Alaska’s Hidden Black History That Built a Frontier

In this 1942 photograph from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Office of History, a Black soldier peers through a surveyor’s transit during construction of the Alaska Highway in Alaska’s northern sector. The image captures the wartime engineering effort that helped carve a strategic overland route through the Interior, where African American service members labored in segregated units under harsh frontier conditions. (U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Office of History)

Cold steel rests above frozen soil where the work of soldiers helped carve a northern lifeline during World War II.

By Gina Hill | Alaska Headline Living | February 2026

Along the quiet stretch of the Alaska Highway, winter air seems to slow the movement of time.

Near Delta Junction, river ice drifts beneath the steel of the Black Veterans Memorial Bridge.

Most travelers pass without stopping.

But history does.

1942 photograph from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Office of History showing a Black soldier placing dynamite during construction of the Alaska Highway in Alaska’s northern sector. The image documents the hazardous wartime labor that helped forge a strategic route through the Interior.

Originally known as the Gerstle River Bridge, the structure was renamed in 1993 by the Alaska Legislature to honor African American soldiers and engineering troops who helped build the Alaska Highway during World War II.

Muskeg terrain, a waterlogged landscape that behaves like a muddy form of quicksand, posed constant challenges during northern road construction. Vehicles could pass once, only for the ground to liquefy into unstable mud beneath them, often requiring heavy equipment to pull them free. (Photo and caption courtesy of Missouri University of Science and Technology, 2014.)

Thousands of U.S. Army Corps of Engineers service members, including Black soldiers serving in segregated units, worked across subarctic winter, muskeg wetlands, frozen soil, and mountain terrain to complete the highway in roughly eight months.

The bridge, constructed in 1944, is now approaching the end of its design lifespan under modern freight traffic, seismic considerations, and the mechanical stresses produced by Alaska’s freeze-thaw climate.

Map view showing the location of the Black Veterans Memorial Bridge along the Alaska Highway near Delta Junction, as displayed on Google Maps.

Planning documents from the Alaska Department of Transportation and Public Facilities emphasize balancing public safety with historical recognition.

Officials have stated that portions of the original steel span may be offered for relocation or memorial preservation if communities, museums, or organizations wish to maintain them as public heritage artifacts.

This undated image provided by the Alaska Department of Transportation and Public Facilities shows the trestle crossing the Gerstle River along the Alaska Highway, southeast of Delta Junction. The structure is part of Alaska’s aging wartime-era transportation network that continues to carry travelers across the Interior, where remote terrain and long distances still shape the design and maintenance of northern infrastructure. (Alaska Department of Transportation and Public Facilities via AP)

The replacement crossing is expected to be completed in the early 2030s as part of long-range highway modernization.

The project is designed to strengthen a vital northern transportation corridor while engineering the new structure to endure Alaska’s environmental pressures, including permafrost movement, seasonal temperature extremes, and seismic activity common to the region.

Preservation efforts aim to keep the story of the wartime bridge visible along the Alaska Highway so that historical memory and modern movement continue side by side.

In Alaska, infrastructure is more than engineering.

It is memory carried forward.

Highways are not shaped by steel alone, but by the people whose labor, endurance, and lives helped open the Last Frontier.

This Oct. 25, 1942, photo from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Office of History shows Corporal Refines Slims Jr. (left) and Private Alfred Jalufka shaking hands during the historic “Meeting of Bulldozers” construction milestone for the Alaska Highway near Beaver Creek in what was then the Yukon Territory. (File photo)

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