SALMON FOREST - Key Persons


Adrienne Wilber

Job Titles:
  • Member of the Board of Directors
  • Treasurer of the Board
Adrienne Wilbur is a life long Sitkan, artist and mariner. As a board member she most values SCS work driving strategic policy forward to protect the Tongass, seeking out the priorities and values of indigenous leaders and storytellers to inform our actions and philosophies, and approaching conservation with the needs of healthy and sustainable communities in mind.

Adrienne Wilbur

Job Titles:
  • Member of the Board of Directors
  • Artist

Allie Prokosch

Job Titles:
  • Land and Building Community Coordinator
Allie Prokosch (she/her) is our Living with the Land and Building Community Coordinator through the Jesuit Volunteer Corps Northwest, serving as a leader of the Alaska Way of Life 4-H Club, a collaboration between Sitka Conservation Society and University of Alaska Fairbanks Cooperative Extension Service.

Andrew Thoms

Job Titles:
  • Executive Director
Andrew Thoms grew up in rural Upstate New York State. After studying Environmental Sciences at SUNY Plattsburgh, he worked for 10 years in Latin America as an environmental specialist in international development projects. Most of his projects focused on the interface between the sustainable use of natural resources and the conservation of tropical biodiversity. One of his favorite jobs was developing and integrating new techniques for cultivating coffee in an environmentally sustainable way on a Guatemalan Coffee farm that he managed for a few years. Andrew received a Master's degree in Conservation Biology and Sustainable Development at the University of Wisconsin where he concentrated his studies on conservation and economics. Andrew enjoys being outdoors hunting, birdwatching, fishing, and exploring.

Anita Behnken

Anita Behnken is an energetic mother and grandmother who has raised three environmental activists and heavily influenced all seven of her grandchildren in this regard. She has a B.S. in Art History from Wheaton College and is a strong supporter of the arts as well as environmental causes. Her eldest daughter Janet lives in Wales, where she has been the driving force behind the creation of a county-wide recycling program. Janet is also an active member of Friends of the Earth in the U.K. She and her three sons regularly donate their time and energy to a local wetlands restoration and preservation non-profit. Anita's other two daughters live in Sitka, Alaska. Linda's primary focus is the protection of marine habitat from destructive fishing practices. She fought tirelessly and is commonly credited with being a major force in influencing the decision to eliminate factory trawlers from the southeastern Gulf of Alaska. This was an essential step in the preservation of delicate coral habitat, which is vitally important to so many marine species. Linda has an M.S. in Environmental Science from Yale and is a commercial fisherman herself, which gives her an uncommon ability to see both perspectives in the ongoing resource-extraction vs. habitat-preservation debates. Nancy, Anita's third daughter, was a board member of the Sitka Conservation Society for over thirteen years and is a passionate environmentalist. She is also an artist, a talent she inherited from her mother and which her mother has nurtured since early childhood. As an SCS board member and volunteer, Nancy did what she could to protect the Tongass and continues to donate her artwork to further the work that SCS does.

Anna Schumacher

Job Titles:
  • Coordinator
  • Sitka Youth Coordinator
Anna Schumacher (she/they) is our Sitka Youth Coordinator. Over the past year, Anna served as the Living with the Land and Building Community Coordinator through the Jesuit Volunteer Corps Northwest, serving as a leader of the Alaska Way of Life 4-H Club, a collaboration between Sitka Conservation Society and University of Alaska Fairbanks Cooperative Extension Service. Anna grew up on the blustery plains of northern Minnesota, where her family and community instilled a deep love and respect for the natural world in her. This love and respect has led her many places - senators' offices to oppose mining in wilderness areas, pipeline resistance camps, and now, SCS! Anna holds a degree in Psychology from Carleton College, and she is most interested in the interactions between our environment and personal and collective wellbeing. She is passionate about all things aligned with liberation and community building, and enjoys flexing her creative muscle by repurposing old things. Anna is deeply grateful for the opportunity to live and learn in the community of Sitka, and looks forward to building connections with the people, plants and animals that call this place home.

