• About
    • About
    • FAQs
      • Emblem
      • Igloos
      • Igloo History
    • Past Igloo Presidents
    • Committees
    • Juneau Igloo Royalty
    • Charter Members
    • Igloo Officers
      • 2023 Juneau Igloo Officers
      • 2024 Juneau Igloo Officers
      • 2013 Juneau Igloo Officers
      • 2014 Juneau Igloo Officers
      • 2015 Juneau Igloo Officers
  • Join
  • Calendar
  • Contact
    • Contact
    • Grand Igloo Officers Directory
    • Statewide Igloos
  • 2024 Officers Installation
  • 2024 Telephone Hill Advocacy
  • 2024 Pioneer Forget-Me_Not Tea
  • 2024 Gold Rush Days
  • Newsletters
  • 2024 Independence Day
  • 2024 King and Queen Coronation
  • Historic Districts and Places
    • Historic Districts and Places
    • Casey-Shattuck Historic Neighborhood
    • Chicken Ridge Historic District
    • Douglas Townsite
    • Downtown Historic District
    • Douglas Historic Cemeteries
    • Historic Shipwreck Sites
    • X'unaxi, Juneau Indian Village Historic Neighborhood
    • Douglas Indian Village Historic Neighborhood
    • Juneau Townsite Historic Neighborhood
    • Starr Hill Historic Neighborhood
    • Telephone Hill Historic Neighborhood
    • Tidelands Historic Neighborhood
    • Treadwell Mine
    • Fort Durham site
    • Kennedy Street Mine Workers Houses
    • Jualpa Mining Camp
  • 2024 Petersburg Mayfest
  • Historic Properties
    • Historic Properties
    • Alaska Coastal Airlines Hangars
    • Governor's Mansion
    • Alaska Steam Laundry Company
    • Alaskan Hotel
    • Bergmann Hotel
    • Davis House
    • Frances House
    • Gruening Cabin
    • Holy Trinity Episcopal Cathedral
    • Wickersham House
    • Rudy-Kodzoff House
    • Valentine Building
    • Juneau Memorial Library
    • Mayflower School
    • MacKinnon Apartments
    • St Nicholas Russian Orthodox Church
    • Point Retreat Light Station
    • Sentinal Island Light Station
    • Twin Glacier Camp
    • McCloskey Mansion
    • Rustgard House
    • Norton House
    • Walker House
    • Jenne House
    • Thornton House
    • Cole-Carter House
    • Cole House
    • Mize House
    • Mullen-Herbert House
    • Geyer House
    • Perelle House
    • Bradford House
    • Johnstone Redelet House
    • Hermann House
    • Torvinin House
    • Longenbaugh House
    • Edward Webster House
    • John Peterson House
    • William Bosch House
    • Edward Bayless House
    • Martin House
    • Worthen House
    • Augustus Brown House
    • Judge George Alexander House
    • Percy Reynolds House
    • Anita Kodzoff House
    • Juneau Motor Company
    • Juneau & Douglas Telephone Company Building
    • Wlden & Allen Engstrom Building
    • Douglas Indian Cemetery
    • Douglas Catholic Cemetery
    • Douglas Asian Cemetery
    • Douglas Eagles Cemetery
  • 2024 Scholarships
  • Historical Events
    • Historical Events
    • First Alaskan Air Expedition
    • 1834 Charter of Sons of Norway Svalbard Lodge
    • Tlinglit settle Juneau Indian Village
    • Gold Discovered, Juneau Founded
  • Historic Pioneers
  • 2024 Candidates Forum
  • Projects-Activities
    • Projects-Activities
    • Current Activities
    • Past Activities
      • King and Queen Regent Tea
      • Fourth of July
      • Summer Picnic
      • Christmas Party
      • Wood Stacking Contest
      • Grand Igloo Convention
      • Movie Night
      • Sweethearts Ball
      • Scholarship Winners
    • Current Projects
      • Little Sister of Liberty
      • Douglas Cemetery Restoration
      • Lone Sailor Memorial
    • Past Projects
      • First Juneau Alaska Day Ball Held
      • Richard Harris & Joseph Juneau Memorial
      • Pioneer Pavilion Donation
      • Pioneers of Alaska Igloo 6 donates $10,000 to Whale Project
      • Conservation of POA Murals
    • Scholarships
  • Music
    • Music
    • Alaska's Flag
    • Alaska, I love you.
    • The Forty-Ninth Star
  • Donate
    • Donate
    • Stay At Home Tea

Pages tagged "Edward Webster"


Frank Bach

Posted on Historical Pioneers B by Dorene Lorenz · January 09, 2024 11:32 PM

Frank Xavier Bach was November 3, 1850 in Germany, his parents were Peter Bach of Germany and Julia Miller Bachof Barvaria/Germany.  He was 5'8", 150 pounds.

