Evangeline Atwood

[5] She married Robert Atwood on April 2, 1932, whom she met while working in Springfield.

She would write six books about the history of Alaska and its culture, including one about James Wickersham.

[4][5] She also wrote for the Anchorage Times, in which she had two columns, "Alaska Women in Politics" and "Historically Speaking."

The organization funded George Sundborg to produce a research study that would be used to explain to voters why they should make Alaska a state.

[6] A manuscript about the history of Alaska's newspapers was started by Atwood, and completed by journalist Lew M. Williams, Jr., upon her death.

[2] The Anchorage Museum named the Bob and Evangeline Atwood Alaska Resource Center after her and her husband.

[7] The Atwood family papers are held in the collection of the University of Alaska Anchorage.