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Sitka Jazz Festival

1995 establishments in AlaskaAnnual events in AlaskaFebruary eventsJazz festivals in the United StatesMusic festivals established in 1995
Music festivals in AlaskaTourist attractions in Sitka, Alaska

Sitka Jazz Festival is a three-day jazz festival in the community of Sitka, Alaska that takes place every February. It features educational clinics for participating students, evening concerts featuring professional jazz artists, and the All-Alaska Jazz Band—an audition-entrance honor ensemble for Alaskan high school students.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Sitka Jazz Festival (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors).

Sitka Jazz Festival
Lake Street, Sitka

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Latitude Longitude
N 57.060171 ° E -135.339984 °
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Lake Street 804
99835 Sitka
Alaska, United States
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Alaska Native Brotherhood Hall
Alaska Native Brotherhood Hall

Alaska Native Brotherhood Hall, or Sitka Camp No. 1, is significant for being the original chapter of the Alaska Native Brotherhood, an Alaska-wide Native organization. It is located on the waterfront in Sitka, Alaska, on Katlian Street.The two-story building, built in 1914, is of wood-frame construction, and is about 40 feet (12 m) wide and 60 feet (18 m) long. Most of its length extends out over water, supported on pilings. The roof is trimmed at front and back by plain bargeboard with seven unadorned corbel-like supports in the form of triangular struts. Architectural evidence suggests that the building has been altered and enlarged; adding the front quarter of the building and raising the roof to a full two stories probably occurred sometime after its original construction.The interior of the building is mainly taken up by a large two-story auditorium, with the stage at the rear (over the water). A narrow gallery, accessed by stairs within the auditorium space, wraps around its rear and side walls. The front of the building has a lobby area on the first floor, and office space for the Brotherhood on the second floor.The Alaska Native Brotherhood was founded in Sitka by Tlingit natives in 1912 as a vehicle to fight discrimination against them in restaurants and movie theaters. The organization, which now has a much broader membership across Alaska's many native groups, has been successful in bringing about significant changes for its members, including securing United States citizenship for Alaska natives and passage of the Alaska Historic Preservation Act.The hall was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1972 and was declared a National Historic Landmark in 1987.