Wrangell, Alaska

Wrangell[2] (Tlingit: Ḵaachx̱ana.áakʼw, Russian: Врангель, romanized: Vrangel') is a borough in Alaska, United States. As of the 2020 census the population was 2,127,[3] down from 2,369 in 2010.[4]

Wrangell, Alaska
Ḵaachx̱ana.áakʼw
View of the city in 2016
Shakes Glacier in the Stikine-LeConte Wilderness
Fishing boat docked at harbor
Post Office and Customs House
Ferry M/V Stikine arriving
Flag of Wrangell, Alaska
Official seal of Wrangell, Alaska
Wrangell, Alaska is located in Alaska
Wrangell, Alaska
Wrangell, Alaska
Location of Wrangell within Alaska
Wrangell, Alaska is located in North America
Wrangell, Alaska
Wrangell, Alaska
Wrangell, Alaska (North America)
Coordinates: 56°23′06″N 132°05′11″W
Country United States
State Alaska
Founded1834 (1834)
English1839
American1867
Incorporated1903 (as a city); May 30, 2008 (as a borough)
Named forFerdinand von Wrangel
Government
  MayorPatricia Gilbert
Area
  Unified Borough3,476.61 sq mi (9,004.37 km2)
  Land2,555.99 sq mi (6,620.00 km2)
  Water920.61 sq mi (2,384.38 km2)
  Urban
71 sq mi (180 km2)
Elevation
69 ft (21 m)
Population
 (2020)
  Unified Borough2,070
  Density0.83/sq mi (0.32/km2)
Time zoneUTC-9 (AKST)
  Summer (DST)UTC-8 (AKDT)
ZIP code
99929
Area code907
FIPS codes02-275, 02-86380
GNIS feature IDs1415843, 2418874
Websitewww.wrangell.com

Incorporated as a Unified Home Rule Borough[2] on May 30, 2008, Wrangell was previously a city in the Wrangell-Petersburg Census Area[2] (afterwards renamed the Petersburg Census Area (the Petersburg Borough was formed from part of this census area)). Its Tlingit name is Ḵaachx̱ana.áakʼw ("Ḵaachx̱ans Little Lake" with áa-kʼw 'lake-diminutive'). The Tlingit people living in the Wrangell area, who were there centuries before Europeans, call themselves the Shtaxʼhéen Ḵwáan after the nearby Stikine River. Alternately they use the autonym Shxʼát Ḵwáan, where the meaning of shxʼát is unknown.

The central (urban) part of Wrangell is located at 56°28′15″N 132°22′36″W, in the northwest corner of Wrangell Island, whereas the borough now encompasses the entire eastern half of the former Wrangell-Petersburg Census Area, in addition to the area around Meyers Chuck, which was formerly in the Prince of Wales-Outer Ketchikan Census Area. It also includes Thoms Place, a former census-designated place on Wrangell Island.[5]

History

Totem poles in Wrangell

Tlingit people and their ancestors have inhabited this island for thousands of years. According to Naanyaa.aayí clan traditions, Tlingit people migrated down the Stikine River during a time when the river still flowed underneath glaciers. The population slowly moved down the river, settling in different locations such as Tlákw.aan "Ancient Village", Sʼiknáx̱ "Across from the Grass", Shaal.aan "Fish Trap Town", Xakw.aan "Sandbar Village", and Kayáash "Platform", Hehl (Xel/Xehl) "Foam People", Hehl being the senior of house of the village.

Later settlements on the coast included Chʼuxʼáasʼaan "Waterfall Town" (now Mill Creek), Ḵeishangita.aan "Red Alder Head Village" (site of the Wrangell Institute at Shoemaker Bay), Kʼaatsʼḵu Noow "Among the Sharps Fort" (now Anita Bay), An.áan "Village that Rests" (now Anan Bear Viewing Area), and many others. The numerous petroglyphs found at Petroglyph Beach just north of Wrangell, as well as those scattered on the beaches of the many islands in the vicinity, attest to the long Tlingit presence.

It is also known and somewhat forgotten, that first peoples coastal migration to the Stikine River happened from the south. The Nass River people had several migrations into the area. The "Git Setti" people tell of their migration story in a totem raised in Wrangell in 1894 called "Kickssetti" Totem.

