Our TOwn - Historic Ketchikan
Transcription
Our TOwn - Historic Ketchikan
OUR TOWN DISCOVER KETCHIKAN ALASKA Published by Historic Ketchikan Inc. With support from Ketchikan Gateway Borough and City of Ketchikan Historic Ketchikan Inc. Board of Directors Terry Wanzer president Ralph Beardsworth vice president Deborah Hayden secretary James Alguire treasurer Cecelia Coenen director Rick Hardcastle director Len Laurance director Dave Rubin director Stephen Reeve executive director Historic Ketchikan Inc. P.O. Box 23364 Ketchikan, Alaska 99901 www.historicketchikan.org 907-225-5515 info@historicketchikan.org Historic Ketchikan Inc. is a private, nonprofit organization that promotes economic development through historic preservation and heritage tourism. Our programs are designed to instill community pride and interest in Ketchikan’s history. This publication is a community profile with general factual information and residents’ opinions. It is designed to be informative and entertaining—a tribute to the spirit of a progressive community. It is not intended to be a primary historical reference. Prior editions — 1994, 1998, 2003, 2008, 2011 Publication design | text | text editing — Gregg Poppen | Full Circle Media Arts | fullcirclemedia@gci.net cover photo by Chip Porter 1 Our Town The people of Alaska’s First City relish their remarkable place between the clean sea and lush mountainsides. gregg poppen © 2015 Historic Ketchikan Inc. All rights reserved. This publication may not be reproduced in any form except with written permission. Brief passages may be excerpted in reviews. Have an elevated hotel experience above Creek Street and the heart of historic downtown Ketchikan Comfort, service and a feeling that now you’re on top of the world. NATHAN JACKSON Ride OuR fuNiCulAR TRAm TO wORld-ReNOwNed CReeK STReeT ANd THe wATeRfRONT COmplimeNTARy SHuTTle • COmplimeNTARy wi-fi THROugHOuT THe lOdge fiNe diNiNg wiTH A biRd’S-eye HARbOR view iN HeeN KAHidi diNiNg ROOm ON-SiTe bOOKiNg fOR CApe fOx TOuRS ANd OTHeR exCuRSiONS The lodge proudly displays Cape Fox Native Corporation’s million-dollar collection of Alaska Native art and artifacts Cape Fox Lodge On venetia lode mine Hill 907-225-8001 capefoxlodge.com Ketchikan settles comfortably into a magnificent natural world. We’re in a wondrously lush temperate rain forest beside the calm, clean Inside Passage of the North Pacific—but we’re also intricately tied to remarkable human heritages. Our historical properties hark back to Alaska’s Last Frontier times. World-class totem poles and a living Alaska Native culture express a presence beyond history. A vital business climate and a thriving arts community GREGG POPPEN round it out. Nature makes it extraordinary. History makes it unique. People make it Ketchikan. Sailboats are numerous on our stretch of Alaska’s Inside Passage. Some are kept for pleasure sailing and a few larger vessels are used as liveaboards. Stroll our harbors to see the vast variety of sailers and motor vessels that homeport here. More than stores. We’re a heritage. Tongass Trading Co. has provided the essentials for residents and visitors since 1898. outdoor apparel fishing gear Dock Store 201 dock st. Outfitter • Sporting Goods • Curios Menswear Building 312 dock st. marine supplies gifts men’s wear ladies’ wear Every single day, we carry on that heritage. home furnishings Marine Store 2521 marine works way Marine Supplies • Commercial Gear Hardware • Sporting Goods • Raingear Menswear • Ladies Loft • Curios Tongass Trading Outlet Store Berth 4 – 55 schoenbar Ct. #103 Inside Passage Curios & Gifts 301 mission street Tongass Trading Furniture House 2324 tongass ave. 907-225-5101 www.tongasstrading.com 1-800-235-5102 4 Our Town ketchikan museums Ketchikan was building fast in 1902 as cabins and a few substantial homes pushed aside the forest. Commerce and salvation stood onshore in the form of the Heckman store and tiny St. Agnes Mission, surmounted by its bell tower. At right, the newly raised Chief Johnson pole towered over the Alaska Native settlement. The wood viaduct led to a cannery. Pioneers pursuing salmon brought a can-do spirit to Alaska’s First City Salmon made Ketchikan. Native Alaskans had a summer fish camp at the mouth of what they called, in the Tlingit language, Kich-xaan: generally interpreted to mean “wings of the eagle.” Those salmon lured entrepreneurs from the Pacific Northwest, eagle-eyed for new sources of fish for a hungry America. The first of these salmon scouts landed here about 1885. By the mid-1890s, pioneering business people had built a wharf in deep water; a cannery steamed and clattered away for Tongass Packing Co.—which borrowed its name from a clan of the Tlingit tribe. An Irish-American adventurer named Mike Martin arrived in those pioneer years and with partner George Clark bought Tongass Packing Co.’s land after the cannery burned down in 1897. The pair established a saltery on a new wharf just about where Dock and Front streets meet today. The partners opened the town’s first trading store. The rough little settlement was burgeoning and Martin and Clark sold their land to developers who had a plan for that creekside square quarter-mile—Ketchikan Improvement Co., they called it. They platted paradise and put up a pack of lots, most of them 50 by 100 feet. And Mayor Mike Martin when momentum was set, 103 property-owning men of the settlement voted to incorporate “Ketchikan.” It was 1900. Mike Martin was elected as the first mayor. The first head count found 800 residents in this “First City” up the coast from Puget Sound. The affable Martin and those who followed foresaw not just the salmon-packing industry, but the use of steady Ketchikan Creek for a mechanical power source. They saw a deepwater port and valuable ores in the area. And eyes were on the great steamships that chuffed up the coast, bearing gold-rush prospectors, settlers and even intrepid sightseers. The Common Council met in homes, in the Red Men fraternal hall or, at times, in Mayor Martin’s Sideboard Saloon. A property tax of 7.5 mills was levied for a school, fire protection and streets. Ketchikan grew, always with natural resources at its base. Sawmills cut lumber for buildings, salmon cases and export. Families cleared forest for homesites. Police were hired. Dog control was ordered. “New Town” residents north of Knob Hill campaigned to remove brothels and the city sent working girls south of the creek— establishing the Creek Street red-light district. Mud streets were planked. When Ketchikan went dry with the Bone Dry Law in 1917, Creek Street’s layout and modes of operation lent themselves to trap-door liquor deliveries and cathouse parties. The town grew and changed with the times. Ketchikan was Alaska’s most populous city as late as the 1930s. Front Street was paved in 1923 (the first paved street in Alaska) and brothels were closed in 1953. The pulp mill became Alaska’s biggest employer in the mid-’50s. Ketchikan integrated its schools and its social life with the Alaska Natives and the town came to take pride in a culture that fascinates visitors. We welcomed hundreds of immigrants from the Philippines, whose enterprise and enthusiasm are a second pioneer wave. It’s a town with a unique past and a spirit made of optimism and enterprise. 5 Our Town KETCHIKAN PRINCE RUPERT B.C. – Alaska ferry BELLINGHAM Wash. – Alaska ferry SEATTLE Wash. – Direct jet flights ISLE SEATS The First City is the Alaskan town nearest the Lower 48. It’s easy to get to our islands by air or sea. Flight time is about 100 minutes from Sea-Tac Inernational Airport to Ketchikan International Airport. Alaska Airlines flies here daily, year-round; Delta initiated seasonal service in 2015. Alaska Marine Highway System ferries depart Bellingham, Wash., for a relaxing 38-hour trip. Or drive to Prince Rupert, B.C., and board an Alaska ferry for a sixhour transit. Seat yourself in the ferry’s observation lounge to see Ketchikan coming into view. 11 10 1 2 nick bowman | ketchikan daily news 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Downtown Ketchikan is a blend of century-old historical structures and the features of a busy port city. This view is from the eagle’s vantage, looking toward the northwest. For a close-up perspective, take the Historic Ketchikan Walking Tour. The map is available at the Ketchikan Visitors Bureau Tour Center on Berth 2, at the Ketchikan Daily News and at a number of businesses around town. A B C D E A5 Thomas Basin breakwater; end of waterfront promenade A10 North end of Pennock Island | C7 Berth 1 E1-J1 Historic Thomas Street | K1-K6 Historic Stedman Street J3 Ketchikan Yacht Club at Thomas Basin | L6 Stedman Street Bridge 6 Our Town F G H I H8 Berth 2 | H7 Southeast Alaska Discovery Center J7 Ketchikan Fire Dept. Station 1 | L7 Federal Bldg. M5-N7 Historic Creek Street K8 Yates Memorial Hosp. / St. John’s Episcopal Church J K L M N H8 Ketchikan Visitors Bureau Tour Center J9 The tunnel | L8 Ketchikan Daily News K9 Historic Newtown | L10 Captains Hill H11 Ketchikan International Airport on Gravina Island 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 A 7 Our Town B C D E F G H I 1 A state road project starting in 2015 extends White River Road to logging road at Shelter Cove, opening up recreational land (G12 to I13) Vallenar Bay state road project was pending in 2015 in the state’s Roads to Resources program (A5 to B5) South Tongass Highway was paved from Herring Cove to the end of the road in 2015 (H3 to I6) m u n icipaliti e s City of Ketchikan City of Saxman Ketchikan Gateway Borough City of Ketchikan crews deliver power via KPU and maintain streets—even board streets above