He lived in Douglas with his sister, Anna Kunigunde Bach-Zengel-Graf the last few days of her life. His brother, George Bach, lives in Taku Harbor.

He married Ellen Calhoun-Bach, they had six children, four of whom survived to adulthood - Alice Bach-Coughlin and and Lenore Bach-Edwins, and a son, Cecil Bach.

He joined Edward Webster in forming the Juneau Douglas Telephone Company.

District Recorder records and the 1894 plat map of Juneau Townsite show Edward Webster and his business partner, Frank Bach, owning Lots 7 and 8 in Block 1, where the Edward Webster House and the Juneau-Douglas Telephone Company Offices stand at 135-139 West Second Street in the Telelphone Hill Historic District.

He later sold out his interest to his partner.

He served as Mayor of Douglas in 1903.

He died instantly on June 3, 1933 at age 72. Charles W. Carter was his undertaker. He was buried in the Douglas City Cemetery.

Telephone Hill Historic Site and Structures Survey, 1984

Find-A-Grave


Juneau & Douglas Telephone Company Building

Posted on Historic Properties by Dorene Lorenz · January 09, 2024 11:21 PM

The Juneau & Douglas Telephone Company, 204 Main Street, sits on a sloped grade on Telephone Hill's east side below the hilltop where the Edward Webster House stands on 204 Main Street Block 6; Lots 3-4.

From 1915 until 1956 the company was located in a Webster House extension (Hurley, Carrigan 1983). By 1956, the increased telephone demand prompted the company's search for another site and construction of a larger building. Lots 3 and 4 were purchased that year from B.M. Behrends, a store owner and banker who had maintained ownership since 1901.

Two vintage residential structures were removed from the site to permit construction of the new telephone building. The telephone company's new structure housed the first automatic dialing system in Juneau. Today it serves as a switching station.

The Webster family sold the Juneau & Douglas Telephone Company to Continental Telephone Company in 1968.

The rectangular, one-story, Industrial Box building, was constructed in 1956. Its 40' x l00' area encompasses 4,000 square feet. The structure is made of steel and concrete with a steel entry door and stepped, flat canopy on the east facade.

The main floor's small switching room previously served as a public service counter. The room had four windows facing Main Street, but they have since been covered over. A larger room on the main floor contains the main frame of the switching station. The basement contains a storage area for an emergency generator, furnace, transformer and garage.

Telephone Hill Historic Site and Structures Survey, 1984


Bosch House

Posted on Historic Properties by Dorene Lorenz · January 07, 2024 10:42 PM

The William Bosch House at 214 Dixon Street sits on the west slope of Telephone Hill. It was constructed between 1913-14 by William Bosch.

The 1894 plat map of the Juneau Townsite shows Charles W. Garside owning Lots 3 and 4 at the turn of the century. Charles and his brother, George Garside, came to Juneau in 1884.

They were mining engineers and early surveyors of the Juneau Townsite. George Garside was one of the original developers of the Perseverance, Atla and Jumbo lodes in the Silver Bow Basin (Stone 1980; DeArmond 1967).

City tax records show that Charles Garside sold the two lots to William Bosch in 1912. Bosch owned the Old Stand Saloon on Front Street, located next to the 20th Century Market in 1983. The estate of William Bosch sold Lots 3 and 4 to Joseph Stocker in the 1950s.

Ownership was transferred to the Nordales in 1967, and to Roy and Verna Carrigan in 1969. (Carrigan 1983; City of Juneau 1965-1983).

Verna Carrigan is the granddaughter of of Edward and Anna Webster, the founders of Juneau-Douglas Telephone Company. She vice-president and chief operator during the 1960s (DeArmond 1967).

This l½-story, rectangular, 28'x34' dwelling is representative of the Decorated Pioneer Farmhouse style. Its identifying characteristics include a steeply pitched gable roof, boxed cornices and detailed ornamentation consisting of scalloped/fish scale siding on the gable ends. The rest of the house is clad with cedar shingles.

A shed dormer is situated on both gable slopes, and the original brick chimney adorns the ridgeline. The windows are double-hung sash, multi-lite, fixed-sash, large picture and casement. A few windows exhibit a diagonal , leaded-glass pattern.

