30 October 2010

Legacy of the Chief: Complete Chapter Listing



Contained herein is the complete "Historic Native adventure novel with a
twist of the supernatural," now online.


Below are the listings as links to all sixty chapters. You may click either
the chapter name or the associated image to the right. Please note that I hold a 2001 copyright to the book, ISBN
1-888125-86-1


 I purchased the rights to use the images which appear in
the book. However, those rights are not transferable and the images are mostly
copyrighted with the rights to their use held elsewhere.





Legacy of the Chief


-- © Ronald N Simpson,
2001,  author, Legacy of the Chief

Ron Simpson's intro:


Preface

2001


intro: Rosalene
Nicolai: 



The Story Begins
 2003


(newly-added)


Story Begins

Ch 1: Ron Simpson: Echoes 1848-1982



Ch 2: Wesley Dunkle's
Wrangell Formation
1956


Ch 3: W.A. Richelsen: 

Closing Day at Bonanza


1938


 



Ch 4: Johnny Gakona:  


The Russian C'eyigge


1885



  



Ch 5: Skolai Nicolai: 



A Warning from Uk' eledi
  


1898



Ch 6: Skolai Nicolai:  
Nicolai's Anger


1899



Ch 7: Johnny Gakona:


The Deal

1899




Ch 8: Johnny Gakona:  Sezel at Taral
 1910



  



Ch 9: Johnny Gakona / Chief Nicolai:  Nicolai's Raven Story of Creation

1910
 




Ch 10: Johnny Gakona: Abercrombie Rapids Landing

1914
  







Ch 11: Mary Birch
:


Mary Storms into Alaska

1916




Ch 12: Mary Birch: 
Mary and Stephen Birch Arrive at Childs Glacier

1916



  




Ch 13: Johnny Gakona:   Ketcheteneh Birch and Johnny Gakona
1916


Ch 13

 




Ch 14: Johnny Gakona: 
Johnny Gakona Signs On

1916


  


Ch 15: Johnny Gakona: Chitina Trestle Crossing
1918



Ch 16: John DeHaviland:


DeHaviland Arrives in Chitina

1923

Chapter 16


Ch 17: Johnny Gakona: Interview at Chitina

1923

Ch 17

                                            


Ch 18: Stephen Birch:
 Birch Private Train #73
1924

Ch 18


Ch 19: author: Birch Party at McCarthy
1924




1924




Ch 21: Frank Buckner:


Lunch at Bonanza
  1924



Ch 21




Ch 22: author:
Cap Rescues Johnny at McCarthy

1924


Ch 22



Ch 23: Cap Goodlataw:


Cap Tells His Story
  1916


Ch 23



Ch 24: Cap & Johnny:

Green Butte
Copper
1924


Ch 24




Ch 25: Johnny Gakona:
 Buckner to
Goodlataw
1924


Chapter 25




Ch 26: Cap & Johnny:

Arrival at
Kennecott
1924


Ch 26



Ch 27:
Cap, Johnny & Frank:
 

Boxing Match & Layoff
1924


Ch 27



Ch 28: Cap & Johnny:

Reassignment to Erie

1924


Ch 28

Ch 29: Frank Buckner:

Frank Argues the Point

1924


Ch 29

Ch 30: Cap & Johnny:

The Erie Job
1924


Ch 30





Ch 31: Author:

Departing
the Camp
1924



Ch 31



Ch 32: Author:

Return to
Chitina
   1924




Ch 32





Ch 33: Cap & Johnny:

Billiard Hall
Conversation
1924


Ch 33





Ch 34: Cap & Johnny:

Strelna Work Crew
Sets Up
1925


Ch 34



Ch 35: author:


Returning Crew Meets Tom
1924



Ch 35



Ch 36: Cap Goodlataw:


Cap's Vision
of Nicolai
1925


Ch 36





Ch 37: author:


Emil's Paint Shop

1925


Ch 37





Ch 38: Cap & Johnny:


The Great Paint Job Begins

1925





Ch 38





Ch 39: Johnny Gakona:


Charlie Arrives
   1925



Ch 39



Ch 40: Johnny Gakona:


The Sla'cheen and the Warning
1925



Ch 40



Ch 41: Author:


Henry Takes the
Plunge
  1925


Ch 41



Ch 42: Author:


The Indians Paint the
Mill Gray
  1925


Ch 42



Ch 43: Author:


Johnny to Frank
  
1926




Ch 43



Ch 44: Author:


Kennecott Goes into
Subtle Decline
, late 1920s and early 1930s


Ch 44



Ch 45: Author:


The Marvelous
Assignment
  1926


Ch 45





Ch 46: Frank Buckner:  Frank's Thanksgiving Letter   1926   



Chapter 46




Ch 47: Author:


Reopening the Mother
Lode
  1927



Ch 47






Ch 48: Author:


The Saghanni Ggaay at
Mother Lode
  1927




Ch 48






Ch 49: Frank Buckner:


Blast and Avalanche at Mother Lode

1927



Ch 49




Ch 50: Author:


Avalanche Aftermath
 
1927



Ch 50






Ch 51: Author:


Coded Telegraph
Exchange
  1927



Ch 51






Ch 52: Author:


Frank Buckner Special
No. 71
   1927



Ch 52






Ch 53: Walter Richelsen:


Last Train In
   1938





Ch 53




Ch 54: Cap Goodlataw:


Cap Takes the
Plunge
1932



Ch 54







Ch 55: Johnny Gakona:


Tom's Indian
 
1959


Ch 55







Ch 56: Johnny Gakona:


Chittyna
Indian Village
  1938



Ch 56








Ch 57: Johnny Gakona:


The Last Train Ride


   1938


Ch 57







Ch 58: The Ghosts of Kennecott & the author:


The Ravens at National Creek
  1968



Ch 58







Ch 59: Rosalene Nicolai:


Rosalene
Comes Home
1982



Ch 59






Chapter 60: The Ghosts of Kennecott:


Where It All Began: The Bonanza Dies
  1968

The concluding chapter to this historic Native-American adventure novel.


Ch 60




© Ronald N Simpson, 2001,  author, Legacy of the Chief


Cast of narrators:
 shown in the order in which they first appear in this novel:

Ron Simpson:

 This is the author. Not much can be said about him, except an interesting and
relevant family tree.


See it here
.


author

Rosalene Nicolai Gadanski:
(picture is of

Elizabeth Peratrovich
-
-a
most-fitting model on which to base Rosalene

Rosalene is the fictional daughter of Johnny Nicolai Gadanski who is himself
fictional. She is a composite character based on certain female Native leaders
of the 20th Century. I have recently given added importance to her role in this
story as the last-remaining modern-day link into the past.



Peratrovich

Wesley Dunkle:

He became famous geologist, largely due to his work as one of the  original
Kennecott consultants, but also in his subsequent work to develop gold mines in
the Talkeetna Range.  He lived most of his life developing Alaskan
resources at a time when Alaska was still mostly wilderness.


Wesley Dunkle

W.A. Richelsen:

Walter Richelsen was the chief engineer and also the last superintendent at
Kennecott.  WA. appears at the beginning and also near the end of this
story. Walter passed away in 1962. Well into the 1950s he still worked for
Kennecott as its Alaska representative based in Seattle.


W.A. Richelsen

Johnny Gakona:
(picture is of Johnny Galauska, on whom Johnny Gakona
Gadanski is based)

Johnny is a composite (fictional) character half-breed, grandson of Nicolai and
a cousin to Cap created by the author to assist in the telling of this 
story.  It turns out he may have had a real historic counterpart as a sla'cheen
to Cap Goodlataw, who was a historic character.  See the picture at the
bottom of this page.


Johnny G

Skolai Nicolai

Chief Nicolai,
the Tyone of Taral
: Nicolai was the Ahtna chief who made the deal with Lt. Henry Allen and later
with the prospectors and possibly even Stephen Birch himself. This book revolves
around the spirit of Nicolai although he rarely appears personally in this long
narrative.


Chief Nicolai

Mary Birch:
(picture is generic of a high-society lady. no image is
available of the real Mary Birch)

She was the wife of Stephen. Her loudly-proclaimed negative attitudes toward
Alaska may have changed the course of history. It definitely served to change
Stephen Birch's attitude toward the original Kennecott investment.  She is
one of those characters that people love to hate !


high society lady

John DeHaviland:
(picture is generic. JD is wholly
fictional)

John is a fictional character working for a fictional San Francisco newspaper
who appears as a visiting reporter in Chitina, 1923. He  decides to
interview Johnny Gakona upon a chance encounter at Chitina and in the process
provides some unique insights.



DeHaviland

Stephen Birch:

 "The Great Man," the man primarily responsible for the development of the
Kennecott mine systems in Alaska and the formation of the Kennecott Copper
Corporation who lead that entity as president and chairman of the board to see
KCC become the major copper producer in the entire world for several decades. 



Stephen Birch

Frank Buckner:
(picture is of Frank Buckie on whom fictional character Frank Buckner is
based)

Frank was the junior engineer in Kennecott (under a slightly different name in
real life) who plays a central role in the drama which is about to unfold.


Frank Buckie

Cap Goodlataw:

Cap is the true Native hero in this story. He becomes the spirit of Nicolai,
taking over where Nicolai left off, trying his best to stem the tide as a world
he does not understand overtakes the Native ways of his deceased grandfather
Nicolai. He chooses not to accept this change in the way it unfolds even as he
attempts to survive within it.



Cap Goodlataw

The Ghosts of Kennecott and of the CRNW Railway :

The original term "The Ghosts of Kennecott" is the name of a book written by the
late

Elizabeth Tower
. These are the spirits who continue to haunt what once was
a magnificent railroad that ran deep into the interior of Alaska and the Ahtna
Indian territory.







In the Spirit of




Kennecott Copper
Company's

Braden El Teniente Copper
Mine at Sewell, Chile in the 1930s:

Interview with the manager of KCC's largest underground copper mine
in the world--Bob Haldeman, who was KCC's representative in Chile during the
1950s, 60s and 70s. This is an excellent window into how Kennecott operated from
their inception in 1915 into the 1970s.





Link is here

or with the pix to the right ---->>>













Link to the
Copper Rail Depot large-scale model railroad, Copper Center, AK:



Ronald N. Simpson
/ Copper Center,  Alaska

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