Bethany Goodrich

Job Titles:
  • Director of Storytelling With the Sustainable Southeast Partnership
  • Storytelling Program Director
Bethany Goodrich is the Director of Storytelling with the Sustainable Southeast Partnership and the Sitka Conservation Society. She is a wandering conservationist with field experience working with wildlife, diatoms and humans in Antarctica, Alaska, California and Africa. She holds a masters degree in Biodiversity, Conservation and Management from the University of Oxford's School of Geography and the Environment and a bachelors of science in Biology with minors in Fine Arts and Neuroscience from the University of San Francisco. She first experienced the Tongass while working with the Sitka Conservation Society as a storytelling intern in 2012. She reluctantly left to pursue her masters degree in merry old England. Her thesis investigated how commodity crops influence human-elephant relations among cocoa farmers in South Central Ghana. She is now happily rooted in Southeast Alaska where she focuses on how storytelling and communications can empower communities and connect with policy.

Bob Ellis

Bob Ellis was a very calm, even tempered, capable, knowledgeable man with tremendous depth of knowledge about the environment of coastal Alaska. He brought all this to the SCS Board for 27 years. We are deeply fortunate and appreciative of his work to protect the Tongass and his contributions to a sustainable Sitka. Bob Ellis is a life-long conservationist. He is also a fish biologist, a boat captain, a seaweed gatherer, a wine and seaweed medicine maker, a garlic and potato grower, a Russian language learner and traveler to Russia, a recorder musician, a daily walker, a clear thinker, a widely read practical scientist, and a uniquely valued member of our Sitka community. Bob came to Sitka in 1982 with Natasha Calvin after many years work and residency in Juneau. Both were marine biologists and together they did underwater environmental impact work throughout SE Alaska, diving off the back of their workboat/classic cruiser Nakwasina. There are many interesting corners of Bob's life. He has built two sailboats "from scratch!" He was one of the NOAA divers NASA used to study the psychology of scientists living and working together for long periods in a confined habitat. He discovered Alaskan dulse, a seaweed preparation that helps hundreds of people with the pain of shingles and herpes. When the Alaska DEC chose not to acknowledge the polluted water from the pulp mill, Bob did his own study and sent the results to DEC so the condition could not be ignored. The Nakwasina took Bob and Natasha, and their friends, all around what Sitkans now call their "community use area." During one of their annual fishing trips to Redfish Bay, Bob spotted an unusual pattern in the mud. He and Natasha uncovered the first of five ancient baskets, carbon-dated to over 5,000 years of age. People have been on Baranof Island that long! After Natasha died in 2001, Joan Vanderwerp entered his life, bringing a multitude of family, friends, and infectious laughter - and the only cat that Bob has ever tolerated. Bob lives off the land in his own unique way. Besides fishing and gathering seaweed, he cultivates an extensive garlic and potato patch. He begins with seeds; many of them have come from Russia. He gathers buckets of red and blue huckleberries in his yard. He has extended a long tradition of Calvin winemakers, and has branched out from huckleberry wine to stink-berry and banana wine made from the last store banana offerings "bought for a nickel." He has noted that these wines are white, like Sitka Slugs, which is the icon he has placed on his wine labels. Friends find his wines "variable" and sometimes with the effect of "white lightning." Bob is a past president of and is now an elder statesman at the Sitka Conservation Society. He prepares for the issues to be discussed and comes up, regularly, with the phrase to catch an idea or the critique to quash it. He speaks slowly and softly, and with great effect. He is a man of good humor and good judgment with abounding patience. We are glad that he is our friend and neighbor.

