80 years of the Alaska Highway The 11,000 workers who built the Alaska Highway over the course of eight months in 1942 were divided into units that were tasked with constructing a section of the 1,600-mile road. These crews forced their way through the wilderness toward one another, until the road sections connected. The most famous of these meetings took place near Beaver Creek on October 25, 1942, when two bulldozer operators came crashing through the woods toward one another. Photographer Harold W. Richardson of Engineering News-Record posed Corporal Refines Sims, Jr. and Private Alfred Jalufka for a photo of the two men shaking hands. The image was widely reprinted in newspapers and magazines and the press heralded the construction success as a feat of engineering. The official ceremony for the opening of the Alcan, as it was called at the time, took place nearly a month later on November…
2022 is the 80th anniversary of the Alaska Highway, so editor Susan Sommer shares 10 highlights worth stopping for along the iconic route.
By picking up hitchhikers on the Alaska Highway, Tom Walker has met the Archduke of Lithuania and a man with a namesake river.
Crossing the line sometimes gets you “nowhere”
Father and sons find adventure in a trip to Alaska
[by Archie Bowen]