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Photo, Print, Drawing Kitty Faith Crib, Alley off east side of Broadway between Fifth and Sixth Avenues, Skagway, Municipality of Skagway Borough, AK Klondike Gold Rush National Historical Park The Brass Pic Skagway and White Pass Historic District

[ Drawings from Survey HABS AK-288  ]

More Resources

[ Data Pages from Survey HABS AK-288  ]
[ Photo Captions from Survey HABS AK-288  ]

About this Item

Title

  • Kitty Faith Crib, Alley off east side of Broadway between Fifth and Sixth Avenues, Skagway, Municipality of Skagway Borough, AK

Other Title

  • Klondike Gold Rush National Historical Park The Brass Pic Skagway and White Pass Historic District

Names

  • Historic American Buildings Survey, creator
  • Faith, Henrietta "Kitty"
  • Stinebaugh, James D. "J. D."
  • Stinebaugh, Anna
  • Snyder, Philip W.
  • Gault, Mayme Katherine
  • Gault, Edwin L.
  • Lund, Katherine E.
  • Hamilton, Gregory J. "Jim"
  • Hamilton, Peggy S.
  • Danielson, Gary C.
  • Danielson, Margo E.
  • Pacific and Arctic Railway and Navigation Company
  • Newell, Marjorie
  • Aten, Ralph W.
  • Long, Virginia
  • Clem, Billie
  • Clem, Greg
  • U.S. National Park Service (NPS)
  • Woman's Christian Temperance Union (WCTU)
  • Coram, Mrs. Ollie
  • Wandsted, Chris
  • Suffecool, Virginia
  • Boughton, William W.
  • Snow, David
  • Klondike Gold Rush National Historical Park, sponsor
  • Matsov, Anne E., project manager
  • Park, Robert C., photographer
  • Lyon, Robert, photographer
  • Larsen, Jennifer Rose, project assistant
  • McPartland, Mary, transmitter
  • Dowds, Susannah, project assistant
  • Taylor, Rachel Lanier, historian
  • Wachtel, John, field team
  • Matsov, Alexander, field team
  • De Sousa, Daniel, delineator

Created / Published

  • Documentation compiled after 1933

Headings

  • -  brothels
  • -  wooden buildings
  • -  women
  • -  gold rushes
  • -  commerce
  • -  commercial facilities
  • -  sheds
  • -  storage
  • -  Alaska--Municipality Of Skagway Borough--Skagway

Latitude / Longitude

  • 59.455464,-135.314482

Notes

  • -  Significance: On July 17, 1897, the Seattle Post-Intelligencer announced the arrival of the steamship Portland. It carried in its hold "more than a ton of solid gold" from the Klondike region of the Yukon. Word spread, spurring the Klondike Gold Rush -what some consider "the last grand adventure of the 19th century." Historians estimate that approximately 100,000 gold-seekers set out to test their luck in the Yukon. The majority of these stampeders passed through Skagway, Alaska. There, they purchased supplies from quickly constructed businesses and took part in the town's growing sex trade. Cribs -small, one-room, wood buildings -were among the first structures built in Skagway. Common in boomtowns across the U.S. West, cribs served as private spaces for sex workers to bring clients. The Kitty Faith Crib, named for the woman who was once Skagway's richest landlady, or land-owning madam, was likely built around 1899 during the Klondike Gold Rush. Cribs like the Kitty Faith Crib proved profitable for their owners who charged prostituted women to use the space. By 1901, the Klondike Gold Rush was coming to an end, but the arrival of the White Pass and Yukon Route railroad ensured that Skagway would endure. Families began to replace stampeders, and reform groups pressured the town's city council to restrict sex work. Skagway's leaders established vice districts, confining and obscuring the prostituted women. As these restricted districts shifted, it is possible that the Kitty Faith Crib changed location. Given the difficulty and cost of obtaining new building supplies in Skagway, owners moved and reused their buildings, selling land and improvements separately. The practice of moving structures makes it challenging to trace the historical locations of the Kitty Faith Crib. Records do indicate, with certainty, that the crib was located on Block 10, Lot 5, near the southeast corner of Sixth Avenue and Alaska Street by 1914. Prostitution continued in Skagway until 1917, but once in this location, it is highly unlikely that the structure continued to serve as a crib. Instead, the owners may have used it as a garden or tool shed. The crib was moved from this location around 1981 and served as a souvenir shop, "The Brass Pic," until 2003. From 2003 to 2014 it rested near the alleyway between Eleventh and Twelfth Avenues off Alaska Street (Block 71, Lot 3). The National Park Service (NPS) moved the crib a final time on November 6, 2014 to its current location on the alleyway between Fifth and Sixth Avenues and east of Broadway. The Kitty Faith Crib serves as a physical reminder of the Klondike Gold Rush as well as Skagway's history of vice. In addition, its moves and altered purpose reflect the changing social circumstances of Skagway as it transitioned from gold rush boomtown, to established railroad town, to tourist destination.
  • -  Unprocessed Field note material exists for this structure: N2563
  • -  Survey number: HABS AK-288
  • -  Building/structure dates: ca. 1899 Initial Construction
  • -  Building/structure dates: 2014 Subsequent Work
  • -  Building/structure dates: before 1915 Subsequent Work
  • -  National Register of Historic Places NRIS Number: 66000943

Medium

  • Photo(s): 10
  • Measured Drawing(s): 1
  • Data Page(s): 31
  • Photo Caption Page(s): 3

Call Number/Physical Location

  • HABS AK-288

Source Collection

  • Historic American Buildings Survey (Library of Congress)

Repository

Control Number

  • ak0733

Rights Advisory

Online Format

  • image
  • pdf

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Obtaining Copies

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Cite This Item

Citations are generated automatically from bibliographic data as a convenience, and may not be complete or accurate.

Chicago citation style:

Historic American Buildings Survey, Creator, Henrietta "Kitty" Faith, James D. "J. D." Stinebaugh, Anna Stinebaugh, Philip W Snyder, Mayme Katherine Gault, Edwin L Gault, et al., Park, Robert C, and Robert Lyon, photographer. Kitty Faith Crib, Alley off east side of Broadway between Fifth and Sixth Avenues, Skagway, Municipality of Skagway Borough, AK. Municipality of Skagway Borough Alaska Skagway, 1933. translateds by Mcpartland, Marymitter Documentation Compiled After. Photograph. https://aj.sunback.homes/item/ak0733/.

APA citation style:

Historic American Buildings Survey, C., Faith, H. "., Stinebaugh, J. D. ". D. "., Stinebaugh, A., Snyder, P. W., Gault, M. K. [...] De Sousa, D., Park, R. C. & Lyon, R., photographer. (1933) Kitty Faith Crib, Alley off east side of Broadway between Fifth and Sixth Avenues, Skagway, Municipality of Skagway Borough, AK. Municipality of Skagway Borough Alaska Skagway, 1933. McPartland, M., trans Documentation Compiled After. [Photograph] Retrieved from the Library of Congress, https://aj.sunback.homes/item/ak0733/.

MLA citation style:

Historic American Buildings Survey, Creator, et al., photographers by Park, Robert C, and Robert Lyon. Kitty Faith Crib, Alley off east side of Broadway between Fifth and Sixth Avenues, Skagway, Municipality of Skagway Borough, AK. trans by Mcpartland, Marymitter Documentation Compiled After. Photograph. Retrieved from the Library of Congress, <aj.sunback.homes/item/ak0733/>.