[[{"type":"media","view_mode":"media_original","fid":"1167","attributes":{"alt":"Book cover -- Coming of Age in the West 1883-1906","class":"media-image","height":"225","style":"font-size: 1rem; line-height: 1.6; width: 150px; height: 225px; border-width: 1px; border-style: solid; float: left; margin: 0 10px 10px 0;","title":"Coming of Age in the West 1883-1906","width":"150"}}]]Coming of Age in the West 1883-1906
Routledge
© 2011
ISBN: 1456326074
178 pages
 
by Will E. Gurr and Ted Robert Gurr
 
 
 
In Coming of Age in the West 1883-1906, Ted Robert Gurr tells a story of western American and Alaskan life and travel by annotating a barely legible copy of his uncle Will's late-in-life memoirs.
 
Will's youth was filled with adventures and dangers. His widowed father, the Rev. Henry Gurr, led his two boys to London and then a dozen Episcopal parishes in the Midwest and West. After several failed attempts to sail a schooner to Gold Rush Alaska and a trek over Skagway's White Pass in harsh weather, father and boys rowed and sailed 100 miles on lakes in the Canadian interior to the mining settlement of Aitlin. They built a rough cabin as winter set in and when the Rev. Gurr was recalled to Skagway, 15-year-old Will stayed behind. For the next seven years he made his own way. His memoirs describe vividly the years in which he worked, hunted and sailed a charter launch along Alaska's Inside Passage.
 
Coming of Age in the West ends with an account of Will's life in Chelan, a resort town located at the edge of the Cascade Mountains in north central Washington, where he settled down in 1907. In Will's 70 years in Chelan he became a successful businessman and photographer, married twice, and took a leading role in public life. Family memories, letters and museum records provide rare insights into the character of a resilient and self-confident man with a strong moral compass.
 
The written record is illustrated with 24 restored photographs of Alaska and the West, most of them taken by Will and his father.