Brendan Jones

Job Titles:
  • Member of the Board of Directors
Brendan Jones, born in Colorado, raised in Philadelphia, attended Columbia and Oxford Universities. He has been a MacDowell Fellow, as well as a resident at the Anderson Center, Caldera, and Ragdale. He worked eleven years as general contractor, starting Greensaw Design & Build, guiding Pennsylvania's first LEED Platinum reconstruction. He continues to carpenter and commercial fish in Alaska, and also teaches philosophy and creative writing at University of Alaska, Irkutsk Technical University in Russia, and Stanford University, where he was a 2013-15 Wallace Stegner Fellow. He has published work in The New York Times, The Guardian, Washington Post, Smithsonian, Sierra, Ploughshares, Fine Woodworking,National Fisherman, Narratively, The Seattle Times, The Philadelphia Inquirer, Narrative Magazine,and recorded commentaries for NPR. His novel The Alaskan Laundry, published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, won the 2017 Alaskana prize, and was longlisted for the Center of Fiction debut prize. He recently returned from Siberia, where he spent a year with his family as a Fulbright Scholar. His upcoming novel Whispering Alaskais forthcoming with Penguin/Random House in October 2021. He lives in Sitka, Alaska, with his wife and three daughters.

Chandler O'Connell

Chandler O'Connell was born and raised in Sitka, a guest on Lingit Aani. She moved back home in 2016 to work as the Sitka Sustainable Community Catalyst with the Sitka Conservation Society and the Sustainable Southeast Partnership. Chandler graduated from Harvard University with a degree in Human Evolutionary Biology and a minor in Health Policy. Following graduation, she worked in Sitka and San Francisco, before moving to Burundi as a Global Health Corps Fellow with the Clinton Health Access Initiative. At the end of her fellowship year, she moved to Rwanda to work with One Acre Fund, a fast growing social enterprise that supports smallholder farmers to build resilient communities. Five years later, humbled and grateful for the experiences she had living and working Internationally, Chandler headed home. Alongside her community, she hopes to contribute to creating a healthy, vibrant, just and sustainable future for the people and place of Southeast Alaska.

Debra Brushafer

Job Titles:
  • Member of the Board of Directors
  • President of the Board
Debra moved to Sitka AK in 1992. She has worked as a family practice physician since her arrival in Sitka. She is an avid outdoors person. She enjoys kayaking, hiking, camping, and boating to explore the beautiful Tongass with her family and friends. Her husband, children, and she regularly subsistence hunt, fish, and gather. She believes in preserving the Tongass for future generations. Debra joined the SCS Board in 2015 and became Board President in 2020.

Dr. Katharine K. Wilkinson

Job Titles:
  • Strategist
Dr. Katharine Wilkinson is a bestselling author, strategist, and teacher, working to heal the planet we call home. Time magazine featured her as one of 15 "women who will save the world." Dr. Wilkinson's books on climate include the bestselling anthology All We Can Save, The Drawdown Review, the New York Times bestseller Drawdown, and Between God & Green. She co-hosts the podcast A Matter of Degrees, telling stories for the climate curious with Dr. Leah Stokes. In 2022, A Matter of Degrees released an episode inspired by Dr. Wilkinson's time spent at Sea Pony Farm. The episode features our friends and collaborators from the Sustainable Southeast Partnership, Marina Anderson (Deputy Director, SSP) and President Richard Chalyee Éesh Peterson (Tlingit & Haida). These conversations share stories of the logging history on the Tongass National Forest, the Roadless Rule, how the Tongass is an important climate solution, and what the future co-management on the Tongass looks like through the USDA Southeast Alaska Sustainability Strategy. You can find the episode The Tongass: A Way Forward for the Forest here or wherever you listen to podcasts.

Edith Johnson

Job Titles:
  • Member of the Board of Directors
  • Khaasda Tláa Edith Johnson / Board Member
Edith Johnson, Khaasda Tláa, was born and raised in Sitka, Alaska and is the owner and creator of Our Town Catering. Edith is an incredibly passionate and dedicated community member and business owner, who has helped support and serve Sitka in a variety of ways. In 2020 and 2021, Edith and Our Town Catering partnered with SCS to serve hundreds of free seafood dinners to households needing food assistance.

