ANCHORAGE, Alaska — President Warren G. Harding drove a golden spike into the final coupling of the Alaska Railroad more than a century ago, a ceremonial act that marked the launch of a system to easily bring coal and other natural resources out of the wilderness.
Harding would die of a massive heart attack just a few days later, on his way back to Washington, D.C. The spike he pounded with such fanfare — weighing nearly a pound and valued at up to $50,000 — has been in private hands outside of the state ever since.
Now, two Alaska institutions want to bring that piece of history home. The Anchorage Museum, with financial backing from the Alaska Railroad, will bid on the 14-karat solid gold spike when it goes up for auction Friday in New York as part of the Christie's Important Americana collection, said Aaron Leggett, the museum's senior curator of Alaska history and Indigenous cultures.
''The whole history of our state and really the whole history of this town begins with the Alaska Railroad,'' Leggett said of Alaska and its biggest city, Anchorage.
The 5 1/2-inch (14-centimeter) spike is being offered by an unidentified California resident who has owned it since 1983. The Alaska Railroad, originally constructed, owned and operated by the federal government, was sold to the state for $22 million in 1985.
The railroad was built to open what was then the Alaska territory to development. It connected Seward, a Pacific Ocean port city on the south-central coast, to Fairbanks, 470 miles (756 kilometers) away in interior Alaska.
The construction project lasted from 1914 to 1923. Laying tracks across the untamed Alaska wilderness had a ''transformational impact on the last century of Alaska's history,'' said Meghan Clemens, the railroad's director of external affairs. Alaska would not become a state until 1959.
Even today, there are few highways in the nation's largest state; one of the busiest is along the same passenger and freight rail corridor from Seward to Fairbanks. About 75% of Alaska's 740,000 residents also live along that stretch, called the rail belt, which Clemens said is a testament to how instrumental the railroad has been to the economic development and growth of Alaska.