The salt water inlet that is now Wrangell Harbor was traditionally called Ḵaachx̱ana.áakʼw, literally "Ḵaachx̱án's little lake". Before the harbor mouth was dredged and cleared in the late 19th century, the mouth of this inlet would often go dry at low tide, which led to its being called a lake.

Ḵaachx̱án was a man from the village variously known as Ḵaalchʼalʼaan (Kotzlitzan) or Chʼaalʼít.aan, meaning "Willow House Village"; or Shaax̱ít.aan meaning "Driftwood House Village." The village site today is known as "Old Town" or "Old Wrangell" (located at 56°12′28″N 132°16′22″W). Ḵaachx̱án was supposedly a hermit who preferred living away from his relatives, and lived in a smokehouse located on the rear shore of the lake, which was named after him.

19th century

Village of Wrangel Alaska (Tlingit: Ḵaachx̱ana.áakʼw) in 1868, present-day Front Street.

Wrangell was founded by Russians as one of the oldest non-Native settlements in Alaska. They started trading for furs with area Tlingit in 1811 at the site of present-day Wrangell. In 1834, Baron Ferdinand Petrovich Wrangel, then head of Russian government interests in Russian America, ordered a stockade built near the Naanyaa.aayí clan house of Chief Shakes, called Shéiksh Hídi. This house was located about 13 miles (21 km) north of Old Wrangell, on a small island in the middle of what is today Wrangell Harbor. The stockade, named Redoubt Saint Dionysius (Редутъ Санктъ Дионисіусъ), was founded at the location of present-day Wrangell and stood near the end of the small peninsula that forms the northeastern side of the mouth of the harbor.

The British Hudson's Bay Company (HBC) leased the fort in 1839 and named the stockade Fort Stikine. The Tlingit had used the Stikine River as a trade route to the interior since ancient times, and they protested when the Hudson's Bay Company began to use their trade routes. Two epidemics of smallpox in 1836 and 1840 sharply reduced the Tlingit population in the area by half, as they had no acquired immunity, and silenced most of the protest.

The HBC abandoned the fort in 1849 after the area's stocks of sea otter and beaver were depleted, ending the fur trade. Fort Stikine remained under British rule until Alaska's purchase by the United States in 1867.

Bird's Eye view, 1897

In 1868, the U.S. built a military post called Fort Wrangell at the site, and it remained active until 1877. The community around the post continued to grow through commerce with prospectors in the gold rushes of 1861, 187477, and 1897. As in Skagway, businessmen looking to make money off the miners built many gambling halls, dance halls, and bars. Thousands of miners traveled up the Stikine River into the Cassiar District of British Columbia during 1874, and again to the Klondike in 1897.

The Wrangell Bombardment occurred on 25 December 1869 when a Stikine Indian named Lowan bit off Mrs. Jaboc Muller's third right finger, and was killed in an ensuing fight by soldiers who mortally wounded an additional Stikine Indian. The following morning, Scutd-doo, who was the father of the deceased, entered the fort and shot the post trader's partner Leon Smith fourteen times. Smith died some 13 hours later. The US army made an ultimatum demanding Sccutd-doo's surrender, and following bombardment of the Stikine Indian village, the villagers handed Scutd-doo over to the military in the fort, where he was court-martialed and publicly hanged before the garrison and assembled natives on 29 December,[6] stating before he was hanged that he had acted in revenge against the occupants of the fort for the killing of Lowan and not against Smith in particular.[7][8][9][10][11]

In 1877, the first Presbyterian church in Alaska, the first Protestant church of any kind in the area, was founded near its current location at 220 Church Street. Reverend S. Hall Young, a colleague of Sheldon Jackson, was assigned to the Wrangell mission and arrived on July 10, 1878.[12] He worked among both miners and Tlingits. He established the Fort Wrangell Tlingit Industrial School to teach young Tlingit men various American trades, such as printing, boatbuilding, and construction. This institution was a parallel to Sheldon Jackson's Sitka Industrial Training School, which became Sheldon Jackson College. Young's school was the nucleus of the later Wrangell Institute, a boarding school for Alaska Natives through the mid-20th century.

