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| Name: |
William W. Knight |
| City: |
Sitka |
| District: |
3 |
| Occupation: |
Merchant |
| Born: |
March 26, 1889 - London, England |
| Death: |
March 1971 - Sitka, Alaska |
| Burial Location: |
Pioneer Home Cemetery - Sitka, Alaska |
| Alaska Resident: |
1919-71 |
| Convention Posts: |
- Member, Committee on Administration
- Member, Committee on Ordinances and Transitional Measures
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Quote from the Constitutional Convention:
"I would like to say a few words on this question. In 1938 the salmon
pack for Alaska was roughly nine million cases; in 1955 it had decreased to
less than three million cases. I can recall in 1923 at Ketchikan when large
scows came up the coast and about 12 inches of crushed ice would be put on the
floor of the scows, and truck tenders would come up and unload their fish, probably
three feet deep, and an additional 12 or 18 inches of ice would be placed on
top of the fish, and they moved up to the cannery site waiting to unload. In
1941 at Sitka, I can recall the 12 seine boats operating at that time for the
canneries were ordered to take their gear ashore, as the story went, because
the traps were supplying the canneries with more fish than they could handle.
In 1954, I have been told, that there were 11 million fish caught in the Fraser
River where there are no traps. Now, I also have been told that in the last
5 years about two hundred people have been compelled to leave Petersburg because
they could not make a living fishing; also that some families have been compelled
to leave Ketchikan and Metlakatla for the same reason. The families have gone
to Seattle and the Puget Sound country where they do have a chance to make a
living. So, there is no doubt in my mind that this is a very serious economic
condition we have to face..."
-Delegate William W. Knight, Day 69 of the Constitutional Convention, speaking
about the economic effects of overfishing in Alaskan waters, and the repercussions
on communities reliant on fishing.
| Education: |
Through Seventh Grade in English School System |
| Public Offices and Organizations: |
- US Commissioner, Sitka - 1938-46
- Collector of US Customs, Sitka - 1961-65
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| Further Information: |
The personal papers of Delegate William Knight, including his papers from the Constitutional Convention, are held by the Sitka Historical Society |
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