The extended front entry was originally an open porch. It was enclosed in the 1930s with numerous multi-lite windows (Carrigan 1983). The Carrigans reconstructed the extension in the 1970s. Fixed-sash windows replaced the multi-lites. The original single leaf, three-paneled door to the 5'x12' front entry and the inner door to the house were retained. The inner door has beveled glass with fir trim and beveled-glass side panels.

Pre-1984 structural alterations include a shed-roof dormer on the south facade with clapboard siding and two picture windows. A decorative bay window on the south facade's first floor was replaced with a picture window.

Several other fixed-sash windows were installed on the front and rear facades, and a wood deck and concrete walkway were placed along the north and east facades. A small, enclosed rear entry stoop was reconstructed by the Carrigans. The above-grade concrete block basement was completed in the 1970s.

The interior consists of a living room, dining room, kitchen, small sewing room, vestibule and bath. The kitchen and bath, with acoustic-tile ceilings, underwent extensive remodeling pre-1984.

Original features include an ornate sideboard or "pass-through" with leaded-glass windows located between the living and dining rooms. A partial wall divider between the living and dining rooms displays book shelves and leaded glass. An original stairwell leads to a second floor landing.

The second floor has a remodeled bath, and its two bedrooms were enlarged when the south facade dormer was constructed. Adjacent to the north facade sits a wood-framed, ll' x20', one-bay garage with a vertical sliding door. The structure has a medium-pitched gable roof, extended eaves and verges with exposed rafter ends and cedar shingle siding. 

Telephone Hill Historic Site and Structures Survey, 1984 found this well-maintained residence to be is one of the most architecturally significant structures in the study area and a contributing member of the Telephone Hill Historic Neighborhood.

A fine example of the Decorated Pioneer Farmhouse style, this building was constructed with a greater concern for detail and embellishments than was the basic Pioneer house. The structure's steeply pitched gable roof, boxed cornices and meticulous trim reflect this distinctive design. Ornamentation consists of scalloped/fish scale siding on gable ends, leaded-glass windows and a beveled-glass front door with beveled-glass side panels. Many interior decorative features were retained, reflecting fine carpentry work and preserving the ambience of the era in which it was constructed.

Although the house has undergone several ,..structural alterations, they are not severe enough to compromise the building's architectural integrity. Unfortunately, a fair number of the original double-hung sash and multi-lite windows were replaced with single-sash types. A shed dormer was added on the south facade; there had always been a dormer on the north facade. The enclosed front entry, recently reconstructed, was originally an open porch. The entry's original outer door, however, was retained, as was the beveled-glass door to the main house.


Edward Webster House

Posted on Historic Properties by Dorene Lorenz · January 07, 2024 7:42 PM

The Edward Webster House, 135-139 West Second Street, sits on the east ridge of Telephone Hill Historic Neighborhood overlooking downtown Juneau. Photographs of Juneau during the 1880s confirm that the Webster House was one of the early homes in the area. Robert E. Hurley, the grandson of  Edward Webster and Anna Faulkner-Scott-Knutson-Websterr, owned the home when the 1984 Telephone Hill Historic Site and Structures Survey was conducted in 1984.

Edward began construction of his house in 1882, and numerous extensions were added during the next 70 years (Hurley, Carrigan 1983). District Recorder records and the 1894 plat map of Juneau Townsite show Edward Webster and his business partner, Frank Bach, owning Lots 7 and 8 in Block 1.

The Webster family owned and operated the Juneau & Douglas Telephone Company from 1893 to 1968, the first commercial telephone service in Alaska. The phone company offices were located in the Webster home from 1915 to 1958 (DeArmond 1967; Hurley, Carrigan 1983).

Telephone Hill Historic Site and Structures Survey, 1984, evaluated the structure's architectural significance and concluded that with its numerous additions and alterations, the house was been altered beyond recognition of its original Classic Box design. These modifications contribute to its loss of architectural integrity, and was deemed a non-contributing structure to the Telephone Hill Historic Neighborhood.

The Webster House is listed on the Alaska Heritage Resources Survey (AHRS JUN 070).


Webster, Edward

Posted on Historical Pioneers W by Dorene Lorenz · January 03, 2024 9:10 PM

Edward Webster arrived in Juneau in 1881 and staked placer claims in the Silver Bow Basin with his father, William I. Webster (Stone 1982). Over the next 10 years, the Websters located and developed the Humboldt Mine on Gold Creek. During that period they established the first stamp mill in the Juneau Gold Belt (Alaska Monthly 1907). Webster also worked as a pile driver contractor, engaging in wharf construction along the Juneau waterfront (Alaska Monthly 1907).

Bach arrived in Juneau in 1883, moved across the channel to Douglas and opened a merchandise business (Alaska Monthly 1907; OeArmond 1967).