S. Hall Young was a friend and companion of the naturalist John Muir, who lived in Wrangell in 1879–1880.[13][14] Muir and Young traveled up the Stikine River, as well as to Kake, Glacier Bay, and elsewhere in Southeast Alaska. Young and Muir were accompanied by two Stikine elite men, Tʼaawyaat ("Toyatte", lit. Long Feather), and Kaadaashaan ("Kadachan"), as well Sitka Charley, as a young man who was their interpreter in Chinook Jargon and English.

The oldest Catholic Church in Alaska; St. Rose of Lima, was established at Wrangell May 4, 1879.

Having been Tlingit territory and then under the jurisdiction of Russia, Great Britain, and the United States, Wrangell has the unique status as the only Alaskan city to have been governed under four "flags".

20th century

Scow loaded with salmon at the Alaska Packers Association cannery in Wrangell, 1918

Fish traps were constructed in the late 1890s on the nearby mouth of the Stikine River and in the Zimovia Strait. These contributed to the growth of the fishing and fish canning industries in Wrangell, which provided much of the economic life for the town before the rise of logging in the 1950s. The fish traps caused severe damage to the Stikine River salmon runs, reducing the number of fish that managed to spawn and causing a decline in salmon runs and fishing in the region. After statehood, the new government decommissioned all fish traps in Alaska. The fishing industry remained strong, and continues to be the primary occupation of many residents.

The weekly newspaper, The Wrangell Sentinel, was founded in 1902, and printed its first issue on November 2 of that year. The newspaper remains in publication with only a few short periods of inactivity. It is the oldest continuously published newspaper in Alaska.

Scow with salmon is unloaded at a cannery's dock in Wrangell, 1918

The renowned Bear Totem Store, built in the 1920s by Walter Waters, housed innumerable examples of Tlingit arts and crafts, as well as a number of irreplaceable totem poles. Waters began his business career carrying mail by boat from Wrangell to Sulzer. During this period, he traveled throughout southeast Alaska as a fur buyer. While on business travels, Waters began to acquire Indian artifacts and make valuable contacts with Indian artisans. He eventually enabled him to open his curio shop, The Bear Totem Store.

A severe fire in the early 1950s burned much of the downtown area, destroying the Bear Totem Store and most of its contents. Few historic buildings remained after the fire. The disaster dramatically changed the face of Wrangell, and with new buildings, the past was lost.

Logging, fishing and tourism are the current mainstays of the Wrangell area economy. One of the last two major sawmills in southeast Alaska is operated by the Silver Bay Logging Company just south of the city proper.

The community has always been a center of the Tlingit Kaach.àdi, Kiks.ádi and Naanyaa.aayí clans, as well as the only home of the Kayaashkiditaan, Sʼiknax̱.ádi, X̱ookʼeidí, Kaasx̱ʼagweidí, and Taalḵweidí clans.[15] Chief Shakes Tribal House, which is known in Tlingit as Shéiksh Hídi "Shakes House", is a replica of traditional Tlingit houses. It was constructed by CCC crews in the 1930s of the Great Depression, according to traditional knowledge and methods. It stands at the original location of Shakes House, on Shakes Island inside Wrangell harbor. Today the Wrangell Cooperative Association, a Tlingit IRA council and the federally recognized tribe for the area, maintains Shakes Island and the House, as well as Totem Park near the city center.

21st century

Totem poles at the Shakes house
Wrangell downtown

In an election held on May 6, 2008, to decide whether to upgrade from city to borough status, 63.99% of the votes were in favor of borough status.[16] On May 30, 2008, Wrangell was reincorporated as the City and Borough of Wrangell.[2] Canadian American Donald McConachie Sr. was the CBW's first mayor. He was succeeded by Jeremy M. Maxand, but was elected in 2012 as mayor again after Maxand declined to seek reelection.[17]

The Wrangell Cooperative Association has commissioned a team to restore Chief Shakes House and the totems at Totem Park. It consists of a master carver, Wayne Price, and six assistants, four of them women, accepted after intensive training in the use of the traditional adze tool.[18]

Geography

"Elephant's Nose" point on Woronofski Island, from Wrangell

Wrangell is located on the northern tip of Wrangell Island, an island in the Alaska Panhandle. It is 155 miles (250 km) south of the Alaskan capital of Juneau. It is across the narrow Zimovia Strait from the mouth of the Stikine River on the Alaska mainland. The town is named after the island, which was named after Ferdinand Petrovich Wrangel, a Russian explorer and the administrator of the Russian-American Company from 1830 to 1835.