Newtown. Saxman Seaport and a world-class totem park are among responsibilities of the City of Saxman. The airport on Gravina Island and the city on Revilla Island are connected by the borough’s ferries. The City of Ketchikan incorporated in 1900 in the U.S. District of Alaska. The city is a home rule municipality with wide-ranging powers and services: police; firefighting; streets; electric, telephone, water and wastewater utilities; a library and a museum; and others. City residents elect seven council members and a mayor who presides over meetings and breaks tie votes; all terms are three years. The city doesn’t impose term limits. The council hires a city manager to oversee city departments and municipally owned Ketchikan Public Utilities. territory. Saxman is a second-class municipality; residents elect city council members, who select a mayor from their body. Saxman provides water service and wastewater collection and operates Saxman Seaport, a multimodal sea and rail facility. The City of Saxman is managed by a city administrator. A borough assembly of seven members is elected to oversee the government, serving staggered three-year terms; the mayor is elected separately to a three-year term and votes only to decide deadlocks. Assembly members and the mayor, elected areawide, are limited to two successive terms. The assembly hires a borough manager, clerk and attorney. The City of Saxman incorporated two miles south of Ketchikan in 1929, when Alaska was a U.S. Ketchikan Gateway Borough was chartered in 1963, four years after statehood, as a second-class borough with limited powers: property assessments; tax collection; education; and animal control. The borough government operates the airport; a bus system; and parks and recreation facilities. Planning, zoning and community development are borough roles. Ketchikan Gateway Borough School District provides public education in facilities owned by the borough. The board of education has seven members, elected areawide to three-year terms. Board members choose a president after each October election. The board oversees the superintendent. PROPERTY TAXES IN KETCHIKAN 2002-2015 Sales tax Property taxes have been relatively steady in Ketchikan municipalities for years. Figures below reflect Ketchikan property owners’ ad valorem payments to two governments: the areawide government (Ketchikan Gateway Borough) and the City of Ketchikan within the borough. City of Ketchikan Borough Total in-city PROPERTY TAX Mill rate 2015 Mill rate 2010 Mill rate 2007 Mill rate 2002 City of Ketchikan 6.7 6.10 6.40 5.35 Ketchikan Gateway Borough 5.0 5.80 7.20 7.85 11.7 11.90 13.60 13.20 Total mill levy for in-city property An additional property tax of 0.7 mills is levied non-areawide—outside the cities of Ketchikan and Saxman—for a borough contribution to operation of Ketchikan Public Library. 8 Our Town 4.0% 2.5% 6.5% Sales tax is paid on only the first $1,000 of any single item purchased within Ketchikan Gateway Borough—the singleunit tax exemption. Bed tax City of Ketchikan 7.0% Rural borough, Saxman 4.0% GREGG POPPEN After nearly half a century in a building shared with the city’s museum, the community’s library moved into a capacious hillside home. City opens a new chapter in a dazzling facility Ketchikan Public Library moved into a new building in 2013, nearly doubling the space it had occupied for decades in a shared building downtown. The library sits above Bear Valley with an encompassing view of the range running north from Deer Mountain. The $12 million facility earned honors for its architecture and design— but most welcome to the City of Ketchikan were commendations from a community tired of the library’s being crammed with a museum into a tight creekside building since 1967. About half of funding came from a local bond issue, the other half from a legislative appropriation. The new building wraps the book collection and other media into a 16,726-square-foot, high-ceilinged building paneled entirely in wood. Library staff have nearly twice as much space for materials and programs as they had in the Centennial Building downtown—where the library rubbed shoulders with the city’s Tongass Historical Museum. The new facility has a teen-interest room, a meeting room with a mountain vista and an enclosed Alaskana collection. Lighted bookshelves and media cabinets stand in roomy ranks beyond the check-out area. A gas-fueled fireplace flanked by comfortable reading chairs and tall window walls is the centerpiece on the north side. A cozy children’s library opens out behind a glass wall. The exterior is clad in gray slate and A remarkable bequest from a library lover contributed to the capital fund. Marjorie Anne Voss of Ketchikan willed property and possessions worth more than $500,000 to the capital campaign seven years before the library opened. The new library earned an honor award from the American Institute of Architects. The Alaska chapter of AIA conferred its people’s choice award for A community living room, as opposed to a drive-up restaurant where patrons rushed in and out wood. A biomass wood pellet boiler heats the building. A member of the staff likened the new digs to “a community living room”—as opposed to the constrained confines of the prior facility, where patrons rushed in and out, “drive-up restaurant” style. An array of art by Ketchikan artists enhances the new library. The Ketchikan City Council laid out $68,000 for projects wrought in sculpture, Native carving, fiber and sheet steel. the facility as being “most Alaskan.” The library was cited in the American Libraries library design showcase. And it was one of three buildings in the world singled out in the 2014 American Library Association/International Interior Design Association awards for interior design. The new Ketchikan Public Library was designed by Bettisworth Welsh Whiteley LLC, a partnership of Ketchikan and Anchorage architects; library design specialists at Perkins Will consulted on the project. Village manages infrastructure and culture The City of Saxman is a unique municipality, with responsibilities from providing water to cultivating Northwest Coast Native artistry. Founded in the late 1890s by Tlingit Indians who resettled from remote villages, Saxman is home to about 420 people. Its 1898 schoolhouse is the area’s oldest active building. Saxman’s most familiar features are the Totem Park and Beaver Clan House, visited by more than 110,000 tourists each year. The city promotes Alaska Native culture at the Edwin Dewitt Carving Center, where artists work and demonstrate. Saxman is expanding the center with $825,000 from the city, state and borough CPV revenue. 9 Our Town Saxman has a marine/rail/road seaport with a 160,000-pound transfer bridge and 30,000-square-foot warehouse. Saxman Community Center includes a theatre, a gym, meeting space, a kitchen and some city offices. The city operates a water distribution system and a sewer collection system. Public works staff take care of Saxman’s roads. Firefighting is handled through a contract with a rural fire department. A village public safety officer is funded by the regional Tlingit and Haida Central Council and is supervised by city staff and state troopers. hall anderson GREGG POPPEN The library’s entrance brings patrons to a compelling view of our city’s mountain backdrop. Donald Varnell is one the artists who work and demonstrate in the Saxman carving shed. The facility will double in size in a new project, aiding both carvers and Saxman’s 110,000 annual visitors. The new fire department station downtown is HQ for a department with a recently upgraded insurance rating. C ity firefighters’ $12 million station house on Bawden Street in the heart of downtown was dedicated in mid-2012. Two years later, KFD got notice from the leading insurance rating agency that a firereadiness upgrade put them on an elite pedestal. Class 2/2Y designation by the Insurance Service Office (ISO) has significant benefits for business and industry in holding down insurance costs; smaller benefits spin off for homeowners. KFD called the Class 2/2Y rating “a tremendous tool for future development.” KFD reported that fewer than 750 of 47,000 fire departments nationwide—and only two others in Alaska— have earned that Class 2 rating. KFD has 19 career staff, including four paramedics. About two dozen volunteer firefighters and EMTs supplement full-time personnel. Firefighting capabilities on the waterfront are enhanced by a 45-foot fire boat, the MV Harry Newell. KFD also has an emergency dive team, shared with city police. City police protect and serve Ketchikan Police Department handles law enforcement inside the City of Ketchikan. KPD has 23 full-time officers and 36 employees overall. The department is focused on its relationship with the community, providing programs such as a school resource officer, Citizens Academy, Halloween safety for students and bike safety, including a bike rodeo and helmet give-away. The department staffs two stations. The new station downtown was funded with a city bond issue and a state appropriation. Mutual aid agreements are in force with the North Tongass and South Tongass volunteer fire departments and with the Ketchikan International Airport fire department. KFD boosted its baseline as an “all-hazards fire department” in 2015 with a new engine, new ambulance and new command vehicle. KFD has provided advanced life support ambulance service since the early 1980s. 10 Our Town gregg poppen Everyday community involvement is important: members of the department volunteer as coaches Ketchikan police officers protect and serve from a station house at Main and Grant streets. and