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Report from Wilford B. Hoggatt to Theodore Roosevelt

Report from Wilford B. Hoggatt to Theodore Roosevelt

Governor Hoggatt sends President Roosevelt a report of Alaska’s administrative and legislative needs. Hoggatt believes the territory has multiple pressing needs, including more lighthouses, a new judicial division, and regulation of the growing railroad industry. He wishes to reduce the number of saloons and dance halls, believing these are centers for agitation against the government. The territory remains rich in natural resources but sparsely populated, and its mines are not producing because mining interest has largely shifted to other parts of the country. Hoggatt doesn’t feel that the territory has a large enough population or tax base to maintain its own standards of law and order, so he believes Alaska’s government not be reorganized until its future is more stable.

Collection

Library of Congress Manuscript Division

Creation Date

1907-09-24

Creator(s)

Hoggatt, Wilford B. (Wilford Bacon), 1865-1938