Per the 2010 United States Census, the borough has a total area of 3,462 square miles (8,970 km2), of which 2,541 square miles (6,580 km2) is land and 921 square miles (2,390 km2) is water.[19][20] This is larger than the former City of Wrangell, which as of the 2000 census had a total area of 70.844 square miles (183.5 km2), of which 45.278 square miles (117.27 km2) was land and 25.566 square miles (66.2 km2) was water.[21]

Adjacent boroughs and census area

Climate

According to the Köppen climate classification system, Wrangell has a oceanic climate (Cfb). Summers are mild and rainy with cool nights. Winters are moderately cold, though not very cold by Alaskan standards.

Climate data for Wrangell, Alaska (1991–2020 normals, extremes 1917–present)
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °F (°C) 62
(17)
65
(18)
61
(16)
77
(25)
86
(30)
91
(33)
92
(33)
85
(29)
82
(28)
72
(22)
66
(19)
60
(16)
92
(33)
Mean maximum °F (°C) 49.0
(9.4)
48.7
(9.3)
51.9
(11.1)
62.0
(16.7)
69.6
(20.9)
76.2
(24.6)
74.8
(23.8)
74.8
(23.8)
65.3
(18.5)
58.3
(14.6)
50.5
(10.3)
49.0
(9.4)
79.2
(26.2)
Average high °F (°C) 36.3
(2.4)
38.5
(3.6)
42.3
(5.7)
49.5
(9.7)
57.9
(14.4)
61.2
(16.2)
63.7
(17.6)
63.3
(17.4)
57.5
(14.2)
49.2
(9.6)
41.2
(5.1)
37.3
(2.9)
49.8
(9.9)
Daily mean °F (°C) 32.5
(0.3)
34.3
(1.3)
37.3
(2.9)
43.4
(6.3)
50.8
(10.4)
55.3
(12.9)
58.0
(14.4)
57.5
(14.2)
52.7
(11.5)
45.2
(7.3)
37.8
(3.2)
33.9
(1.1)
44.9
(7.2)
Average low °F (°C) 28.8
(−1.8)
30.1
(−1.1)
32.3
(0.2)
37.4
(3.0)
43.7
(6.5)
49.3
(9.6)
52.2
(11.2)
51.8
(11.0)
47.9
(8.8)
41.3
(5.2)
34.5
(1.4)
30.5
(−0.8)
40.0
(4.4)
Mean minimum °F (°C) 11.3
(−11.5)
17.2
(−8.2)
20.3
(−6.5)
28.8
(−1.8)
35.5
(1.9)
42.3
(5.7)
46.7
(8.2)
45.8
(7.7)
39.3
(4.1)
31.1
(−0.5)
23.5
(−4.7)
17.8
(−7.9)
7.1
(−13.8)
Record low °F (°C) −10
(−23)
−8
(−22)
0
(−18)
16
(−9)
22
(−6)
30
(−1)
32
(0)
31
(−1)
22
(−6)
18
(−8)
1
(−17)
−7
(−22)
−10
(−23)
Average precipitation inches (mm) 8.01
(203)
6.13
(156)
6.09
(155)
4.94
(125)
4.79
(122)
4.29
(109)
5.36
(136)
6.99
(178)
11.49
(292)
13.91
(353)
10.01
(254)
9.20
(234)
91.21
(2,317)
Average snowfall inches (cm) 18.4
(47)
12.4
(31)
7.9
(20)
0.8
(2.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.1
(0.25)
5.8
(15)
12.6
(32)
58.0
(147)
Source 1: NOAA (Precipitation 1981–2010)[22][23]
Source 2: WRCC[24]

National protected areas

Economy

Fishing boat at Wrangell dock

The primary industry of the city is fishing. A commercial fishing fleet is harbored in Wrangell and several sports fishing guiding services operate here as well taking tourists and wilderness adventurers to remote locations on the great Stikine River branching eastward into British Columbia. Boatyards have increased in scale allowing storage and repairs of larger vessels. The city has a picturesque golf course with a view of Mt. Wrangell. Like many S.E. Alaskan communities state government spending is important to the local economy, though not to the extent of Juneau-the state capitol. The Federal government also kicks in a share with the forest service, postal service and homeland security operations expenditures. The southernmost terminus of the vast Juneau ice field is just north of the Stikine with several glaciers flowing down to the river and saltwater at LeConte Bay. Though Chinook salmon have been devastated by commercial over-harvesting recently and the fishery was largely closed in spring 2018, hope for its recovery abounds since fisheries have crashed in S.E. Alaska recurrently over history and recovered.

