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From 1884 through 1906, the Northern Pacific Railway published a promotional booklet, each year, mainly extolling the wonders of Yellowstone National Park. Although NPRR brochures and annual Wonderland guidebooks initially focused upon the virtues of Yellowstone as a resort destination they were expanded to extol the sights, natural history, and increasing development and opportunities along the northern transcontinental railway. With the extension of steamboat service to the Klondike gold mines, NPRR's Wonderland came to include the entire Canadian west coast and lower Alaska.
There is within the covers of this book much historical matter, some of it new , some old, as well as purely descriptive narrative.
This booklet for 1901 featured artwork of modelled clay on the front and back covers, as well as several section headers inside the book. The designing artist was Alfred David Lenz (1872-1926), New York Hall of Fame metal sculptor and inventor of a new "lost wax" metal casting process that surpasses the quality of work done by master craftsmen of the Italian Renaissance.
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Book Details
Edition Notes
"Descriptive of that protion of the Northwest tributary to the Northern Pacific Railway, an particularly relating the history of the unique trademard of the Northern Pacific and describing Yellowstone Park and Custer Battlefield."
WSU MASC copies are: 002-102589017, c. 1 ; 002-119884526, c. 2.
WSU MASC copy 1 donated by Edwin H. Burgess.
WSU MASC copy 1 bound with: Wonderland 1900.
The Physical Object
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Feedback?September 7, 2023 | Edited by Tom Morris | merge authors |
June 4, 2012 | Edited by G. Gordon Orr | Added new cover |
June 4, 2012 | Edited by G. Gordon Orr | Added a description, added artist & metal sculptor to tags, added a person, deleted "description & travel" from places mentioned, added Klondike, Canadian west coast & Alaska to places mentioned, added 1901, 1804-1806 & 1876 to when it is set. |
July 16, 2010 | Edited by WorkBot | add subjects from MARC records |
October 23, 2009 | Created by WorkBot | add works page |