(Letter No. 29) Joyce Campbell (Baldwin).
(Letter No. 35) Martha Brown (Reed).
(Letter No. 44) Arthur and Wilma Gregory and Vern and Evelyn Huffman.
(Letter No. 50) This ringstone was given by the Greatest Holy Leaf to Mrs. Marie Lowell of Santa Barbara, California who gave it to Frances Wells. Mrs. Wells gave it to the Alaska National Archives.
(Letter No. 57) Miss Honor Kempton served in Luxembourg after leaving Alaska.
(Letter No. 57) Miss Dagmar Dole came to Alaska shortly after the first Local Spiritual Assembly was formed. She pioneered to Europe and is buried in Switzerland. The Guardian said she was a “distinguished consecrated pioneer.”
(Letter No. 69) Seward was opened by the pioneering of the Edgar Russell family.
(Letter No. 70) This letter so encouraged the friends when it was re-read a year and a half later that it changed attitudes from one of discouragement to confidence and enthusiasm which resulted in the formation of the first Local Spiritual Assembly of Ketchikan the following Ridván.
(Letter No. 76) Janet Johnson (Smith) later became the Secretary of the Alaska National Spiritual Assembly.
(Letter No. 76) The Bahá’í Center at Unalaska was dedicated by Florence Mayberry at the first public meeting in February, 1958.