Preparing crabs for shipment at Andrew Arneson's place, September 1910

Whales live seasonally in the waters of the Alexander Archipelago[25] and visit Wrangell searching for herring and salmon creating good photo opportunities. The former vast Alaska Pulp Corporation logging operations at Wrangell closed down in the mid-1990s unable to meet water quality standards though cutting hundreds of millions of board feet of lumber annually. Wrangell has three marinas on the northwest side of the island and the southernmost; Shoemaker Bay, is undergoing renewal construction in September 2018.

F.W. cannery tanks and equipment for tarring gillnets in Wrangell, 1918

A Tlingit cultural center and museum is located on the waterfront of Wrangell. In order to keep a small-town rural aesthetic the city turned down the prospect of building a state prison and home-porting a naval vessel. The Stikine Inn was remodeled to fine shape, and an inter-island ferry business was established with service to Prince of Whales Island. Sunrise aviation- an air work and tourism float plane service, continues to provide service anywhere in the region, though helicopter journeys to high mountain glaciers need to be scheduled from Ketchikan to the south 100 miles (Ketchikan is from the Tlingit word Kootchikan meaning place of stinky fish).

Baron Von Wrangell sent Lieutenant Dionysius Zarembo to establish a trading post on Stikine Strait in 1833 to beat the Brits. Tlingits apparently were receptive to British and Russian traders. Today nearby Zarembo island has an elk and moose population visited by hunting guides and parties from Wrangell.

A marijuana sales business was placed in the back of a restaurant downtown. Alaska Airlines creates a few local jobs with twice daily service to Seattle and Juneau, Ketchikan, Sitka and other S.E. destinations and the Alaska Marine Highway system has a terminal with a few workers where dock ferryboats, near the Stikine Inn. Wrangell's seafood processing plant, though small and consuming much of the city's water supply seasonally, has employed workers from Mexico, Russia and Somalia in recent years.

Stikine River Delta

Wrangell has several churches and bars and a pizza store though no citywide free wireless internet for tourists or business travelers yet. The local Native Corporation—the Sealaska Corporation, contributes to the cost of local health care provisioning.

Wrangell has writers including Bonnie Demerjian[26] and Garrison Gibson.[27] It also has guided kayak tours in summer, and some of the most accessible coastal forest wilderness hiking, camping and climbing of S.E. Alaska. It is possible to follow the historic route in kayaks to the Stikine River Delta where the orphan warrior Chief Gush X'een and his band of Tlingits defeated boatloads of invading Nisga'a warriors from the south. Rather than becoming a slave the defeated Nisga'a Chief surrendered his hat and title of Shakes to Gush X'een.

The former mill site of the Alaska Pulp Corporation that was dismantled has some use sending logs and boulders via ships and a prospect for development as a cruise ship site with multipurpose western theme shops and dark ale brewery for export. The city has expanded its electrical power lines a mile and a half south on Isheyami Drive to allow a concrete production facility to power up (they bring in sand via barge from the Stikine River).

Politics

Voters in Wrangell lean strongly conservative, having voted for a Democrat only once, in 1964.

