy responded to an ad in the
local post office offering Civil Service jobs to
former military personnel. With his weather training
in the Air Force, he was accepted to a position with
the United States Weather Bureau and along with that
acceptance came an airline ticket to Barrow, Alaska.
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Barrow, Alaska Weather Bureau Office.
Temperature at time of photo was –43 F – had to run out,
take picture and return before film froze.
He arrived in Barrow in the winter of 1947 equipped
with an Argus C3 35 mm camera and would spend 3
years there before being transferred to Nome and
then on to Wales. As Sy points out, it gets a bit
confusing sometimes to remember the exact timelines
as he was shuffled around quite often while working
for the Weather Bureau.
Point Barrow is the northern most tip of Alaska and
is quite remote to say the least. Point Barrow is a
spit of land about a mile north of Barrow. Barrow is
an Eskimo village. In 1947 there were approximately
1000 residents of Barrow and this was the location
of the weather offices where Sy worked.
Barrow was explored by the British and named after
Sir John Barrow. The Eskimo name for Barrow is
“Ukpeagvik”, which means a place where owls are
hunted. Just to the south of Barrow a monument is
erected to mark the spot where a plane, the Winnie
Mae, crashed in 1935 killing Will Rogers and Wiley
Post.
During the three years at Barrow, Sy got to
experience events some of us could only dream of. He
was invited by the local Eskimos and accompanied
them on whaling expeditions, polar bear hunts, seal
hunting in the Arctic Ocean with “skin boats” among
other things.
Sy’s photos show an oomiak, which is a large whaling
boat covered with walrus skin. He would ready the
dog sleds with supplies. The natives taught him how
to “mush” the dogs and take the supplies out to the
whale camp. Whale camp was located about 3 or 4
miles out into the Arctic Ocean to where the first
“lead” was found. A lead is where the ice has split
away from the main pack. |

All members of the families and villagers
helped out with whale hunt.

Orphaned polar bear cubs.
Flown to Seattle and found a home at a zoo.

Natives sew walrus skins onto the outside of their boats

A 30 foot whaling boat called an oomiak.
Its frame is covered with walrus skins.
The whales follow these open water leads to spring
feeding and calving grounds. During this migration,
the whales are somewhat trapped and surface in these
relatively narrow leads. Once a whale is spotted,
crews man their boats and give chase with rifles and
harpoons. Attached to the harpoons are inflated
sealskins, called pokes, which are used for buoyancy
and drag to impede the whales in their attempt to
dive. This also tires the whale to near exhaustion
at which time the natives finish the kill. |

Whale hunters waiting for one to surface.

Heading out to hunt.
Sy is seated at very bow of boat – 1949

Inflated sealskins act as buoys.
Once the hunt has completed, the whale is floated to
the edge of the ice within the lead and a signal
goes out to all the villagers of the kill. A slope
is chopped into the ice to make a gradual ramp
leading out of the water and up onto the ice. Ropes
are tied around the tail and all hands work together
and drag the mammal out of the water and up onto the
ice. |

Readying a whale to be hauled out
of the water and onto the ice.
At this point in time many hands go to work salvaging every
conceivable part of the whale right down to the bones.
Nothing from the whale is discarded as Eskimos have found
uses for every part – even to feed their dogs.
Sy was transferred down to Nome, Alaska, most famous for
being the finish line to the Iditerod Sled Dog race. Nome is
south and west of Barrow and is located on the south side of
the Seward Peninsula. Later on he would be transferred to
Wales which is the most western point of the Seward
Peninsula and is the point where the United States comes
closest to Russia. The Bering Strait and the International
Dateline separate them.
Front Street Nome, Alaska 1950
Sy describes Wales as a “tough” outpost and that he was a
one-man operation for a while before being sent an
additional weatherman. Sy says they became a 24 hour
operation then. He had his own D-4 Caterpillar tractor for
transportation, two one-cylinder diesel generators and a
Collins voice radio communication system. On a good day,
which Sy says was a rarity; you could see East Cape Siberia
and the Diomede Islands. The Diomede Islands are located
about half way between Wales and Siberia.
Wales was an important outpost during World War II. It was a
navigation point for transporting new fighter planes to the
German front. Planes were brought into Anchorage and then to
Wales. From there they were taken across the Bering Strait
to Siberia to join the Russian Air Force battling the German
invasion.
Groceries and mail back then were brought in by bush pilots.
In the summer they landed on the hard sand beaches and in
the winter on the frozen tundra just behind the village. Sy
would drag an old telephone pole behind his D-4 tractor to
keep the runway relatively smooth for the bush pilots.
Around the Wales area and the Seward Peninsula there was
never a lot of snowfall but what snow there was would be
carried for miles looking for some place to stop. A house or
structure of any kind was a good target and one could very
easily become buried in drifted snow in a relatively short
amount of time. Because of this a trap door was constructed
into the attic of the houses so if someone got snowed in
they could crawl out through the attic and slide down the
drift.
Also constructed where a series of posts and ropes strung
between Sy’s residence and the Weather Bureau office. So
often there were whiteouts and the only way to move between
buildings was using the ropes. Once outside, he would wrap
an arm around the rope and begin to slowly back up until he
bumped into hopefully, the right building. Often you
couldn’t see your own feet it would be blowing so badly.