Gheistéen Chuck Miller

Job Titles:
  • Member of the Board of Directors
  • Gheistéen Chuck Miller / Board Member
Gheistéen yoo xat duwasaakw. L'uknax.adi aya xat. Kayaash Ka Hittaan aya xat. Deikeenaa yadi xat sitee. Kaagwaantaan dachxan aya xat. My Tlingit name is Daanax.ils'eik and my borrowed name is Chuck Miller. I am of the Raven/Coho Clan of Sitka. I come from the Mother Coho Clan House here in Sheet'ka. I am the Child of the Haida people of Kasaan, Alaska. I am the Grandchild of the Kaagwaantaan (Wolf Clan). I was born and raised here in Sitka and for a portion of time in Haines, Alaska. My parents are the late Malcolm (Jay) and Mary I. Miller. My grandparents are the late Ed and Sarah James. Growing up here on the land of my maternal Uncles, I have a lot of respect for the land and the sea that many of us enjoy on a daily basis and harvest our subsistence foods. To be able to share my knowledge, that was gifted to me by our local Tlingit elders, with the Sitka Conservation Society is an honor and privilege. Gunalchéesh!

Heather Bauscher

Job Titles:
  • Community Engagement Specialist
  • Fisheries Community Engagement Specialist
Heather Bauscher is the Fisheries Community Engagement Specialist, a shared position with SalmonState. She has a BA in Environmental Studies/Resource Management and a Bachelor of Fine Arts in Painting and Drawing. She also has a Masters in Teaching, and has worked as a wildlife specialist for the USDA, deckhand, adjunct professor, and most recently as an activist advocating for increased salmon habitat protection measures. Heather enjoys hunting, fishing, sailing, painting, and motivating community members to partake in the public process!

Jasmine Shaw

Job Titles:
  • Member of the Board of Directors
Jasmine grew up in Long Beach, CA, and currently works for the University of Alaska Fairbanks Cooperative Extension Service. She first arrived in Sitka in 2010 and immediately fell in love with the community and the surrounding environment. Within the first few weeks of her arrival, she sought out volunteer opportunities with Sitka Conservation Society. Jasmine has been a board member since 2013.

Katie Riley

Job Titles:
  • Deputy Director of Policy and Programming
Katie Riley was born and raised in Sitka, Alaska, and is happy to be home and working on supporting innovative policy initiatives and engagement at the Sitka Conservation Society. Katie has worked in the commercial fishing industry for over 10 years, both at a processor, on a commercial troll tender, and a gillnetter in Bristol Bay. After graduating from the University of St Andrews in St Andrews, Scotland with a Masters of Arts in International Relations and Italian, she went to work in Madagascar at an international non-profit focused on conservation, sustainable social and economic development in a small fishing village on the Southwest coast. After a couple years on the reef, the mountains and stormy seas came calling and Katie returned to Sitka with a desire to apply her knowledge and experience to research and catalyze policy solutions to help conserve the rainforest she calls home. Katie enjoys playing rugby, hiking, being out on the water, and exploring near and far.

Keith Nyitray

Job Titles:
  • Member of the Board of Directors
Keith grew up east of NYC and has a degree in Environmental Resources Management. He came to Alaska in 1979 to climb Denali and stayed. After many years of adventuring around the state he finally settled in Sitka in 1998. His interest in protecting the environment was instilled in him at an early age as he grew up with the then fledgling Environmental Defense Fund fighting to ban DDT nationwide. In his teens, Keith went "out west" through the Student Conservation Association and discovered his love for the wilderness. Over the years he has lobbied in DC and given presentations across the country on the need to protect both the Tongass National Forest and the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. He now looks forward to working with everyone at SCS to protect the land and the way of life he loves so much.

Krystina Scheller

Job Titles:
  • Member of the Board of Directors
  • Vice President of the Board
Krystina is originally from Hawaii and has always had a close relationship with the land and water around her. In 2015, Krystina moved her family and her Arctic sailing business to Sitka via the Northwest Passage. Her passion for the environment and sustainable living has taken her to some of the most remote parts of the Northern Hemisphere including the Central Arctic Ocean, Northwest Greenland and Ellesmere Island. During her voyages she has seen firsthand the devastating results of climate change, the disappearing sea ice and the side effects of industrial practices in remote locations. Her lifelong relationship with the natural world and firsthand knowledge of the effects of climate change motivated her to join the SCS Board. She has a degree in Political Science and Economics from Drew University. Krystina became Board Vice President in 2021.