United States presidential election results for Wrangell, Alaska[28]
Year Republican Democratic Third party
No.%No.%No.%
2020 827 64.76% 396 31.01% 54 4.23%
2016 757 66.87% 273 24.12% 102 9.01%
2012 738 64.57% 362 31.67% 43 3.76%
2008 858 68.92% 356 28.59% 31 2.49%
2004 693 77.87% 164 18.43% 33 3.71%
2000 1,041 77.57% 195 14.53% 106 7.90%
1996 698 57.07% 248 20.28% 277 22.65%
1992 592 43.37% 289 21.17% 484 35.46%
1988 812 67.00% 365 30.12% 35 2.89%
1984 795 70.48% 308 27.30% 25 2.22%
1980 626 59.68% 292 27.84% 131 12.49%
1976 461 54.49% 327 38.65% 58 6.86%
1972 422 59.02% 255 35.66% 38 5.31%
1968 365 50.91% 305 42.54% 47 6.56%
1964 210 29.83% 494 70.17% 0 0.00%
1960 360 55.73% 286 44.27% 0 0.00%

Demographics

Historical population
CensusPop.Note
1880106
1890316198.1%
1900868174.7%
1910743−14.4%
192082110.5%
193094815.5%
19401,16222.6%
19501,2638.7%
19601,3154.1%
19702,02954.3%
19802,1847.6%
19902,47913.5%
20002,308−6.9%
20102,3692.6%
20202,127−10.2%
U.S. Decennial Census[29]

Wrangell first appeared as an unincorporated village on the 1880 U.S. Census. It featured 106 residents, of which 105 were White and 1 was Creole (Mixed Russian & Native).[30] In 1890, it returned 316 residents, of which a majority, 228, were Native, 71 were White, 15 Creole, 1 Asian and 1 Other. This also included the Chantay farming settlement & Labouchere Cannery.[31]

In 1900, it became the 5th largest community in Alaska with 868 residents (though the racial breakdown was unspecified). In 1903, Wrangell formally incorporated. In 1910, it fell to 10th largest city in Alaska and returned 743 residents, with 419 Whites, 249 Natives and 75 Others.[32] In 1920, it had 821 residents and remained the 10th largest city. In 1930, it was the 9th largest city with 948 residents. In 1940, it rose to 8th place. In addition to the 1,162 residents, the census also reported a separate 163 individuals living in the unincorporated areas surrounding Wrangell.[33][34] The combined number of 1,325 would've placed it just ahead of 7th place Petersburg (with 1,323 residents). Beginning in 1950, Wrangell fell out of the top 10 largest communities in Alaska. In 2008, Wrangell became a separate city & borough.

As of the census[35] of 2000, there were 2,308 people, 907 households, and 623 families living in the city. The population density was 51.0 inhabitants per square mile (19.7/km2). There were 1,092 housing units at an average density of 24.1 per square mile (9.3/km2). The racial makeup of the city was 1696 White, 3 Black or African American, 358 Native American, 15 Asian, 3 Pacific Islander, 8 from other races, and 9.8% from two or more races. 23 of the population were Hispanic or Latino of any race.

There were 907 households, out of which 35.7% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 54.9% were married couples living together, 9.4% had a female householder with no husband present, and 31.3% were non-families. 26.5% of all households were made up of individuals, and 9.6% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 2.52 and the average family size was 3.05.

In the city, the population was spread out, with 29.4% under the age of 18, 5.2% from 18 to 24, 27.3% from 25 to 44, 26.4% from 45 to 64, and 11.7% who were 65 years of age or older. The median age was 39 years. For every 100 females, there were 106.1 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 102.7 males.

The median income for a household in the city was $43,250, and the median income for a family was $54,167. Males had a median income of $43,846 versus $29,205 for females. The per capita income for the city was $21,851. About 7.3% of families and 9.0% of the population were below the poverty line, including 11.0% of those under age 18 and 9.3% of those age 65 or over.

Schools

Wrangell is a part of Wrangell Public Schools, which operates:

The Wrangell Institute was an American Indian boarding school opened in 1932, which closed in 1975.[36]

Health care

The Wrangell Medical Center hospital is owned by the Southeast Alaska Regional Health Consortium. The Wrangell Medical Center is a critical access hospital and long-term care facility with a total of 22 beds, 8 for acute care and 14 for long-term care. Emergency care, inpatient care, imaging, lab, and physical therapy are provided by the center. Visiting specialists in internal medicine, obstetrics/gynecology, optometry, pediatrics, ophthalmology, podiatry, orthopedics, rheumatology, dietetics and dermatology compliment local services. SEARHC is currently constructing a new hospital that will be opened in 2021.