referees for youth and high school The department sports and are leaders in activities such as Boy Scouts supports personnel not only as trainees, but as trainers, and church youth groups. too: nearly 20 are certified to teach firefighting and EMS; five are involved in distance delivery. State troopers handle rural enforcement Ketchikan is “A” Detachment headquarters for Alaska State Troopers in Southeast Alaska, overseeing four posts. AST assigns eight commissioned troopers to Ketchikan Post. AST provides law enforcement outside the City of Ketchikan and assists KPD as requested. Alaska Wildlife Troopers post four commissioned officers to Ketchikan. Their fleet of equipment consists of trucks, SUVs, patrol cars and boats, including the 68-foot patrol vessel Enforcer. gregg poppen Ketchikan Fire Department moved into a new home and, soon after that, celebrated an upgrade in status among the top-rated squads in the nation. photos f.b.i. VIA Ketchikan Museums Ketchikan Museums Volunteer firefighters posed in 1905 with their human-pulled hose carts. Fired up Volunteers have always been ready for battle K etchikan was made of fuel. The volunteer fire department was one of the first civic organizations in a town built out of combustibles: wood buildings, wood pilings, plank streets and sidewalks. Into this tinderland, introduce wood and coal stoves, oil lamps and a sawmill tepee burner downtown. You’d want crackerjack firefighters —and Ketchikan had them. Ketchikan Museums Ketchikan Fire Department volunteers in 1900 boasted the most basic of equipment: all a member needed was a bucket for the bucket brigade. Capabilities increased soon after with the purchase of hose carts. About 1904, a fire hall was put up on Main Street—with a 50foot tower where hoses of that length could be dried after use. As the city expanded, KFD strung wire for a primitive fire-alarm system that rang at the station. Devoted volunteers ran from every point of the compass to fight their nemesis. By the 1920s, KFD was buying modern rolling stock. One of the engines Unwelcome event—The Marine Hotel fire at Front from that time and Mission, beside the welcome arch, was arson. is displayed in a windowed annex at the new station downtown: “Grandma” still gets out for the Fourth of July parade. A concrete fire station was built on Main Street in the 1940s and was in use until 2012. Conflagrations of many kinds challenged local volunteers from the 1950s on: among them, a series of arsons downtown (see sidebar at right); the blaze that took out New England Fish Co. (where the Berth 2 parking lot is now); a fire at an oil-distributor; and innumerable ordinary house fires and commercial blazes. But volunteers’ commitment and systematic training proved adequate: even as late as the 1960s, fewer than a handful of paid professionals were on KFD’s personnel roster. The balance tipped over to paid staff through the 1970s. The city built Station No. 2 in the West End in the middle of that decade and, until the new downtown station opened, parked Grandma behind a phalanx of contemporary fire engines. In the present day, KFD remains a home for volunteers: about two dozen of them augment the full-time staff. 11 Our Town Fire Lt. Bill Mitchell’s outfit in his final crime spree disguised his return to town—and to arson. V.F.D. OFFICER IGNITED DISASTROUS BLAZES Between 1956 and 1961, fires destroyed much of downtown Ketchikan—including a hotel, a movie theater, restaurants, stores and apartments. In a single fire in 1958, an entire block on the water side of Front Street fell to the flames and was never rebuilt. Arson was to blame in many of the blazes and early suspicion settled on Bill Mitchell. Aside from some circumstantial details, he was an unlikely suspect. Mitchell was a solid citizen: lieutenant in the volunteer fire department, married, manager of his parents’ Ben Franklin store and president of the Jaycees. But all the same … fellow firefighters wondered why Mitchell was so often the first man to arrive at fire scenes. Local and state authorities set up polygraphs for fire department personnel. But using one pretext or another, Mitchell avoided his appointment with the lie detector. The D.A. got an indictment of Mitchell anyway, based on physical evidence found at fire scenes and circumstantial features of Mitchell’s whereabouts during and after fires. Mitchell lit out, so to speak. He went to California in the spring of 1961 to stay with family. His firefighting colleagues noticed that Ketchikan was fire-free during his absence. Then all heck broke loose during Fourth of July celebrations in 1961. Fires struck three downtown buildings within 90 minutes. Afterward, a local pilot reported having flown a man dressed in drag to the airport on Annette Island, where flights departed for Seattle; the pilot had seen a wanted poster for a forger who disguised himself in women’s clothing. FBI agents met the cross-dresser in Seattle, but he wasn’t their man: he was Bill Mitchell of Ketchikan—and was released. Back home, fire investigators discovered that candles in Ben Franklin-style glass holders, ringed by rag and paper, had been used to ignite the Fourth of July fires. Then they learned from the FBI that Bill Mitchell had been in Ketchikan on that disastrous day. Mitchell was hauled back. He confessed to a number of arson fires and served a prison term. Fortunately, no one was hurt in the firebug’s six-year spree, which recast the face of downtown. RHONDA BOLLING We may be a quaint old Alaskan town by the sea, but we’re up to date where it counts. Big investments in hydropower generation, power transmission and fiberoptic communications ensure that we tap into modern technology. Mountain heights shed snow and rain for hydropower or domestic water. Ocean depths cradle fiberoptic cables that connect us to the world. Public and private systems offer contemporary conveniences. Hydro keeps power rates steady E tapped by New England Fish Co. in 1912 as a power source for its processing plant in town. KPU operates three other hydro plants that collectively spin out about 12 megawatts of electricity. Bailey Power Plant in the West End uses diesel engines and can develop more than 20 megawatts, but KPU tries to minimize their use: hydro is almost always cheaper. Ketchikan is heaven-sent. Affordable kilowatt-hours are generated by hydropower turbines across our region, spinning below high Demand on the system hit a record 30 megawatts one mountain lakes that catch snowmelt and rainfall. February, when winter heating use combined with the Municipally owned Ketchikan Public Utilities (KPU) shipyard, the aquatic center and other large users to set a provides electricity through its distribution system to record—and to challenge KPU’s total in-house capacity. residents and businesses on several islands. Some of Since the 1980s, Swan Lake hydro has been the that juice comes from KPU’s own hydro plants and a answer for increasing power demand. diesel-fired generator; the municipal The 25-megawatt facility northeast of utility also buys low-cost electricity Ketchikan is wired into KPU’s system. from Southeast Alaska Power SEAPA owns Swan Lake hydro, along Agency (SEAPA), which operates two per kilowatt hour (cents) with the Tyee Lake plant that serves hydroelectric projects in the region. Petersburg and Wrangell. SEAPA sells Residential 9.58 KPU electric rates are steady. electricity at a wholesale rate of 6.8 cents Commercial 8.97 Residential customers paid 9.58 cents per kilowatt hour to municipal utilities in Industrial 8.31 per kilowatt hour for power in 2015, the the three communities. rates as of 2015 same price as in 2010. Industrial users SEAPA’s two plants were linked in 2009 with high-voltage service paid 8.31 per by the Swan-Tyee Intertie—57 miles of kWh in 2015, commercial users 8.97 cents. high-voltage line spanning mountains and inter-island KPU works hard to stay ahead of power demand. ocean depths. The intertie permits SEAPA to send The utility brought a new hydro plant online in 2014; excess Tyee Lake power as needed to Ketchikan, where Whitman Lake hydro added 4.5 megawatts to KPU’s demand is greater than in Wrangell and Petersburg. generating capacity and engineers estimated that it But SEAPA’s forecasts of winter demand indicate that could replace 1 million gallons per year of dieselthe power supplier needs more water for cold-season generated power in the KPU system. Local bonding and generating capability. SEAPA secured funding to state appropriations funded the new facility. Like some increase maximum Swan Lake reservoir height by 15 other hydro infrastructure in Ketchikan, Whitman Lake feet, boosting storage by 25 percent. SEAPA will has a remarkable heritage: The lake was dammed and lectricity in KPU electricity 12 Our Town install a flash board and gate in a 100 foot-wide fixed spillway slot. The modification will displace up to 800,000 gallons per year of diesel generation. SEAPA is nominally a division of the state, with a board of directors comprised of representatives from Ketchikan, Petersburg, and Wrangell. Internet and home entertainment services are vigorously competitive, built on the foundation of fiberoptic undersea cable linking Ketchikan to the Lower 48. Alaska-based GCI brought fiberoptics to shore here in 2009 and carries Internet and TV via its cable network; cable modem service speeds range up to 250 mbps. KPU delivers the Web and entertainment via an expanding fiber-to-the-home grid and also via DSL. Both providers run high-definition TV and on-demand content. The municipally owned entertainment provider has the distinction of a local-TV effort. KPU TV boasts 14 local channels, with