In 1893, business partners Webster and Frank Bach constructed a two-telephone system across the channel to provide better communication between their residences. The system worked so well that the Treadwell Gold Mining Company connected to the line.

When other residents desired phone service, Webster and Bach formed the Juneau and Douglas Telephone Company. By the late 1890s the partnership dissolved, and Webster assumed full ownership.

Edward Webster married Anna Faulkner-Scott-Knutson-Webster on August 10, 1910 in Juneau. She brought three daughters from previous marriages to the family, twins Mabel Grace Scott and Minerva Beatrice Scott and Carol "Carrie" Swanhilde Knutson-Webster-Jorgenson.

The Edward Webster House, 135-139 West Second Street, sits on the east ridge of Telephone Hill overlooking downtown Juneau. Photographs of Juneau during the 1880s confirm that the Webster House was one of the early homes in the area. Robert E. Hurley, the grandson of Edward and Anna Webster, owned the home when the 1984 Telephone Hill Historic Site and Structures Survey was conducted in 1984.

The Webster family owned and operated the Juneau and Douglas Telephone Company from 1893 to 1968, the first commercial telephone service in Alaska. The phone company was located in the Webster home from 1915 to 1958 (DeArmond 1967; Hurley, Carrigan 1983).

Edward Webster began construction of his house in 1882, and numerous extensions were added during the next 70 years (Hurley, Carrigan 1983). District Recorder records and the 1894 plat map of Juneau Townsite show Edward Webster and his business partner, Frank Bach, owning Lots 7 and 8 in Block 1.

After Webster's death in 1918, his wife, Anna, assumed control of the company until her death in 1957.


Webster, Anna

Posted on Historical Pioneers W by Dorene Lorenz · November 29, 2023 7:15 PM

Anna Faulkner Scott Knutson Webster was a Charter Member of Juneau Igloo No. 6.

She was born on January 29, 1867 at Maitland, Hants County, Nova Scotia. She was the daughter of Captain Thomas Faulkner and Elizabeth McPherson Faulkner. She was descended from a long line of seafaring men. Anna immigrated to the United States in 1888 and was naturalized in 1890.

She married her first husband, Newton Scott, on May 21, 1890 in Idaho. They had five daughters, Lucy born on May 23, 1980 in Idaho, twins Mabel Grace Scott and Minerva Beatrice Scott born on April 1, 1893 in Grangeville, Idaho, Ruth born in Denver, Idaho in September 1894 and Alice born on June 13, 1895 in Denver, Idaho. Their daughter Ruth died on March 15, 1896 Newton was killed by a falling tree while riding a horse on November 5, 1897. Lucy died on November 14, 1897 and Alice died on November 22, 1897.

Her second husband was Swan Knutson. They were married in Salmon River, Idaho on January 25, 1899. She was widowed when Swan died on August 1, 1901. Their twin children Clarence Knutson and Carol Swanhilde Knutson born on April 5, 1902 in Idaho after his death.

Anna and her three daughters, Mabel, Minnie and Carrie moved to Juneau in 1904 and began her career as head of the Douglas telephone exchange in 1905.

Anna married Edward Webster, who was the President of the Juneau-Douglas Telephone Company, on August 10, 1910, in Juneau. The family moved to Juneau and her Juneau home stood high on the hill, where it was built before the town itself was laid out and planned.

The house is registered as the Edward Webster House on Telephone Hill. Robert E. Hurley, the grandson of Edward and Anna Webster, owned the home when the 1984 Telephone Hill Historic Site and Structures Survey was conducted in 1984.

Anna died on August 13 of 1957 in Juneau and was buried in Evergreen Cemetery on August 16, 1957.

Biographies of Alaska Yukon Pioneers 1850-1950, Vo3. p 318-320, Ed Ferrell, Idaho Marriage Licenses: 1910 I U.S. Federal Census Douglas; 1930/1940 U.S. Federal Census Juneau; Douglas Island Weekly News 8-17-1910; Alaska Death Certificate; Evergreen Cemetery Burial Record


Webster, Carol Swanhilde

Posted on Historical Pioneers W by Dorene Lorenz · November 29, 2023 6:51 PM

Carol WebsterCarol "Carrie" Swanhilde Knutson-Jorgensen was a Charter Member of Juneau Igloo No. 6.

She was born on April 5, 1902 in Idaho along with her twin, Clarence Knutson. Her parents were Anna Faulkner-Scott-Knutson-Webster and Swan Knutson. Her father died in 1901 and the family, including her twin half-sisters Mabel Scott and Minnie Scott relocated to Douglas, Alaska in 1904.