Alaska Island Community Services was established in Wrangell in 1989 under the original name Wrangell Community Services, and began providing Core Mental Health Services to the Community of Wrangell. Over the next two decades the delivery of services expanded to include Disability and Senior Services, rehabilitative wilderness experience for youth, Primary Care Health Care, Dental Services, and a Pharmacy Department. As a federally qualified health center, all of the services are provided on a sliding fee discount scale based on federal guidelines.

Southeast Alaska Regional Health Consortium is a non-profit medical, dental, vision and mental health organization serving the health interests of the residents of Southeast Alaska. In 2017 SEARHC merged with local non-profit Alaska Island Community Services to form AICS, a Division of Searhc.

Post Office

In 1943 the federal Treasury Section of Fine Arts commissioned artist Austin Mecklem and his wife, Marianne Greer Appel, to paint a mural, Old Town in Alaska, intended for the Wrangell post office. The work was completed at their studio in New York state, transported via railway on Oct 19, 1943, arrived in Wrangell in December 1943 and installed in early 1944. [37]

Media

Newspaper

In print since 1902, the newspaper for the borough is The Wrangell Sentinel,[38] the oldest continuously published newspaper in Alaska. A sibling is the Petersburg Pilot in the City of Petersburg. Also available are the Juneau Empire and Alaska Dispatch on-line.

Library

The primary library is the Irene Ingle Public Library. https://www.wrangell.com/library

Radio

Wrangell is served by two radio stations: KSTK broadcasts Public Radio format, while KWRG-LP broadcasts a Christian format.

Transportation

Alaska Marine Highway ferry MV Matanuska in Wrangell

On Wrangell island, Wrangell has two forms of transportation: ferry and airplane. The island offers a network of paved roads and miles of logging trails.

Ferry

The Alaska Marine Highway serves Wrangell on its Inside Passage route with regular northbound and southbound stops linking residents and visitors to the rest of Southeast Alaska.[39]

Wrangell is also a stop on the summer Monday, Friday, Saturday runs of the Inter-Island Ferry Authority's M/V Stikine. Their round-trip run originates in Coffman Cove on Prince of Wales Island, continues to Wrangell and Petersburg as the furthest stop, returning to Wrangell, and Ketchikan.[40]

Airport

Passengers entering Alaska Airlines airplane at Wrangell Airport

Wrangell also receives two daily scheduled Boeing 737-700/800 passenger jet service operated by Alaska Airlines at the Wrangell Airport. One plane in the morning and one plane in the evening. Sunrise Aviation provides float plane service to the region.

Roads

View of the Zimovia Highway just south of town

The primary road is the Zimovia Highway along the west side of the island for 14 miles. Leaving the highway and most roads in town, the rest are unpaved logging trails, forest service roads, and hiking trails. Isheyama Drive on the east side south beyond the golf course is paved for two miles. At the former terminus of the road is a view spot of Eastern Passage for pedestrians. Ballard's, named for a fisherman, does not offer safe small-boat landing. A logging road runs almost all the way through to Pat's Creek road six miles south to bisect the island east–west to Shoemaker Bay, however a half-mile or less is incomplete according to one forest service timber harvest contract. The Reagan Road is suggested as a name for the future street.