content from community events and sports to locally produced TV shows. (See the “Media” pages for more on local programming.) Cellular telephone service is available from GCI, AT&T and ACS. Our mountainous terrain cuts out mobile sEAPA We’re up to date in wired and wireless The regional power provider used heavy-lift choppers and daring contractors to conquer terrain for the intertie that links Southeast Alaskan hydro projects nearly 60 miles apart. growing economy. GCI provides state-of-the-art cloud data storage services for businesses that want in-state data storage. Lake water slakes local thirst The KPU water division pipes fresh, safe water to about 3,250 customers, 15 percent of them businesses. The source is Ketchikan Lakes above the city. KPU maintains the safety of potable water with a newly installed UV and chloramination system along the creek. Water usage is unmetered; household service is $48 per month. KPU brought a new hydro plant online in 2014, adding 4.5 megawatts to generating capacity. It could replace 1 million gallons per year of diesel-generated power in the system. service in some areas. In 2014, KPU built a 4G LTE wireless network in conjunction with Verizon’s Rural to America program. GCI initiated 4G LTE service in 2015. Both GCI and KPU offer business solutions to local companies. KPU’s hosted IP phone systems are considered state of the art technology. In 2014, KPU built a secure, hosted data center for storage in a 13 Our Town The city water division provides more than 7 million gallons a day in summertime, when fish processors and cruise ships increase demand. Wintertime water use falls back to about 4.5 million gallons a day. Outside the cities of Ketchikan and Saxman, people hook up to neighborhood water systems or catch rainfall from their roofs. gregg poppen city of ketchikan Ketchikan has a mountaintop facility that proves its versatility by hosting statewide conventions, our renowned annual runway wearable-art show, a summertime musical melodrama and crab feast, federal safety conferences, concerts, weddings and dances—plus the occasional standing-roomonly gubernatorial debate. Ted Ferry Civic Center’s award-winning design incorporates a 4,300-square foot central room that can seat several hundred people. An oak dance floor is set down when TFCC users want to cut a rug—but without treading the carpet. Smaller, private meeting areas can be created with soundinsulating partitions. With quiet ease, the ballroom becomes three distinct bays with individual sound systems and lighting controls. (Naturally, these three bays are named for three bays in the ocean around Ketchikan.) The historical museum preserves and displays authentic First City stories Tongass Historical Museum has the mission of making sure the First City lasts—by collecting, preserving and interpreting the heritage of a place like no place else. The museum in the Centennial Building on Dock Street features permanent and temporary exhibits taken from its own collection. The professional staff also organizes and curates exhibits that call on the community to participate— such as the 2015 exhibit “Grown on the Rock,” comprised of artifacts, photos and text related to this area’s intrepid truck farmers, dairymen and gardeners. The museum is also occasionally the host for traveling exhibitions of photography or artifacts from other institutions. Public programs, special events, workshops, and educational programs that relate to Ketchikan area history are offered throughout the year. Early-days Ketchikan and Native villages in this area were 14 Our Town The civic center offers a spacious, 1,500-square foot stage for performances and presentations. An 800-square foot kitchen is available for on-site food preparation. Outside caterers also serve the center. An executive boardroom and spacious lobby contribute to the comfort and convenience of this much-used community facility. The civic center has the essentials for conferences, including AV equipment, copiers, high-speed Internet, teleconferencing equipment, computers and LCD projectors. The facility is owned and staffed by the City of Ketchikan. Ketchikan Visitors Bureau markets the facility as part of its promotional program for the community. Ted Ferry Civic Center is on Venetia Way off of Park Avenue and boasts a dramatic view of Deer Mountain. It’s adjacent to Cape Fox Lodge, which is accessible via its own funicular tram from Creek Street. vitally documented by photographers from the 1890s on, and priceless images from the period are registered and carefully stored. The museum’s extensive historical archive and photographs are available for Tongass Historical Museum beside the creek is a research upon repository for the narrative of the First City. request. Rare artifacts in the museum’s permanent exhibit display Ketchikan’s many guises: a Native fish camp; a way station for the Interior gold rush and a hub for this region’s mining boom; a canned-salmon colossus and halibut hot spot; a timber town; and the home of a notorious red-light district that persisted until the 1950s. Museum staff are reconfiguring the Centennial Building since the public library moved to a new facility in 2012. Having the building to themselves allows greater opportunity to collect and display Ketchikan’s heritage. city of ketchikan MEETING THE NEEDS OF THOSE WHO NEED TO MEET ketchikan gateway borough Borough bus system extends routes, relieves congestion Ketchikan’s public bus system upgraded its rolling stock, its streetside amenities and its service routes in recent years while counting steady increases in ridership. A blend of fares, federal support, the commercial passenger vessel levy (CPV) and municipal funding fuels the Ketchikan Gateway Borough Transit Department. In a nearly $2 million system, managers work with eyes on residents’ need for convenient, affordable rides and everybody’s desire that we minimize summertime congestion. KGB counted an average of 1,270 rides per day in a recent reporting year—nearly 460,000 for the year. Ridership nearly quadrupled between 2006 and 2013. A ride is just a dollar. Borough buses run about 14 miles north and 6 miles south of town, along with their extensive reach inside the city. KGB transit has built bus shelters with cedar from our forest that was milled here; some shelters have metal art by local artists. Buses bear paintings by Ray Troll and Marvin Oliver, artists with national renown. Like virtually all public transit systems, Ketchikan’s can’t pay for itself with fares alone—particularly while offering That’s how we roll. The bus system operates to serve riders, but also to express the place where it operates. Visual art by famed artists, and shelters made out of cedar grown and milled here, are unique features. This bus was painted by Ray Troll. a free downtown loop shuttle for visitors from May to September. CPV funding contributes to the shuttle that helps to disperse visitors from the docks. A consultant who studied Alaska’s public transit operations judged the borough’s bus system the second most efficient in the state, dividing municipal subsidies into fares per hour of operation. Only Juneau’s bus system bested Ketchikan in those criteria. Borough transit is adding convenience features with help from the Alaska Mobility Coalition: vehicle tracking to allow users to get real-time schedule and buslocation information by phone. Google Trip planning for smartphones and other digital devices was slated to roll out in 2015. Areawide responsibilities of Public Works include City Park and several pocket parks around town, but also take in seaside recreational areas at South Point Higgins Beach and Rotary Beach. Floral beautification sprouts in Public Works greenhouses each spring and spills out of a hundred colorful flower baskets hanging on city light poles. The department lavishes horticultural attention on Tunnel Park, Whale Park and other sites. Borough personnel also maintain fields where we enjoy baseball, softball, soccer and football—five fields in all, spanning more than 20 miles of our island. 15 Our Town City Park along Ketchikan Creek is one of many public recreational areas maintained by the borough. Borough personnel also treat us to summer flowers and keep our ballfields in shape. gregg poppen The Public Works Department of the borough tends to our outdoors in scales as large as ballfields and as small as flower baskets. While enjoying that escape to Alaska on a cruise ship, the visitor is investing in this city and others. T he commercial passenger vessel excise tax, or CPV, provides resources to make Ketchikan and other port communities better places to visit. The CPV was initiated in Alaska law in 2008. Revenue contributes to shoreside projects and programs related to the cruise-based visitor industry. The state collects the CPV tax and allocates portions to municipal governments. Cruise lines pay $34.50 per passenger to the CPV account; the state passes on funding to municipalities affected by the huge numbers of these seasonal visitors. If they come, we will build it—docks, boardwalks, shelters, safety programs and more. In recent years, CPV money contributed to upgrading of cruise ship berths. The city is using so-called head tax revenues to finish the waterfront promenade that runs more than a mile between Berth 4 and Thomas Basin along Ketchikan’s historic downtown core. gregg poppen The City of Ketchikan and Ketchikan Gateway Borough split $5 per head. The municipalities divided about $4.4 million in 2014. Several new sections of Ketchikan’s waterfront boardwalk have moved forward with funding help from the commercial passenger vessel tax. This promenade beside Thomas Basin is a signature addition. The boardwalk project, championed for many years by Historic Ketchikan Inc., exemplifies use of CPV funding to create benefits for visitors and residents alike. CPV money supported the Ketchikan Story Project—six videos outlining aspects of Ketchikan’s unique history and lifestyles. The series, on DVD and online, and associated kiosks won regional Emmys and national Telly awards. 