Her mother remarried to Edward Webster on August 10, 1910.

Carol graduated from Douglas High School and completed two years of college.

She married Martin Sverre Markus Jorgensen on January 21, 1926. They had two daughters, Myrtle Joanne born in July 1928, and Jean Marie born 1935 in Alaska.

Carol died in April 1957 and is buried in Evergreen Cemetery.

1920 U.S. Federal Census Juneau, 1930 U.S. Federal Census Fairbanks, 1940 U.S. Federal Census Seattle, Biography of Alaska Yukon Pioneers, Vo3. p 318-320, Ed Ferrell; Alaska Daily Empire 11-18-1925; Alaska Daily Empire 1-22-1926


Telephone Hill Historic Neighborhood

Posted on Historic Districts and Places by Dorene Lorenz · October 22, 2023 8:38 PM

Telephone Hill is one of the oldest, continuously occupied areas in Juneau, and was part of the original Juneau Townsite Survey. The Pioneers of Alaska Juneau Igloo voted unanimously to formally request that the City and Borough of Juneau preserve this historic neighborhood.

In 1881, the U.S. Navy established a government reservation on the northern portion of the hill and constructed a military post. The hill's geographic prominence provided the Navy with a strategic vantage point from which they could maintain law and order in the raw mining town.

After the Navy abandoned the post, two government court houses were erected on the reservation beginning in 1893, and completed by the ·General Land Office in 1894. The first court house, erected in 1893, burned in 1898. The second court house was constructed in 1904, and remained on that site until razed for the construction of the present State Office Building.

Turn-of-the-century photographs of the townsite show residences on the hill, a few of which still exist today. With its sweeping view of Gastineau Channel and Douglas Island, the hill has been an attraction throughout the area’s history of habitation.

The neighborhood lies south of Third Street and is bordered by Main Street and Willoughby Avenue. The upper portion, north of Third Street, was once the location of the Government Court House until the late 1960’s. Today the State Office Building occupies the site.

The name Telephone Hill became firmly attached to the area when Edward Webster, owner of the Juneau and Douglas Telephone Company, located his business on the summit of the hill. The business remained in the Webster house until the 1957, when POA Charter Member Anna Webster, who was running the company after his husband's death, passed away.

Several long-time Juneau businesses were situated in the study area. Attorneys Edward Bayless and Lewis Shackleford had a law library in the Edward Bayless house on Telephone Hill. The 1914 Sanborn map notes that the offices of the Pacific Coast Steamship Company and Wells Fargo Express were located in a building south of First and Main Streets.

The Winter and Pond Photography Studio, the U.S. Cable Office, and the Juneau & Douglas Telephone Company were located in the Horseshoe Building at the corner of First and Main. Empire Printing was located between First and Second on Main Street. The Alaska Road Commission had a barn and stables at the base of the hill.

The Telephone Hill Historic District is threatened with destruction as most of the development plans proposed to the City and Borough of Juneau in 2023 called for bulldozing all the historic structures.  See 3 January, 2024 Anchorage Press Article for details.

Structures in the Telephone Hill Historic District:

George Alexander House Edward Webster House Anita Kodzoff House Worthen-Hurley House
Augustus Brown House
Elton & Allen Engstrom Building
Ralph Martin House  
Edward Bayless House Juneau & Douglas Telephone Company Percy Reynolds House  
William Bosch House Juneau Motor Company John Peterson House  

Districts are generally groupings of buildings or structures whose significance can be other than historical visual, architectural and environmental. Groups of buildings can create a specific environment physically and spatially by representing the standards and tastes of a community or neighborhood during a period of history. Unrelated structures often collectively display a progression of styles and functions or cohesive townscapes.

The structures at the Telephone Hill summit, constructed between 1882 and 1939, are collectively significant and create a district. Two factors contribute to the district's significance: The site's association with the early development of Juneau; and the buildings' architectural details reflecting the changing construction designs during the past century. Using National Register criteria, the Telephone Hill structures were determined in the Telephone Hill Historic Site and Structures Survey, 1984, to meet the qualifications of the National Register of Historic Places for a Historic District. 

CBJ Telephone Hill Redevelopment Documents

Juneau Telephone Hill Market Analysis, Feasibility Analysis and Development Strategy


  • Sign in


Powered by people like you
James Simard Carol Davis Penny Coronell Dorene Lorenz Cindy Hudson John George
James Simard Carol Davis Penny Coronell Dorene Lorenz Cindy Hudson John George
Sign in. Created with NationBuilder