References

  1. "2020 U.S. Gazetteer Files". United States Census Bureau. Retrieved October 29, 2021.
  2. "Certificate of Incorporation of the City and Borough of Wrangell" (PDF). Alaska Department of Commerce, Community and Economic Development, Division of Community and Regional Affairs (DCRA). May 30, 2008. Archived from the original (PDF) on June 15, 2010. Retrieved May 4, 2012.
  3. "2020 Census Data - Cities and Census Designated Places" (Web). State of Alaska, Department of Labor and Workforce Development. Retrieved October 31, 2021.
  4. "State & County QuickFacts". United States Census Bureau. Archived from the original on October 19, 2011. Retrieved May 18, 2014.
  5. "Map: Alaska Department of Labor" (PDF). Labor.alaska.gov. Retrieved June 25, 2022.
  6. The Aleut Internments of World War II: Islanders Removed from Their Homes by the United States, Russell W. Estlack, page 53
  7. The 1869 Bombardment of Ḵaachx̱an.áakʼw from Fort Wrangell: U.S. Army Response to Tlingit Law, Wrangell, Alaska (Washington DC: American Battlefield Preservation Program; Juneau, AK: Sealaska Heritage Institute, 2015). Part 1 Archived October 19, 2017, at the Wayback Machine, National Park Service, American Battlefield Protection Program, Zachary Jones
  8. Report of the commander of the department of Alaska upon the late bombardment of the Indian village at Wrangel, in that Territory, to Congress, Secretary of War, 21 March 1870
  9. The War Canoe, Jamie S Bryson
  10. History of Alaska: 1730-1885, Hubert Howe Bancroft, 1886, pages 614-6
  11. Journal of the West, Lorrin L. Morrison, Carroll Spear Morrison, 1965, page 310
  12. Young, S. Hall. 1927. Hall Young of Alaska. Fleming Revell.
  13. Muir, John. 1909. Stickeen: An Adventure with a Dog and a Glacier. Boston: Houghton Mifflin.
  14. Muir, John. 1915. Travels in Alaska. Boston: Houghton Mifflin.
  15. "Traditional Tlingit Map and Tribal List". Tlingit Readers, Inc. Retrieved June 21, 2009.
  16. "2008 Wrangel Incorporation Election: May 6, 2008: Official Results" (PDF). Division of Elections. State of Alaska. May 30, 2008. Archived from the original (PDF) on April 8, 2010.
  17. Miller, Mark (October 4, 2012). "Wrangell race tips to McConachie - by 2 votes". Juneau Empire. Retrieved October 15, 2012.
  18. Kate Spielberger, "Wrangell carvers making history renovating site", AP, Juneau, Alaska, in Indian Country News, November 2011, accessed 7 November 2011
  19. "Counties (2010): Alaska" (TXT). 2010 Census Gazetteer Files. United States Census Bureau. Retrieved January 24, 2013.
  20. "Places (2010): Alaska" (TXT). 2010 Census Gazetteer Files. United States Census Bureau. Retrieved January 24, 2013.
  21. "Places (2000)" (Zipped TXT). 2000 Census Gazetteer Files. United States Census Bureau. Retrieved January 24, 2013.
  22. "Summary of Monthly Normals 1991–2020". NOAA. May 27, 2023. Archived from the original on May 27, 2023.
  23. "Summary of Monthly Normals 1981–2010". NOAA. May 27, 2023. Archived from the original on May 27, 2023.
  24. "WRANGELL (509919)". Western Regional Climate Center. Retrieved November 18, 2015.
  25. "Alexander Archipelago | island group, Alaska, United States". Britannica.com. Retrieved June 25, 2022.
  26. "Wrangell, Alaska (Images of America Series)|Paperback". Barnesandnoble.com.
  27. "God, Cosmology and Nothingness - Theory and Theology In a Scientific Era|NOOK Book". Barnesandnoble.com. Retrieved June 25, 2022.
  28. "RRH Elections". rrhelections.com. February 2, 2018. Retrieved December 24, 2021.
  29. "Census of Population and Housing". Census.gov. Retrieved June 4, 2015.
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  31. "Population and Resources of Alaska : 1890 Census" (PDF). 2.census.gov. Retrieved June 25, 2022.
  32. "Supplement for Alaska : 1890 Census" (PDF). 2.census.gov. Retrieved June 25, 2022.
  33. "Alaska : 1939 Census" (PDF). 2.census.gov. Retrieved June 25, 2022.
  34. 1940 Census Enumeration District Descriptions - Alaska - First Judicial Division County - ED 1-17, ED 1-18, ED 1-19. File Unit: 1940 Census Enumeration District Descriptions - Alaska - First Judicial Division County, 1850 - 1950.
  35. "U.S. Census website". United States Census Bureau. Retrieved May 14, 2011.
  36. "World War II Aleut Relocation Camps in Southeast Alaska - Chapter 5: Wrangell Institute". National Park Service. Retrieved January 6, 2019. Gives a very thorough history of the site and buildings, including illustrations and floorplans
  37. "Post Office Mural-Wrangell, AK". Livingnewdeal.org. Retrieved April 27, 2016.
  38. "Wrangell Sentinel Homepage". Wrangell Sentinel. Retrieved June 25, 2022.
  39. "State of Alaska ferries". Alaska Marine Highway System.
  40. "Northern Route Schedule". Inter-Island Ferry Authority.
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