Building the First Power Plant
Building the First Power Plant
LarVern Keys was the first Secretary for the Alaska Agricultural College and School of Mines. She was asked to compile some of her memories of her experiences while there. Her husband, George Keys, had a large hand in the building of the power plant to accommodate the growth of the college.
"We are growing! Two wings have been added to the building, a boys' dormitory is in
progress, more heat is needed, more electricity, more water. A new power plant is
needed!" So mused President Bunnell back in '23-'24 while listening to the electric generator buzzing away in the miniature
power plant located in the college basement.
Jack Sullivan had operated the plant -- consisting of a boiler, and electric generator,
a water pump! He started with a 7-kw generator. As demand for power increased, a 15-kw
generator was installed. Then when the decision was made to build a new power plant,
a 50-kw G.E. generator had been installed. All this in the cramped quarters of the
original "power plant" in the basement of the "College."
Jack Sullivan had some mining claims he wanted to develop, so he wished to leave the College. George Keys was attending the Mining Short Course and handling the night shift. President Bunnell asked him to become Chief Engineer, plan the new power plant, equip it, and then run it using student help. George agreed, providing he had full control, could select his own helpers, hire and if necessary, fire any of them. The president's only restriction was that the boys keep their grades up. George prohibited smoking, drinking, and visiting while on the job. He permitted a small amount of studying if it did not interfere with their work.
Since the decision to build the new power plant had been made, things began to happen. In October, the tunnel, which was to connect the College and the new power plant, was planned and begun. In November, the president decided to go to Juneau and then on to Washington D.C. —no planes then—a four-day trip by rail from Fairbanks to Seward, steamer to Seattle, and then by rail to Washington D.C. He wanted to take with him detailed plans for the new power plant and, from George, a detailed list of equipment, machinery, electrical equipment and supplies— everything—even right down to the amount of nails, paint, everything. He was allowed $18,500 for the building, equipment, supplies. That was the total!
George and the two civil engineering men, Archie Truesdell and Roland Chase, who were
working on the plans, and a number of the rest of us worked all that night —a cup
of coffee at our elbows, a pencil "glued" to our hand and a sheet of paper in front
of us.
Anyway, the next morning saw President Bunnell on his way with several brief cases
loaded with material on the new power plant.
George had had a hard struggle with Truesdell and Chase (the professors authorized
to draw the plans). They did not want to plan for a wide door at the back corner of
the building. George insisted on a six-foot door through which a load of four-foot
wood would be brought in for the boiler. He maintained that a five-foot door was absolutely
necessary and he preferred a six-foot door! His reason: in order that too much time
would not have to be used in loading the wood on the cart. Since he was doing so much
alone, time required on various jobs meant a lot. He got his six-foot door! The wood
was green and there was no time to get it dry. Regrettably, that meant using green
wood.
While the president was away on his business trip, the plans were completed and work
began on the new building. A tunnel from the College to the new power plant also began.
It had to be about 180 feet long.
While a trench some ten feet deep was being dug, George took the College truck and
with two students—Albert and George Dickey—drove to the "Fourteen Mile" for sustainable
timbers. They chopped down one fir for a sixty-foot gin pole. Then they felled and
trimmed sufficient trees for the timbers in the new tunnel.
The tunnel was soon taking shape. When completed, it was six and a half feet high,
four feet wide, and the length was one hundred eighty feet. The sides and roof were
completely timbered with a packed dirt floor.
Besides its own lighting system along one side, it carried two electrical cables,
a water line, two six-inch steam pipes, which were 180 feet long, a return line from
the radiators, a telephone line, and a fire alarm line.
A good fire door was installed halfway up the tunnel.
There was an electrical switchboard in the former power plant in the College building.
The same location was kept for the new switchboard. Professor Brown of the Civil Engineering
Department helped with the installation.
And so, when the President returned from his trip to the States, the tunnel had been
completed, the area resurfaced, the road reopened and cars were passing over it as
though it wasn't there.
There was only one regret! If only it could have been a concrete tunnel! This one
answered the purpose but every so often, some timbers had to be replaced, repairs
had to be made to keep it in working order.
Well, there wasn't the money to make a concrete tunnel! So everybody did their level
best to make something that would meet the need -- and they did it. The tunnel was
still operating satisfactorily when George and I left in July of 1935.