Kylee Jones

Job Titles:
  • Operations Administrator
Kylee Jones was born and raised in Sitka, Alaska and has always been passionate about family, community, wild foods, and her role in caring for the natural world around us. As a child she gained an appreciation for how vital these lands and waters are each day, and she tries to inspire her children by passing down the same lessons and traditions that were taught to her. Today, Kylee continues to utilize and depend upon the forest through annual hunting camps and harvesting wild foods. She is thrilled for the opportunity to take part in protecting the irreplaceable environment around us here on the Tongass National Forest!

Lee House

Job Titles:
  • Sustainability Strategy ( SASS ) Storytelling Specialist
Lee works to creatively communicate stories that embody respect, collaboration, stewardship, and positive change. He first came to know Lingít Aaní Southeast Alaska through two summers of storytelling internships with the Alaska Conservation Foundation from 2015-2016. Since then, he has lived and worked in Sitka, bringing an array of creative skillsets to mission-driven work throughout the region and state. With a communication design education from Massachusetts College of Art, and self-taught principles in writing, photography, and video, Lee seeks to continue to share stories that inspire a healthy world.

Lione Clare

Job Titles:
  • Wilderness & Community Engagement Coordinator
Lione was born and raised in Sitka, and eager to get off the island for college. Throughout those years however, her studies and working as a summer intern with SCS shaped her values and passions and she realized how special and intertwined this place and community is. The pull to return home grew stronger and stronger and Lione has been back in Sitka full time since 2019 and working again with SCS since 2020. She works on a variety of Wilderness stewardship projects, including the Phonograph Project and kayak and other remote expeditions in West Chichagof-Yakobi and other Wilderness Areas for the US Forest Service. She is also part of the communications team and uses her photography and storytelling skills to document and share our work. Lione's degree is in Resource Conservation from the University of Montana with minors in climate change studies and media arts. Lione has endless gratitude for living here and enjoys nature photography, hiking, biking, trail running, backcountry skiing, surfing, exploring on her skiff, kayaking, enjoying wild foods - basically anything you can do outdoors on Lingít Aaní.

Marian Allen

Job Titles:
  • Member of the Board of Directors
  • Secretary of the Board
Marian is a longtime Southeast resident and former fisherwoman. Marian's roots are in Maine. From her father she got her love of the woods and mountains and from her mother love of the sea. As a young person during the 1960s her passion for a healthy planet where there would be equity for everyone, drove her into political activism. A spontaneous trip on the ferry up the Inside Passage in 1978 opened the possibility of living the quiet, off-the-grid life she yearned for. After living that lifestyle for 16 years on Kasiana Island, she had to move to town for economic reasons. It was the rescinding of the Roadless Rule by the Bush administration that convinced her that she had to get actively involved in activism again. Her first action was a GreenPeace protest on Kupreanof Island and shortly after that she joined the SCS Board, recognizing that working in an organization is more effective than simply as an individual. She has worked in commercial fishing, as a seasonal Forest Service employee, for Alaska Marine Safety Education Association, taught at UAS Sitka as an English as Second Language Instructor, on a Title III Grant and as an adjunct, among other work. Retired now, she spends her days collecting and growing edibles and dye stuff, working with fibers, walking in the woods, being on the water, reading, and baking. She especially enjoys visits with family in Seattle, New Mexico and returning "home" to Maine. Marian has been a board member since 2006, and became Board Secretary in 2021.

Maury Skeele

Born and raised in Sitka, a deep gratitude and respect for the natural world and community was instilled in Maury from an early age by her family and community mentors including teachers and afterschool program leaders. She attained an education in Therapeutic Recreation and has worked with youth in many settings around the country, including a residential boarding school, afterschool programs, and wilderness therapy programs. She also has experience in non-profit management and international business. The culmination of her experiences has led her to join us as our Sitka Youth Community Development Catalyst. She is committed to engaging, supporting, and inspiring Sitka's youth through mission-driven recreational programming to empower tomorrow's leaders.