16 Our Town The City of Ketchikan augmented other funding sources with CPV money as it upgraded the berths where visiting cruise ships tie up five months of the year. gregg poppen The borough invites project proposals each year and the borough assembly allocates funding. CPV money has gone into downtown rain shelters and restrooms as well as the bus system. The fund pays for traffic safety monitoring at Herring Cove, a popular site for wildlife-viewing tours and shore fishing 8 miles south of the city. CPV funding helped the City of Saxman nearly double its carving center, where master carvers and apprentices work. Southern Southeast Alaska is in a region that specialists call temperate rain forest—”temperate” because we’re protected from extremes of hot and cold; “rain” because vast, moist climatic systems of the North Pacific Ocean drop prodigious precipitation; and “forest” because the mild clime and abundant rain promote amazing green growth. charles haberbush We handle it with waterproof, breathable fabrics; rubber boots; and the certainty that into each life some sun must fall. We hunker down in winter and wait for that clear day when everything sparkles and we appreciate that most of our trees are evergreens: there’s living color year-round. When it’s really cold for a while, we skate at Ward Lake and go to the mountains on skis or snowmachines. The run-up to summer is all color and anticipation. Crocuses pop up Weather wasn’t half-bad for this half-marathon: just a light rain. We don’t let a little drizzle keep us from healthy activities. in February, sometimes through snow. In April, daffodils open and hummingbirds return. Kids get out for baseball. Fishing boats get a going-over, then get going for king salmon. By June, coolers and beach chairs are always at hand for spontaneous picnics. In July, we see fireworks and our best odds for sun: 16 days of 31 are dry, on average. Long summer days slide into autumn. We put up coho AVERAGE DAYLIGHT HOURS:MINUTES salmon for winter, harvest the garden and get the kids 9:12 10:51 12:46 14:38 16:19 17:49 16:20 14:31 11:50 10:19 8:42 7:46 new rain boots. weather record January average temp 34.9 º F July average temp 57.7 º F Average annual rainfall 1980-2010 141.3 inches Avg. number of days with rain 234 days Longest stretch without rain 23 days starting July 9, 1971 Wettest year 1949: 202 inches Driest year 1982: 87 inches Wettest monthNov. 1917: 53.85 inches Driest month Feb. 1989: 0.82 inches Greatest 24-hour precipitation Oct. 11, 1977: 8.71 inches Average winter snowfall 37.3 inches 40 41 31 30 44 32 AVERAGE HIGH TEMPERATURE °F 49 56 61 64 64 58 AVERAGE LOW TEMPERATURE °F 35 41 47 51 52 47 51 43 40 40 34 31 AVERAGE MONTHLY PRECIPITATION INCHES 15.4 10.5 10.9 9.3 8.1 6.6 6.5 9.8 13.7 19.2 16.6 14.2 putting the boot to a record The 1,976 residents and visitors who trod Third Avenue Bypass in May 2013 surpassed the record of 1,366 established by Lincolnshire, England. It was Ketchikan’s second attempt: an effort a year earlier brought out fewer than 1,200 rainboot racers. The organizers rallied our boot troop again and a rain-free day brought out what may have been the largestever crowd to assemble in Ketchikan. 17 Our Town charles haberbush Nearly 2,000 Ketchikan souls (3,952 soles, to be precise) turned out in May 2013 to claim the Guinness World Record for most people to race in rainboots—or wellingtons, as the former British titleholders call them. (The favorite waterproof boots in these parts are Xtratufs—so-called “Ketchikan sneakers.” See a pair on the exultant lady at right.) OF THE GREAT LAND The archaeological record of human habitation in Alaska goes back more than 10,000 years. The written record—told in Russian, Spanish and English—is considerably briefer, at less than three centuries. Here are some prominent points on the timeline since Europeans encountered the Great Land. 1725 Russian Tsar Peter the Great sends Vitus Bering to explore the North Pacific. 1728 Bering sails through the strait between North America and Asia that now bears his name. 1733 Bering’s second A hand-drawn map of the 1700s. expedition; with him is George Wilhelm Steller, first naturalist to visit Alaska. 1774 Spaniard Juan Perez discovers Prince of Wales Island and Dixon Entrance—the strait linking our area to the open Pacific Ocean. 1776 English explorer Capt. James Cook leads an expedition in search of the Northwest Passage. 1778 Cook reaches King Island, Norton Sound, Unalaska. 1784 Grigorii Shelikhov establishes the first permanent non-Native settlement: Three Saints Bay on Kodiak Island. 1791 George Vancouver leaves England to explore Alaska’s coast. Alejandro Malaspina explores the Pacific Northwest for Spain. 1793 Vancouver’s crew makes land near Ketchikan. 1795 Alaska’s first Russian Orthodox Church is established at Kodiak. 1853 Russian explorer-trappers find oil seeps in Cook Inlet. 1861 Gold discovered on the Stikine River near Telegraph Creek in British Columbia. 1867 U.S. purchases Alaska from Russia for $7 million. 1868 Alaska designated as the Department of Alaska under authority of the U.S. Army. 1869 Alaska’s first newspaper, the Sitka Times, published. 1872 Gold is discovered near Sitka. 1876 Gold is discovered south of Juneau. T.R. designated the forest in Southeast. 1877 U.S. troops withdrawn from Alaska. 1878 First canneries in Alaska are established in Klawock and in Sitka. 1880 Richard Harris and Joseph Juneau discover gold on Gastineau Channel and establish the community of Juneau. 1882 U.S. Navy bombs and burns the Tlingit village of Angoon. 1884 Congress passes the Organic Act allowing for local governments and allocating funds to school Alaska Native children. 1887 Presbyterian Father William Duncan and his Tsimshian followers from B.C. establish Metlakatla on Annette Island. 1890 Large corporate salmon canneries appear. 1891 Oil claims staked in Cook Inlet. 1897-1900 Klondike gold rush. 1897 First shipment of fresh halibut sent south from Juneau. 1898 Nome gold Undersea cable provided the first fast link to the south. rush. Congress appropriates money for telegraph cable from Seattle to Sitka. 1900 City of Ketchikan is incorporated. Alaska capital moves to Juneau. White Pass railroad completed. 1902 President Teddy Roosevelt establishes Alexander Archipelago Forest Reserve in southern Southeast Alaska. 1904 Underwater cables are laid from Seattle to Sitka and from Sitka to Valdez. Rough-hewn Ketchikan in 1895, five years before the city’s incorporation. 1906 Alaska sends a non-voting delegate to Congress. Governor’s office moved from Sitka to Juneau. 1799 Alexander Baranov establishes a Russian post known today as Old Sitka. 1802 Tlingits drive Russians from Old Sitka. 1907 Alexander Archipelago Forest Reserve and other U.S. lands are consolidated as Tongass National Forest by President Teddy Roosevelt. 1804 Baranov re-establishes a Russian settlement at site of present-day Sitka. 1908 Alaska’s first cold storage plant is built in Ketchikan. 1848 Cathedral of St. Michael dedicated at New Archangel (Sitka). 1911 International agreement by U.S., Great Britain, Canada, Russia, and Japan controls fur, seal, and fish harvests; sea otters completely protected. 18 Our Town 1912 Alaska gains territorial status. Alaska Native Brotherhood organizes in Southeast. 1913 First Territorial Legislature. 1915 Alaska Native Sisterhood has first convention. 1916 First bill for Alaska statehood President Harding visited the First introduced in Congress. Alaskans vote City during his tour of Alaska in 1923. in favor of banning liquor by a 2 to 1 margin: the “dry-state law” three years before national Prohibition. 1973 Ketchikan International Airport opens on Gravina Island. Congress passes Trans-Alaska Pipeline Authorization Act. Limited-entry program for salmon fisheries becomes law. 1922 Alaska Agricultural College and School of Mines opens in Fairbanks. Native voting rights established in federal court. 1976 Alaskans approve constitutional amendment for Alaska Permanent Fund. 1923 President Warren G. Harding comes to Alaska to drive the last spike in the Alaska Railroad. We honored the president’s visit by naming Warren, G and Harding streets in Newtown. 1977 Trans-Alaska Pipeline completed, Prudhoe Bay to Valdez. 1924 Congress extends citizenship to all Indians in the U.S. Tlingit leader William Paul Sr. is first Native elected to Alaska Legislature. Airmail delivery to Alaska begins. 1928 Court case resolves the right of Native children to attend public school. 1980 Congress passes Alaska National Interests Lands Conservation Act. Legislature increases Permanent Fund’s share of oil revenues from 25 to 50 percent and establishes Alaska dividend fund to distribute Permanent Fund earnings. Legislature repeals state income tax. 1932 Radiotelephone communications open in Ketchikan, Juneau and Nome. 1982 First Permanent Fund dividends distributed. 1935 Jurisdictional Act allows Tlingit and Haida Alaska Natives to pursue land claims in U.S. Court of Claims. 1983 All of Alaska except the westernmost Aleutian Islands is consolidated in Alaska time zone; previously, Alaska spanned four time zones. 1942 Japan bombs Dutch Harbor and invades the Aleutians. 1986 Price of oil drops below $10 per barrel, state revenues plummet. 