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Waterville, Iowa, where Harry LeRoy Aleson was born 9 March 1899, was an auspicious name for the birthplace of a future river boatman. Though he later changed his name to the more manageable "Aleson," he was fiercely proud of his Nordic heritage, and maintained close contact with family members and Norwegian friends.
After completing two years of high school in Waterville, Aleson quit school to work in an iron mine as a chemist's helper. In March 1918, he enlisted in the Aviation Section of the U.S. Army Signal Corps and arrived in France after a brief period of training. Aleson was proud of his service in World War I, during which his plane crashed and he was gassed, which left him with a chronic stomach ailment and entitled him to a pension for total disability.
Upon returning to Iowa, Aleson completed high school in 1920 and went on to attend Iowa State College, where he took courses in electrical and chemical engineering. Financial pressures forced him to leave college after two and one-half years, but he retained an emotional attachment to Iowa State and was instrumental in establishing the Memorial Union there in honor of the veterans of World War I.
During the Great Depression, Aleson worked in a variety of positions with various geophysical exploration firms searching for oil in the Southwest. By the end of the 1930, though, he had discovered the Colorado River and the Grand Canyon, and he quickly gave up any desires for a life apart from the river. His love for the river cost him his marriage; he and Thursa Arnold, whom he had married in 1928, were separated in 1940.
At about the time of their separation, Aleson took up residence in a tent camp in Quartermaster Canyon, which he christened "My Home, Arizona." From there, during the next decade, he conducted the explorations of the Grand Canyon and the lower Colorado River System that made him a much consulted authority and popular river guide.
In the beginning, Aleson built his river guide business upon the notoriety he achieved as a result of numerous daredevil feats. In April 1945, he became the first person to make an upriver motorboat run from Lee's Ferry, Arizona, to Hite, Utah, a journey of 162.5 miles, which he accomplished in five days. Also in 1945, he and the "Woman of the River," Georgie White of Los Angeles, made a 61 mile down river trip to Lake Mead using only life preservers. They made a similar 81 mile trip in 1946.
In 1945, Aleson took up winter headquarters at the Johnson Hotel in Richfield, Utah, where he earned part of his room and board by working as night clerk. During his long shifts there, he organized the dozens of San Juan River Glen Canyon trips that were his main source of income during the summers.
Aleson's river trips were luxurious experiences that elicited repeated enthusiastic comments from satisfied guests. He pioneered in the use of U.S. Navy surplus neoprene landing craft, which are virtually unsinkable, roomy and comfortable. He offered nearly one hundred different foods and served them on actual china. His leisurely pace, which allowed time for side trips to scenic and historic sites, further enhanced by his knowledgeable comments, made for unforgettable experiences.
During the fall, after the tourist season was over, Aleson often made long expeditions of his own, for a month or six weeks at a time, in the backcountry of southeastern Utah. Beginning in 1952, he was joined regularly in those trips by Dick Sprang and Dudy Thomas. The three established a group called "Canyon Surveys," and their journals, photographs and movies are among the finest records of exploration of Glen Canyon, Grand Gulch, the San Juan River, and the Red Rock Plateau.
During the 1960s, Aleson's life took important new directions. The closing of the Glen Canyon Dam marked the end of the river trips that had been his mainstay. Thereafter, he began to exploit earlier experiences he had had on Canadian rivers, particularly the MacKenzie and Yukon, in offering "Artic River Expeditions."
Aleson remarried in 1962. Thurs Arnold, his estranged wife, died in 1957, and Aleson was free to marry Dorothy Donaldson Keys, whom he met on one of his river trips in 1961. Appropriately, they were married in Glen Canyon and spent their honeymoon on the river.
Aleson never really became inactive on the river, though advanced age forced upon him a slower pace. An interest in genealogy emerged, and he spent a great deal of time in research and correspondence. Aleson died of cancer on 27 March 1972 in Prescott, Arizona.
The photographs of Harry Aleson cover a lengthy period, from family, friends, vacations to Mexico, Mt. Whitney, Yosemite, Yukon people and many river trips. The variety of the collection is equally broad; it embraces photographs, negatives, slides, movies and other material assembled or generated during a long and active life. By far the most numerous photographs are of his river trips down the Colorado River in the Grand Canyon and miscellaneous river trips. The collection is arranged chronologically and alphabetical (people) with undated or fragmentary items at the end of each year. The collection also contains 16mm movies of some of his river trips.
Harry LeRoy Aleson Photograph Collection, 1918-1972, Utah State Historical Society.
The Harry LeRoy Aleson Photograph Collection is the physical property of the Utah Historical Society, Salt Lake City, Utah. Literary rights, including copyright, may belong to the authors or their heirs and assigns. Please contact the Historical Society for information regarding specific use of this collection.
The photographs in this collection were separated from
Movies from the collection have been placed with the USHS Movie Collections under the number Mss C 187 .