Patricia Kehoe

Job Titles:
  • Member of the Board of Directors
Pat grew up in Western Washington in an area noted for clearcutting and "tree farming." Maybe it was the comparison with years of seeing those spindly, fragile trees that made the Tongass so compelling and convinced Pat that we need to avoid the ecological mistakes here that were made decades earlier in her home state. She studied at Western Washington University, became a registered nurse, and after a few years of working as an RN, moved to Alaska for a summer and stayed for 40 years of adventure and hard work commercial salmon trolling and longlining from the southern border to Unalaska. Pat always kept her art supplies with her and spent her spare time working to interpret the special place where the ocean meets the edge of land. Pat and her husband Howard built a home on an island outside of Sitka and homeschooled their two daughters involving them in all the aspects of life in Alaska from subsistence gathering and fishing to protesting water pollution with the Greenpeace Rainbow Warrior. Pat took a sketch book and some paints along in all their adventures and is so grateful for the incredible places she has been able to explore.

Richard Carstensen

Richard Carstensen is a naturalist from Juneau, Alaska, one of the founders in the late 1980s of Discovery Southeast, a non-profit group bringing natural history education to all of the capitol's public schools. He is co-author of The Nature of Southeast Alaska, The Enduring Forests, Book of the Tongass, The Coastal Forests and Mountains of Ecoregion, and Salmon in the Trees. From 1996 to 2004 he was the field leader of the Landmark Tress Project, documenting Alaska's finest remaining large-tree forests. In 2005, with Bob Christensen, he began the Groundtruthing Project, the "eyes and ears in the woods" for Southeast Alaskan conservation community. We first met Richard on Sam Skagg's sailboat, Arcturus, in 1996 when he led a group of eight scientists and conservationists on a fabulous trip to Prince of Whales Island to seek out the oldest, tallest trees in the forest-what we then called "The Temple Trees." On that trip we learned how to specify the location of the trees and to measure their size and age. We also described their surrounding habitat. Every evening we talked about what we had learned and sought to figure out how to use the information both scientifically and politically. Loggers are still cutting the biggest trees. The principle targets have shifted from streamside spruce to upland red- and yellow-cedar, which means that our "landmark Trees protocol" which prioritizes riparian spruce stands is now less politically urgent. Even then Richard was our wilderness specialist. He knew how to do things and he led us in and out of the forest with practiced skill. Richard is the man we would choose to get us through a wilderness trek. The Temple Trees became (for political reasons) the Landmark Trees. Richard has pursued the documentation of these trees with contagious passion. But his passion extends far beyond trees to the entire extent of the Tongass. He is a complete naturalist, drawing delightful pictures of creatures and mountains as well as tress, to place in his already classic books about Southeast Alaska. And his groundtruthing activity has been adopted by the Sitka Conservation Society as an important thread in their summer work. We always are delighted when Richard visits us in Sitka. He sets up his mono-scope at our living room window and we see unexpected birds on our beach-and we talk about The Temple Trees. Richard Carstensen's name was added to the Living Wilderness Celebration Board in 2010.

Ryan Morse - CCO

Job Titles:
  • Communications Director
Born and raised in Sitka, Ryan grew up appreciating the lands and waters of the Tongass, but didn't truly comprehend how incredible it is until he came back from college. He graduated with degrees in Graphic Design and German from Portland State University. While in college, Ryan was selected to be a US Ambassador and Fellow through the Congress-Bundestag Youth Exchange. He has also worked as an Art Director for Berliner Literarische Aktion. Since 2014, Ryan has been the graphic designer and project manager behind the beautiful and creative SCS annual calendar. He is grateful to be back on Lingít Aaní, and to leverage his creative, problem-solving, and communication skills for to support responsible stewardship on the Tongass and connect people all over the world with this place he calls home.