1945 Territorial Gov. Ernest Gruening signs the Anti-Discrimination Act, the first such legislation passed in the U.S. or any of its possessions. 1989 Exxon Valdez oil tanker runs aground and spills 11 million gallons of oil into Prince William Sound. Permanent Fund reaches $10 billion value. Alaska Supreme Court throws out Alaska’s rural preference subsistence law. 1946 Boarding school for Native students opens at Mt. Edgecumbe in Sitka. 1947 First Alaska Native land claims suit filed by Tlingit and Haida people introduced in U.S. Court of Claims. 1948 Alaskans vote by a 10 to 1 margin to abolish fish traps. 1953 The first big Alaskan pulp mill opens at Ward Cove north of Ketchikan. Oil well near Eureka on Glenn Highway opens Alaska’s modern oil history. First Alaska television broadcast at KENIAnchorage. 1955 Alaska Constitutional Convention opens. TV coverage of statehood celebration showed Alaskans hanging a 49th star on Old Glory. 1990 Tongass Timber Reform Act in Congress sets aside more Southeast Alaska forest in wilderness. 1991 Congress closes Arctic National Wildlife Refuge to oil development. 1993 Sitka pulp mill announces indefinite suspension, idling hundreds. 1994 Voters defeat latest proposal to move the capital to Southcentral. 1996 Congress lifts ban on export of Alaskan crude oil. 1997 Ketchikan Pulp Co. shuts down, throwing hundreds out of work and effectively ending 45 years of large-scale timber harvesting and processing in Southeast. Fishermen in Prince Rupert, B.C., blockade an Alaska ferry to protest Alaska salmon-fishing practices; ferry service is cut off for 19 weeks. 1999 A proposal to spend Permanent Fund earnings on state government is rejected by 83 percent of voters. 2002 Alaskan voters reject, by 67 percent to 33 percent, a proposal to fund moving the Legislature to Southcentral. Fish traps depleted natural salmon stocks until outlawed in 1959. They disappeared at statehood. 1956 Territorial voters adopt the Constitution. Two senators and one representative are sent to Washington to push for statehood. 1958 Statehood measure passes. President Eisenhower signs statehood bill. 1959 Statehood proclaimed. Sitka pulp mill opens. U.S. Court of Claims issues judgment favoring Tlingit and Haida claims to Southeast Alaska lands. 2005 The U.S. transportation bill has a $223 million earmark for a bridge from Revilla Island to Gravina Island in Ketchikan—a hard link sought since 1973, but derided nationally by some as the “Bridge to Nowhere.” 2007 Gov. Sarah Palin diverts funding from the proposed bridge to other Alaska projects and orders study of improved ferry service. 2009 Alaska’s population is 698,473—47th among the states and greater than populations in North Dakota, Vermont and Wyoming. 2009 Gov. Palin resigns office on July 29. 1963 Ketchikan Gateway Borough incorporated. 2010 Former U.S. Sen. Ted Stevens dies in an airplane crash near Dillingham. 1964 Good Friday earthquake devastates Anchorage and Prince William Sound. At magnitude 9.2, the most severe earthquake ever in the U.S. 2014 Gov. Sean Parnell signs a contract with Vigor Alaska for $102 million to construct two state ferries—the first state ferries to be built in Alaska. 1968 Oil discovered at Prudhoe Bay on Alaska’s North Slope. Ted Stevens appointed to a vacant U.S. Senate seat; he was elected to the seat seven times and became the GOP’s longest-serving U.S. senator. 2014 Independent candidate Bill Walker defeats incumbent Republican Sean Parnell in the gubernatorial election after forming a “unity ticket” with Democratic nominee Byron Mallott, who is elected as lieutenant governor. 1971 Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act signed into U.S. law: Natives get a tenth of Alaska’s land and $1 billion; village, regional corporations created. 2014 Alaskan voters approve a citizen initiative legalizing limited possession and use of marijuana as of Feb. 24, 2015. Pot sales are to begin in May 2016. 19 Our Town We will find your perfect place. You know RE/MAX and we know Southeast Alaska COMMERCIAL / INDUSTRIAL / RESIDENTIAL / VACATION PROPERTIES LAND / HOUSES / CONDOS FOR SALE OR FOR LEASE FivE thingS you’ll love about your Southeast Alaska home Fabulous outdoor living Camping, hiking, kayaking, sailing, flying, fishing and simply being in one of the most stunning places on earth No roads out of here Not isolated, but unique: travel is by boat or aircraft Our agents have been fulfilling real estate wishes for more than forty years. Wildlife Share your island world with eagles, black bears, ravens, seals, sea lions, whales, deer, wolves, mountain goats and others Fresh seafood It’s fresh because you just caught that salmon, halibut, crab or shrimp! of Ke tc hikan It’s not too hot and not too cold In this temperate rain forest, sunny days are dazzling and the other days bring the fresh, clean water that keeps our surroundings clean and green 907-225-6191 remaxofketchikan.com remax.ketchikan@gmail.com 20 Our Town Ziplines offer opportunities to ride gravity through the rain forest. ■ Go fishing with a local guide; saltwater trips can be on powerboats or open kayaks. Half-day charter trips are available for visitors with tight timelines. All-day trips also take off from our docks and multi-day lodge stays in remote areas provide all-inclusive adventure. Check online for your options. ■ Take a walking tour of downtown or the West End to breathe in our town’s past. Maps are at KVB Tour Center on Berth 2 and in many businesses. Sponsored by Historic Ketchikan Inc. ■ Visit the Southeast Alaska Discovery Center on Main Street for interpretive displays and a film. One of Alaska’s premier attractions. ■ Totem Bight State Park 10 miles north of town has great totem poles, a long house and Spring blossoms under the Chief an extraordinary oceanside setting. Kyan pole—on the walking tour. ■ Visit Misty Fjords National Monument by boat, floatplane or kayak; it’s grand country from any angle. ■ Historic Creek Street has been home to a shingle mill, totem poles, homes and brothels. It’s now lined with shops and eateries above the watercourse; Dolly’s House Museum displays the red-light days. ■ Totem Heritage Center between Deermount Street and Ketchikan Creek presents Native culture and historically significant totems in an interpretive setting. harold adams ■ Saxman village south of Ketchikan offers a world-class collection of totem poles and a cedar clan house. Paddle the Pacific near shore for quiet excitement on our clean, cold waters. Waterproof the camera! 21 Our Town carl thompson Take a young person out for shore fishing and exploration of the tiny ecosystems in tide pools. ■ Hike Perseverance Lake or Talbot Lake trails to see the rain forest. Ward Creek Trail curves along a scenic stream and is an easy walk. Deer Mountain Trail is a 2,500foot challenge with superb vistas. Rainbird Trail above Third Avenue Bypass has intown access and great vistas. ■ Thomas Basin harbor is home to working and pleasure boats. Walk down from the Potlatch Bar to stroll the floats or amble out the breakwater for a great view of town and mountain. Performances by Alaska Native dancers wearing traditional regalia can be seen on some tours. ■ Take a kayak tour for a close, quiet and exciting encounter with Alaska. Southeast Sea Kayaks and Southeast Exposure offer tours. ■ Our tall conifers have inspired zipline adventures at Southeast Exposure north of town and Alaska Canopy Adventures south of town. Visit Creek Street— historic and truly like no other place. Art, food, souvenirs and a brothel museum mix with residences. gregg poppen gregg poppen ATTRACTIONS | ACTIVITIES hall anderson Master carver Nathan Jackson fine-tunes the Kaats the Bear Clan Hunter totem pole as his wife, Dorica, paints details. The pole was commissioned by the Smithsonian Institution’s National Museum of the American Indian. Dorica Jackson is expert in the traditional Native art of Chilkat weaving. A tall cedar tree falls. A story is written as wood chips fly beneath a handmade adze. It’s been that way for longer than anyone knows. Northwest Coast Natives—between a land of plenty and a sea of plenty, and having no written language— developed a unique art form in carved wood. Totemic works related legends, honored ancestors and praised leaders. Even posts holding up clan houses were Chief Johnson incised by stone is depicted in “The Rock.” to further the Sculptor Dave Rubin had carver Nathan Jackson heritage. model for the Tlingit chief. 