As for the power plant itself, George planned to move the boiler down from the College
as soon as the cement floor was ready. He had been busy getting the boiler ready for
its new location. It weighed about 20,000 pounds. He had disconnected it, raised it
onto rollers. He tore out a space in the wall of the building, made an incline up
to the ground level, then, using hydraulic jacks, moved the boiler up the incline
and across to the power plant. Sounds easy, doesn't it? But...well, I was glad to
see that boiler calmly waiting to be "hydraulic jacked" into its new quarters. When
the foundation was ready for it in the new building, with cables, a Spanish Windlass—and
a lot of "beef" —it was moved through the large "to be" fuel door into the building
and onto its new foundation.
I learned the president (with all due respect, we often called him "the Prex."!!!)
didn't think George could possibly do it. I will admit it just looked impossible to
me—but I will also have to admit I was very proud of my husband and greatly relieved
when I saw that boiler resting safely and securely on its new foundation.
George and the Prex. had disagreed over the smokestack. Finally the president had
insisted on ordering the cheaper and lighter-weight stack. Later, due to having to
burn green wood, that smoke stack buckled from an accumulation of creosote and had
to be replaced, this time with the heavier and better-grade stack. That stack was
still in place and giving satisfaction when we left on July 1, 1935.
However, remember only $18,500 had been allowed to build and equip that new plant,
so it took considerable figuring and cutting of corners to come up with a workable
and satisfactory power plant. We continued to "grow" and several years later a "twin"
boiler, a 80 hp. Ames, was purchased and placed beside "No. 1."
There was a 50-kw General Electric turbine generator, direct current, also one 25-kw
De Lavel generator. A glass partition had been added to provide a dust-free room for
these generators. The reason we ordered direct current generators was the saving in
money. We used turbine instead of engines so there would be no oil in the return water,
that water was to be used in the boilers. The boilers were hand fired for several
years, and then automatic stokers were used. Other equipment included a vacuum pump
which pulled the water back from the radiators in the building; a pump for the well
under the new power plant area in the building; and a pump for the well under the
new power plant.
One day, we had a surprise. A cat had appeared from "nowhere." It was cold and had
wedged itself in the power plant. Residents on the campus were not allowed to have
a cat or dog. However, since it was so very cold, George permitted the cat to stay
in the power plant until the weather was warmer. That was a fun side issue in the
power plant that winter.
So we went along for several years. We were continuing to grow, so we changed to coal
for fuel. The coal was delivered by the railroad from the Healy River coal mine. The
railroad placed a carload of coal on the siting at the College Station. Then the coal
haulers, Tom Ek and Joe Flakne, principally, using the College truck would take over,
unload the car and haul the coal up to the coal bin at the power plant. Later, when
we were using more coal, Carl Weller, Harry Lundell, Bob Hoppe, Bruce Thomas, Paul
Wickstrom and Jim Johnson joined the coal gang as extras. The coal car had to be emptied
in three days, so that meant work—and how! The boys worked on a contract basis. It
was hard work—but they were workers and made good money—if they stayed with it and
organized their time.
A number of the boys who worked for George were with him for the full four years of
their college careers. A number of them are gone now, but in this last year, 1983-84,
he has had letters and phone calls from four of those boys.
As soon as the power plant was ready for the "this and that" installations, the carpenters
moved upstairs to complete the apartment for us, and I feel they did themselves proud.
There was a long hall in the center— living and dining room at one end and the kitchen
at the other end. On one side of the hall was the bedroom and a wider hall area at
the head of the stairs.
Glory be! Was I happy! Such a roomy, light, and convenient apartment after being cooped
up in three tiny basement rooms with three tiny windows, out of which all I could
see was feet!
The kitchen was a nice big room with four windows. It had a sink and two water faucets,
that was all! There were no cupboards, no work counter or shelves, and no chimney.
George hustled around and found a couple cupboards with class doors that had been
discarded in the Â鶹´«Ã½ Economics Lab. We bought a kitchen table and four "ice cream"
chairs, some linoleum—but there was no chimney! We had to eat! Finally, we bought
a gasoline range. Gasoline! Of all things in a power plant! But we had to have something
to cook on. Electricity was not allowable because of the amount of power it would
take. We used that gasoline range until we left in '35. George enclosed the sink and
put in cupboards below it. Next to the sink, he rustled some wall cupboards, put in
two laundry tubs below them with a nice counter top. That was my "work table" and
"laundry" department. We bought an electric washing machine and put up four clothes
lines in one end of the room—and we were all set for that department. There was no
way to send out laundry and we were trying to save our money.
The bedroom was small, but large enough for a path between the bed and the dresser.