Sitka Youth

Job Titles:
  • Sitka Youth Coordinator

Steve Fish

Job Titles:
  • Member of the Board of Directors
Steve left the San Francisco Bay area and rode the Alaskan ferry Malaspina to Petersburg in 1974 at the age of 19. Somehow, he ended up buying a plywood, gas powered boat the following year and soon after caught his first halibut despite knowing nothing about halibut fishing, and little enough about anything else. Well, life should be an adventure. The greatest adventure for Steve has been trying to be a good husband, father, and person. Steve met Kari Johnson in Petersburg. They then moved to Port Alexander and, finally, to Sitka in 1991. They have three children: Lexi (pictured with him above), Eva and Erikson. Steve served on the board of the Alaska Marine Conservation Council including two years as Chair. He is currently president of the Alaska Longline Fishermen's Association. He has been on the SCS board since 2010.

Ward Marshall Eldridge

Ward Marshall Eldridge was a longtime Sitkan who left a tremendous mark on the community. Ward served on the board of the Sitka Conservation Society and was a long-time member. There are stories of Ward that will surely become legends. He was intimately connected with the ocean and the Alaskan environment. He was an activist and was always ready to speak up and speak out issues where things needed to be said. Ward worked close with SCS staff and always offered encouraging words, helpful advice, and positive feedback that buoyed spirits and kept everyone focused, engaged, positive, and hopeful. Ward came from an old New England whaling family. Ward learned to love boats and boating at a young age with his father and grandfather. He came to Alaska in 1968 as a college student seeking a summer adventure, and he quickly fell in love with the land and people of northern Alaska. He stayed in Alaska to continue his education at University of Alaska Fairbanks, but he found his true niche that first summer fixing equipment and making things work at Camp Denali. He met his first wife Shelley Rogers and they moved to Juneau where their daughter Cinead was born. Ward left a job with the City of Juneau to pursue a fishing career, and after their marriage ended, he moved to Sitka in 1973. He longlined and handtrolled the F/V Shelley Cinead and the F/V Her Highness. In 1979 while visiting his parents in Jacksonville, Florida, Ward came upon the S/V Merlin, a derelict wooden schooner, built in 1888 to a Herreschoff design. He spent the next six years rebuilding the schooner from the keel up, at first returning to Alaska in the summer to fish, then working full-time on the Merlin. During those years he married Hope Lynn, and when the boat was finally finished, Ward, Hope, and her son Jason Hermann, sailed the boat to the Caribbean, through the Panama Canal, and out to Hawaii. They sailed into Sitka in 1988, as the Merlin turned 100 years old. The Merlin became part of the scene at Crescent Harbor, and Sitka once again became home. Ward turned the shipwright skills that he had developed into a new career. As he grew older, he shifted the focus of Merlin Marine to marine electrical systems and other types of marine maintenance and repair. The highlight of every summer was a cruise on Merlin exploring Southeast Alaska. In 1999, he was anchored in Still Harbor, Whale Bay, south of Sitka and returned from a brief kayak paddle to find the boat had been sunk by a whale. The desire to raise the historic schooner led to the formation of the Sitka Maritime Heritage Society, with the dream of turning the boat into a teaching vessel and museum. The newly formed Society coordinated a community effort that successfully raised the Merlin. The discovery of humpback whale baleen in the hole in the hull corroborated the theory that the boat was sunk by a whale. Ward will be remembered for his love of boats, the ocean, and the Alaskan wilderness. He was always ready to share his technical skills and his knowledge of the waterways and navigation. He mentored many young fishermen and women, teaching everything from basic skills such as use of a crescent wrench, to aligning engines. The last time Ward visited the SCS office, he worked with a young SCS staff member to write a letter to the editor calling out one of our Senators to step up and take action on climate change. The topic was disheartening to her and frustrating and worrying for Ward. But in the action that he took, he showed her how speaking out for what is right is something that will always be a salve for our frustrations and help keep us all on course and moving forward. We will miss Ward's participation in all of the SCS events, activities, protests, and civic actions, and we will really miss him stopping by the office to talk about current issues and get updates on what the organization is working on, but we'll celebrate Ward's ideals and values in all the work that we do because his life has helped to shape us and our community.