22 Our Town Totem poles are just the start A rt and practicality are linked in Northwest Coast Native cultures. Creative work is integral to the way of life of the Tlingit, Haida and Tsimshian peoples of Southeast Alaska. Gorgeous woven cedar bark baskets were traditionally used to hold foods and household goods. Ornamented robes expressed family backgrounds—a sort of walking genealogy. The canoes The art of fishing in an artifact: a halibut carrying Alaska Natives to trading hook carved with totemic designs. sites and fish camps were carved and painted with mythical and family emblems. Even halibut hooks bore artistry: carved figures believed to beguile fish. Too often lost in fascination with visual art is the utilitarianism in Northwest Coast Natives’ decorated objects: cedar baskets woven tightly enough for parboiling food, and halibut hooks sized to catch medium-aged fish, not young spawners nor old fish. A woven basket by Delores Churchill, master Haida weaver and internationally known researcher of traditional weaving. Totem Heritage Center on Ketchikan Creek is indispensable for learning about ancient ways and artistry. Southeast Alaska Discovery Center on Mill Street also presents Native culture. Parnassus Bookstore on Stedman Street has material on Northwest Coast Native culture. Potlatch Totem Park, a private business at Totem Bight, displays totem poles and replicas of village houses. Arts and dance enliven a legacy Native artists and dancers in Ketchikan take their traditions to coming generations, as well as to visitors. Almost 20 percent of Ketchikan’s population claims Alaska Native lineage and cultural preservation is important to identity. Carvers and weavers take on apprentices and students to extend the culture. Many more young Natives get involved through dance groups. Prime examples in this area are the Haida Descendant Dancers, Tongass Tribe Dancers, Cape Fox Dancers and New Path Dance Group. Youths and elders work together on regalia, language and dances, fashioning cultural links while presenting the art form to non-Natives. A local program brings Native elders to elementary schools to introduce their arts and folkways. Educational projects through the University of Alaska Southeast Ketchikan campus—such as anthropological visits to abandoned village sites—double as conservation and outreach. gregg poppen Subsistence harvests and traditional foods also help to keep culture alive. Village corporations and regional corporations set up in the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act in the 1970s boost heritage. Through economic development (such as Cape Fox Corp.’s lodge, tours and store) and foundation support (such as Sealaska Heritage Foundation), corporations project the past forward. Forward motion—Youngsters in dance groups learn traditional forms as well as contemporary extensions of cultural legacies. This image looks in on a rehearsal for a Tsimshian group, the New Path Dancers. ketchikan museums totem heritage center Early photos of Kasaan and other villages are in the interpretive program at Totem Heritage Center. The center’s mission of preserving ‘heritage’ has an educational component; artists teach Natives and non-Natives in areas such as tool-making, carving, weaving and regalia-making. Preservation of objects from the past was a key mission when the City of Ketchikan founded Totem Heritage Center, but the facility has become integral in moving traditional Native culture forward. The center opened in 1976 to hold 19th-century totem poles retrieved from uninhabited Tlingit and Haida village sites near Ketchikan. Functioning as a museum, the center displays these priceless cultural artifacts and more recent carved poles, along with Native Alaskan artifacts. 23 Our Town The Totem Heritage Center also furthers the traditional arts and crafts of the Tlingit, Haida, and Tsimshian cultures in a nationally recognized program of Native arts classes and activities. Master carver Nathan Jackson and master weaver Delores Churchill—both recipients of National Heritage Fellowships—have taught at the center, as have many distinguished artists from across North America. The center is open to visitors year-round. World-class totem collections distinguish Ketchikan P ublicly accessible collections of Northwest Coast totem poles in Saxman and at Totem Bight offer comprehensive looks at an art form known around the world. Carved cedar artistry in museums and at private sites also contributes toward making Ketchikan the best place in the world to explore this unique cultural legacy. waterside setting, where a clan house fronting on the cove replicates the traditional communal gathering place of Native villages. For years, a Native dance group has performed weekly; check community calendars. Totem Bight State Historical Park eight miles north of Ketchikan has an outstanding collection of poles replicating those raised in Alaska Native villages. An interpretive brochure and interpretive signage along the easy forest path provide information on Native culture, the forest and wildlife. The trail leads to a dramatic Six modern poles can be seen between Cape Fox Lodge and the civic center in the commissioned Council of Clans array. Privately commissioned totem pole collections can be seen on paid tours at Rainforest Sanctuary at Herring Cove and at Potlatch Park at Totem Bight. Both public totem parks are on borough bus routes. Totem Heritage Center off of Deermount Street has Saxman Totem Park has been prominent for most of a preserved and contemporary totem poles for viewing; century as a monument to totemic art—and as a training there is a fee for interpretive tours in this city facility. ground for several generations of Native carvers. Chief Johnson Pole along Stedman Street and Chief Contemporary poles and those dating back to the New Deal stand sentinel on Totem Row, which leads to Beaver Clan House. Cedar poles in Saxman are for the most part painstaking replications of village poles dating to the 1800s and early 1900s— although some express more modern themes. Native dance performances and interpretive programs are conducted in the clan house. The carving Saxman Totem Park and Totem Bight State Historical Park stand out as world-leading collections of authentic Native artistry. shed in Saxman provides a work site for master carvers and apprentices. The totem Kyan Pole in Whale Park on Mission Street are notable park along Saxman streets is open to the public; Cape public replications, placed by a community that’s proud Fox Corp.’s paid tours and programs take in the clan of its First Peoples. Another recent addition to our totem house and carving shed in addition to guiding visitors skyline is in front of the downtown facilities of UAS through the totem park. Ketchikan campus on Stedman Street. 24 Our Town CHRONICLES, MYTHS AND STATUS are WRITTEN in cedar Raven Steals the Sun Northwest Coast peoples possess a sophisticated suite of fine arts and crafts, but their totem poles are best-known. This art form predates Western contact, but flourished in the prosperity of the fur trade in the 1700s and 1800s. Poles were commissioned by wealthy village leaders to display their status and affluence. Some poles tell of legends, clan lineages or notable events. Some celebrate cultural beliefs and others merely demonstrate carvers’ artistic talents. Poles also illustrate stories, commemorate historic persons, represent shamanic powers or incorporate ridicule—the so-called shame poles. One of the most-told and mostcarved Northwest Coast stories is that of the Theft of Daylight, or Raven Steals the Sun. A fine example stands beside Tongass Historical Museum on Dock Street. 25 Our Town T he Old Man at the Head of the Nass River was very rich and owned three boxes containing the stars, the moon and the sun. Raven wanted these for himself. Raven transformed himself into a hemlock needle and dropped into the water cup of the Old Man’s daughter while she was picking berries. She became pregnant with him and gave birth to him as a baby boy. The Old Man doted over his grandson, but Raven cried incessantly. The Old Man gave him the Box of Stars to pacify him. Raven played with it for a while, then opened the lid and let the stars escape through the chimney into the sky. Later, Raven cried for the Box of the Moon, and after much fuss the Old Man gave it to him, but after stopping up the chimney. Raven played with it for a while and rolled it out the door, where it escaped into the sky. Finally Raven cried for The Old Man gave him the Box of the Sun, and the Box of Stars to after much fuss the Old Man relented and pacify him. Raven played gave it to him. Raven with it for a while, then knew well that he could not roll it out the opened the lid and let door or toss it up the chimney because he the stars escape through was carefully watched. the chimney into the sky. So he waited until everyone was asleep and changed into his bird form, grasped the sun and flew out the chimney. He took it to show others, who did not believe that he had the sun—so he opened the box to show them and it flew up into the sky, where it has been ever since. SAXMAN SIBLINGS FOLLOW FATHER INTO PUBLIC SERVICE T he Williams brothers inherited public service along with their Tlingit blood. Raised in an Alaska Native village within two miles of the First City, they took after their father when it came to sitting down, talking it through and getting things moving. “My father was the mayor of the City of Saxman for 38 years,” said Joe Williams Jr. The mayor is chosen by fellow Saxman City Council members. Both Joe Williams and his older brother, Bill Williams, earned the honor—just one line on their resumés. Bill Williams was also chosen by his peers as Saxman city mayor; he served on the city council from 1976 to 1992 and was mayor for about eight years. He was also president of the Cape Fox Corp., the village corporation founded in Saxman under the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act. As a young man, Bill Williams was a longshoreman—back when Ketchikan’s industrial waterfront was as busy with freighter traffic as with cruise ships. The pulp mill was turning out dissolving pulp for export to Asia. Two sawmills in the area were producing rough lumber. Canneries on the wharf packed salmon all summer. Alaska Steamship Co. freighters tied up with goods for local stores. “We’d work from 7 or 8 in the morning until midnight, then go back at 7. You had to get those ships in and out,” he recalled. “And I was married. We had children.” By the early 1990s, he saw a political opportunity on a larger scene. He considered a run for the Alaska State House as a Democrat. “The Republicans were fighting amongst themselves and I decided it was timely for me. But it was close. I won by just 12 votes,” he said. Service