{"id":17273,"date":"2017-06-13T00:06:00","date_gmt":"2017-06-13T07:06:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/spijue.wpengine.com\/news\/a-14-week-journey-through-time\/"},"modified":"2017-06-13T00:06:00","modified_gmt":"2017-06-13T07:06:00","slug":"a-14-week-journey-through-time","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/a-14-week-journey-through-time\/","title":{"rendered":"A 14-week journey through time"},"content":{"rendered":"
When Dee Longenbaugh officially shuttered The Observatory bookstore for good last winter, after falling ill earlier in the year, she closed the door on nearly three decades as a Juneau institution.<\/p>\n
But the end of the revered downtown landmark at the corner of Third and Franklin streets marked the beginning of a more than three-month treasure hunt for self-professed “casual historian” Patti David after she was hired by the Longenbaugh family to evaluate the bookstore’s stock.<\/p>\n
The Alaskana amassed by Longenbaugh over the course of four decades — with every map cabinet and stack of paper in every corner of the bookstore painstakingly sifted through by David — is likely to have an exciting new chapter, as collectors from across the country have expressed interest in its purchase.<\/p>\n
“This whole journey has been so amazing,” David said.<\/p>\n
David first met Longenbaugh 10 years ago when she came into the bookstore looking for a copy of the “Teichmann diary,” the first written account by a Jewish person in Alaska. Longenbaugh, David recalls, immediately said she had two copies.<\/p>\n
When she heard that Longenbaugh was closing down The Observatory, David approached the family about assisting in the liquidation of the stock because she has experience in facilitating projects, and because she knows Alaska history well enough that she knew who would be interested in the collection.<\/p>\n
David initially thought she could get done within a few weeks. But it quickly became evident to her that she would need to take her time evaluating what was in the multi-room space.<\/p>\n
“I learned to look at every single piece of paper,” she said. “I feel like I’ve touched everything, and I’ve carried every single book at least four or five times.”<\/p>\n
“I’ve gotten very good at moving a box to move a box to move a box,” she added with a laugh.<\/p>\n
David estimated she has spent at least five hours a day for the last 14 weeks sorting through 30,000-50,000 books and probably another 30,000 pieces of ephemera, because she would find items squirreled away in random places — between the pages of textbooks, for example.<\/p>\n
“Just yesterday, I found (what I thought) was a gift tag,” she said. That “tiny” piece of paper turned out to be a Robert Frost Christmas card from 1950, signed by the artist.<\/p>\n
The task of wading through so much potentially valuable material felt overwhelming at first, David admitted.<\/p>\n
“I was so blown away,” she said. “I felt like an intruder. I didn’t sit down at (Longenbaugh’s) desk for weeks. Then I started trying to figure out how to peel away the layers, to get to the collection.”<\/p>\n
Observatory fans continue pilgrimage to shuttered store<\/p>\n
Longenbaugh opened The Observatory in Sitka in 1977 after the youngest of her four children entered high school.<\/p>\n
“I was looking for something to do because I was very bored,” Longenbaugh told the Empire in an interview<\/a> last year. “I thought I would see how it worked out, and if it didn’t, OK.”<\/p>\n Longenbaugh briefly transplanted her bookstore to New Mexico, still primarily dealing in Alaskana, before moving to Juneau in 1989. For the next nearly three decades, she could be found at her desk, ready to offer direction in the search for a book or to share some of her encyclopedic knowledge on any number of topics.<\/p>\n