It is the only original wooden bridge still in use from the Alaska Highway project. Work began in November of 1942. Fort Nelson, British Columbia, Historic Mile 300 The multi-ton Caterpillar D-8 ...
No one was hurt when the structure fell onto the Seward Highway on the south side of Alaska's biggest city, according to the Alaska Department of Transportation & Public Facilities. A highway ...
With transportation to the remote areas of Alaska and British Columbia unreliable at best ... before they could begin the day's work. The highway builders were constantly on the move, at a ...
A state-owned operation founded in 1963, the Alaska Marine Highway primarily serves as a passenger, vehicle and freight service for British Columbian and Inside Passage ports that lack road access ...
In Canada's Yukon Territory, you'll find a peculiar attraction dating back to 1942, featuring over 77,000 signs ranging from ...
ANCHORAGE, Alaska — The side fencing and roof of a pedestrian bridge fell in strong wind early Sunday, closing the main highway south of Anchorage in both directions until the debris could be ...
MV Columbia is the first Alaska Marine Highway System vessel to offer free, ship-wide WiFi; federal funding means other ...
Travelers on the Alaska Marine Highway’s ferry Columbia got an unexpected Christmas present on a recent trip from Bellingham to Southeast Alaska: Wi-Fi. The Alaska Department of Transportation ...
of the Yukon and British Columbia provinces. The new border would follow the Alaska Highway east until it met the Haines Cut-Off, and from there down to just east of Haines. As Lyons saw it ...
The Alaska Marine Highway's Wi-Fi pilot program has launched on the M/V Columbia, with over 450 passengers connecting so far.