in the legislature was a challenge, but fun for a while. He was reelected twice to two-year terms and said he had “friends in both the majority and minority. But then one session, a guy in the majority told me, If you want us to help you, you need to come over.” Bill Williams joined a bipartisan caucus in the House and later changed party registration to Republican. He was elected to five terms, ending legislative service in 2003. Joe Williams Jr. ran his own community-wide campaign two years later, signing up at the last minute to stand for mayor of the Ketchikan Gateway Borough. “I finally got talked into running for borough mayor,” he said. “It turns out I actually enjoyed it.” Joe Williams was the first Alaska Native elected as mayor of the borough. He lost his campaign for re-election to a younger Ketchikan-area lifer. Joe Williams said his father, born in Saxman in 1903, grew up listening to Cape Fox village elders who remembered their ancestral village. The Cape Fox people joined Tlingits of other villages in creating a new community at Saxman in the 1880s. 26 Our Town gregg poppen Joe Williams Jr. was president of Alaska Native Brotherhood Camp 15 at the age of 16 because, he said, he “was good at keeping people active, building a gym for the young people, chopping wood for the elders.” After earning a bachelor’s degree in business at Alaska Pacific University in Anchorage, he came home. In time, he served simultaneously as mayor of the City of Saxman and of the Ketchikan Gateway Borough. He was also president of the Saxman IRA Council, the tribal governing body organized under federal law. Bill Willams, left, and Joe Williams Jr. at the totem park in Saxman. Their family has been deeply involved in the small town’s development for decades. The brothers have also achieved electoral success beyond Saxman city limits. “The leadership at the time wanted their children to go to school and to go to church,” Joe Williams said. “That generation agreed to move from the villages.” Presbyterian ministers and the Office of Indian Affairs influenced Alaska Natives in this area and in others to “move to town.” Bill and Joe Williams’ father was a commercial fisherman who skippered a seine boat. He stayed on the water after giving up fishing and used his boat for beach logging. Joe Williams touches on family and tribal history as a walking-tour guide, taking visitors on an informative stroll among local sites. He calls the business Where the Eagle Walks. “It started as a favor to the manager of a sightseeing boat who wanted an activity ashore for the passengers,” he said. “She said, do a walking tour. She asked whether I had a script. I said no. She said, you don’t need one—you’ve been here forever.” Saxman is two miles from Ketchikan. A narrow highway connects the communities. As the mayor in Saxman decades ago, Joe Williams Sr., with his wife, Elizabeth, advocated for a safe pedestrian path. “It was his and my mother’s desire to have a walking path,” said Joe Williams Jr. “That stemmed from my grandfather’s and grandmother’s walking into town on that difficult road for so many years.” Bill Williams fulfilled his parents’ and Saxman residents’ wish while he was in the Alaska Legislature, securing funding for a scenic paved seaside path to Saxman. The much-used blacktop—for much of its length, separated from the highway—extends five miles south of Ketchikan to Mountain Point. It’s called the Joseph C. Williams Sr. Coastal Trail, named for the Williams brothers’ father, but only after Bill Williams left the House. “I worked to get the trail built,” Bill Williams said. “But I didn’t work to get my dad’s name on it.” STATS | DATES | FIRSTS Selected features of Ketchikan’s natural history, our unique human history and our way of life between the rain forest and the ocean Hours and minutes of daylight in Ketchikan on the summer solstice in June. (4:18 a.m. to 9:46 p.m.) 954,000 Estimated tourists 7:06 Hours and minutes of became the first Alaskan city to pave a street, replacing Front Street planks between Grant and Mill. 17:28 on cruise ships calling in Ketchikan in 2014. 1923 Year when Ketchikan daylight on the winter solstice in December. (9:24 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.) 20 percent, 1,231 feet Slope and length of 22.04 feet Greatest predicted range between successive tides in Ketchikan in 2015 (on April 19: high of 18.55 ft. at 1:32 a.m., low of -3.49 ft. at 7:50 a.m.) $28 million, 0.9 mile Making the grade: Thousands of cubic yards of rock were blasted out for Schoenbar Bypass linking Bear Valley to Water Street. The vista is a wedge of ocean and Gravina Island. ketchikan museums Schoenbar Bypass, built in the late 1980s. It’s not our most vertiginous street: a portion of Washington Street in the West End slopes at 24 percent. Cost and length of Third Avenue Extension, completed in 2004. The bypass above Newtown provides an alternate route from the West End to Bear Valley and downtown. Its engineering centerpiece is a wall 1,000 feet long and 90 feet high made of 120,000 tons of compacted concrete. J.R. Heckman Founder $25 Annual fee levied by the Forest Service for lease of an entire Tongass Forest island for fox farming in 1907. Nine fox farms started up near Ketchikan area and a number around Prince of Wales Island before World War II. A blue fox pelt was worth $100-$150 to brokers for Europeans in 1925. But the cost of starting a fox farm was estimated at $7,300. of Ketchikan’s first mercantile store, at Main and Dock streets. Heckman is also historically credited as the inventor of the floating fish trap. His namesake building is still in use. U.S. Senator Elective office held by John F. Kennedy when he visited here in the 1950s and spoke in Coliseum Theater. 5,800 visitors called here on excursion steamships in 1898. 954,000 visitors called here on cruise ships in 2013. 4 hours Number to add to local time for Eastern time; add 9 hours for Greenwhich mean time. 1913 Year when the first concrete building was constructed in Ketchikan: 4,592 feet Elevation of Reid Mountain, tallest peak on Revillagigedo Island. 5,800 Number of people who visited Ketchikan as tourists on excursion steamships in 1898, according to U.S. Forest Service records. 27 Our Town ketchikan museums 3,001 feet Elevation at the peak of Deer Mountain (which is only about 6,500 lateral feet from the nearest shoreline). This is not cow country, but defiant farmers faced down difficulties for decades to provide fresh dairy products. Tongass Trading Co., still standing and in use at Front and Dock streets. 1959 Year when Ketchikan’s last milk cow was shipped out, from Homestead Dairy four miles south of town. Between 1902 and 1959, half a dozen commercial dairies produced for the local market, operating on Revilla, Pennock and Gravina islands. The first was the Pittenger dairy at the top of Bawden Street, established about 1902. A street bears the name of the dairy’s founder. EDUCATION Ketchikan Gateway Borough School District 907-225-2118 — www.kgbsd.org MUNICIPALITIES | UTILITIES Ketchikan Gateway Borough 907-228-6625 www.borough.ketchikan.ak.us Ketchikan International Airport 907-225-6800 www.borough.ketchikan.ak.us/130/Airport Parks and Recreation 907-225-9579 www.borough.ketchikan.ak.us/141/Parks-Recreation Planning and Community Development 907-228-6610 www.borough.ketchikan.ak.us/142/ Planning-Community-Development Transit System 907-225-8726 — www.borough.ketchikan.ak.us/145/Transit City of Ketchikan City Hall 907-225-3111 — www.city.ketchikan.ak.us Port and Harbors 907-228-5632 www.city.ketchikan.ak.us/departments/ports/index.html Ted Ferry Civic Center & Convention Center 907-228-5655 www.city.ketchikan.ak.us/departments/civiccenter Tongass Historical Museum 907-225-5600 www.city.ketchikan.ak.us/departments/ museums/tongass.html Totem Heritage Center 907-225-5900 www.city.ketchikan.ak.us/departments/ museums/totem.html City of Saxman City Hall 907-225-4166 Saxman Totem Park 907-247-2502 Ketchikan Public Utilities 907-225-1000 — www.city.ketchikan.ak.us/public_utilities KPU Telecommunications 907-225-1000 — www.kputel.com STATE OF ALASKA | U.S. state of Alaska Alaska Legislative Affairs 907-225-9675 U.S. government U.S. Coast Guard Base Ketchikan 907-228-0210 U.S. Forest Service / Tongass NatIonal Forest 907-225-3101 — www.fs.usda.gov/tongass/ University of Alaska Southeast Ketchikan Campus 907-228-4567 www.uas.alaska.edu/ketchikan MEDIA Ketchikan Daily News 907-225-3157 www.ketchikandailynews.com KFMJ-FM 907-247-3699 — www.alaska.fm/kfmj KRBD-FM 907-225-9655 — www.krbd.org KTKN-AM & KGTW-FM 907-225-2193 — www.ktkn.com | www.gateway1067.com sitnews (Stories In the News) www.sitnews.us The Local Paper 907-225-6540 — thelocalpaper.com THE ARTS First City Players 907-225-4792 — www.firstcityplayers.org Ketchikan Area Arts & Humanities Council 907-225-2211 — ketchikanarts.org Ketchikan Theatre Ballet 907-225-9311 — ktbdance.com BUSINESS AND ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT Greater Ketchikan Chamber of Commerce 907-225-3184 www.ketchikanchamber.com Alaska Small Business Development Center 907-225-1388 — aksbdc.org Historic Ketchikan Inc. 907-225-5515 — www.historicketchikan.org INFORMATIONAL RESOURCES Ketchikan Public Library 907-225-3331 — www.firstcitylibraries.org UAS Ketchikan campus library www.uas.alaska.edu/ketchikan/library/ index.html MEDICAL CARE PeaceHealth Ketchikan Medical Center 907-225-5171 U.S. Congressional Office 907-225-6880 TRIBAL GOVERNMENT | HEALTH CARE Ketchikan Indian Community 907-228-4900 — www.kictribe.org 28 Our Town PRINCE OF WALES ISLAND Prince of Wales Chamber of Commerce 907-755-2626 www.princeofwalescoc.org