The living room was large. I had bought a little furniture in Spokane before coming
North, so when we moved into the apartment, we had enough for a "starter." I had bought
a table which could be used as a library or dining table. It answered the purpose
very well in our living room.
As for the bathroom! That was the only bathtub on campus—outside of the one in the
president's residence! At first, we had lots of requests for bath privileges. Of course we had steam heat
and we were very comfortable and happy there. The equipment in the power plant below
made it noisy but that was part of the deal. I didn't mind it as much as George did,
but he had the responsibility 24 hours a day and knew every little sound! In fact,
we finally turned our bedroom over to one of the girl students, Rosamond Weller, who
was helping me, and slept away from the apartment. Those last years—1930-35—I was
back in the president's office as secretary, registrar and what have you.
After we moved into the apartment, no refrigerator. We needed some place for perishables.
George dug out an area off the side of the tunnel and made a nice cool storage room
for our vegetables, supplies, and what have you.
The college, in time, built a steam heated garage, so then we had a car and a nice
warm stall for it.
George decided he wanted a hotbed. He built it alongside the windows of the generator
room. The heat from that room was sufficient for lettuce, radishes and so on. Since
we were on a twenty-four hour long shift, you might say, the hotbed was a little relaxation
and we enjoyed it. As another diversion, an "entertainment," George built a birdhouse
attached to the windowsill right above the the kitchen sink, leaving it open on the
window side so we could watch the birds in the nest. They got so used to me at the
sink, they didn't mind and they were lots of fun. Something happened to the little
wife. The male stood our on his porch and yelled until he attracted a second wife.
She moved in and tore out everything, built a new nest, laid her eggs, and they raised
a family! It was fun to watch and they didn't pay any attention to me.
There were times when the restrictions got a bit trying! Sometimes, in the winter
—we would take some beans, wieners perhaps -- and other food -- down on the flat --
build a fire, and "eat out" -- perhaps at 20 degrees below zero. Sounds crazy, I know,
but we enjoyed it and it was a relaxation to get away from the power plant.
One day, when George was coming back from a creek where he had been chopping out some
ice for our improvised "ice box," he passed a lady and five little girls. Inquiring
where they were going, the lady introduced herself as Mrs. Robert Bloom and the little girls as Girl Scouts. They were out for a nature walk and were on
their way to the College.
George invited them to come to the Power Plant for hot chocolate.
I was taking a correspondence painting course and was in the middle of a "lesson."
This interested Mrs. Bloom, who was very active with the Girl Scouts. She asked if
I would take a painting class. The outcome was a weekly class of five girls "painting"
in my kitchen, and we continued the class for over two years.
Some 50 years later at a University Alumni dinner, a little short plump lady came
to me: "You won't know me, but I was one of the five girls in your painting class."
I remembered her, also, all the paint those girls left on the chairs in my kitchen.
But it was a lot of fun and wonderful to meet one of them again, now a University
graduate and a contented grandmother!
The College was growing! More water was needed. The Sturgell house had been moved
to become the "Dean's" house. In the area between it and the power plant, a building
holding a 50,000-gallon water tank was constructed. That solved the water problem
-- for the time being at least. And so the "new power plant" had been built and was
operating.
However, it did not remain the "New Power Plant" for long. The College was growing.
In 1935, the Alaska Agricultural College and School of Mines became the Â鶹´«Ã½. There were more students, more buildings, more need for a larger power plant and
water storage.
In 1937, the territorial Legislature appropriated $125,000 for the construction and
equipping of a reinforced concrete power plant during the summer of 1938. Concrete
storage bins sufficient for 200 tons of coal, a steel water tank, capacity 60,000
gallons, under-ground concrete conduits for water and heat distribution, a new 175
hp. Babcock and Wilcox water tube boiler, and a 60KW turbine-generator were added
to the plant. The main building of the power plant was 58 by 54 feet. Provision was
made for the additional equipment as it became necessary.
The University continued to grow, and finally George's dream of a Power Plant below
the road became a reality. The account of the development and building of that power
plant I must leave to someone else. I understand the present plant "went on line"
in January of 1964.
Then, in 1934, while Secretary to President Bunnell, I assembled all the important
scholastic material I could get together and sent it to Dean Bolton, Dean Emeritus
of the College of Education, University of Washington. Dean Bolton used this material
especially to gain membership for the Â鶹´«Ã½ in the Organization of
Northwest Colleges and Universities.
We both consider it to have been a great privilege— and a lot of work, heartaches,
and more work— to have been associated with the Â鶹´«Ã½.