Wales, Alaska 1951

Wales, Alaska 1951

Groceries and mail arrived by bush pilots.
Once his duty was over in Wales, Sy left there and
returned to the States for a couple years before
becoming re-instated with the U.S. Weather Bureau.
After his re-instatement, he received orders to go
to King Salmon, Alaska for a four-year tour of duty.
King Salmon is located southwest of Anchorage near
the upper end of the Alaska Peninsula. The Katmai
National Park and Preserve lies just to the east. To
the west is Bristol Bay. It is while stationed at
King Salmon that Sy had the opportunity to do some
moose and caribou hunting and fishing on the King
Salmon River.
Sy had a friend who owned a Piper Tri-Pacer airplane
and the two would fly down the coastline from King
Salmon about 50 miles and land on the beach. From
there they would climb the bluffs to reach the
tundra where they would often find a lot of caribou
and brown bears. On one of the trips they shot 3
caribou. Not having enough room to take but just one
animal out in the initial trip, they returned the
next day to retrieve the other two. One animal had
nothing left but a few bones and a little hide but
the other was find. Sy’s buddy had covered the
animal with his sweater and his human scent was
enough to keep the bears and any other critters at
bay.
Moose were relatively easy to get. Not only were
they plentiful but you could take boats up the King
Salmon River and shoot a moose that was standing on
the shoreline. They butchered the animal right there
and packed it into their boats for the trip home.
|

What remained of one of Sy’s
caribou left out overnight.

Moose were plentiful along the shores
of the King Salmon River.
After 31 years with the Weather Bureau, Sy retired.
All of his time was not spent in Alaska although I
would be willing to bet they are among the most
memorable times. He spent time with the Atlantic
Weather Patrol as part of research meteorology
spending time on ships traveling about. He did a
stint in rocket meteorology (high altitude studies)
cruising aboard aircraft carriers to places like
South America, through the Panama Canal, down to
Cape Horn and back.
Spending a short time studying tornadoes in Illinois
and then on to ocean weather, for Atlantic shipping
interests, his services were becoming obsolete due
to the emergence of satellites. With not many places
left to go, Sy settled in at the Portland, Maine
Jetport Weather Station and stayed until retirement
in 1984. He has lived in Scarboro since then. He
worked for a few years as a graphic artist and a
sign painter as well as some free-lance art work and
crafting until a stroke last August left him about
90% blind. He loves to listen to his jazz
collection, play with his computer and is an avid
Joe Perham fan.
Sy so humbly keeps telling me in a kind of
apologetic way, “I’m really not much of a hunter.”
What is “not really much of a hunter”? I might
consider myself something of a hunter but only in my
dreams have I gone whale hunting with the Eskimos,
polar bear hunting, seal hunting, flying to remote
places in Alaska hunting caribou and moose or even
fishing on the King Salmon River.
Not being much of a hunter is all relative I guess
but my fascination in the story is two-fold – the
history of post World War II Alaska and the
excitement of the adventures one man has experienced
in his lifetime. We should all be so lucky.
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