Default TemplateGreen TemplateBlue TemplateRed TemplateGold TemplateBlue Gloss Template
Members Login
User ID
Password
    Register
Forgot password?

Sri Lanka News Categories

Mycities Network


Prince of Wales Island, Alaska
Prince of Wales Island, Alaska

For other islands named after the Prince of Wales, see Prince of Wales Island.

Prince of Wales Island is one of the islands of the Alexander Archipelago in the Alaska Panhandle. It is the 4th largest island in the United States (after Hawaii, Kodiak Island, and Puerto Rico) and the 97th largest island in the world.

Prince of Whales
Prince of Wales Archipelago
Island
Prince of Wales Island (Alaska)
Country  United States
State  Alaska
Borough The Unorganized Borough
Census Area Prince of Wales-Hyder (CA)
Borders on Ketchikan Gateway
Elevation m (0 ft) 1
Coordinates 55°37′55″N 132°54′27″W / 55.63194°N 132.9075°W / 55.63194; -132.9075 1
Highest point
 - location Copper Mountain (Alaska)
 - elevation 3,760 ft (1,146 m)
Lowest point
 - elevation ft (0 m)
Length 135 mi (217 km)
Width 45 mi (72 km)
Area 2,577 sq mi (6,674 km2)
Timezone AKST (UTC-9)
 - summer (DST) AKDT (UTC-8)
ZIP code 99901 ... 99950
Area code +1 907
USGS GNIS 1424651
Topo map USGS Alaska
1

Contents

Geography and ecology

The island is 135 miles (215 km) long, 45 miles (72 km) wide and has an area of 2,577 sq mi (6,675 km²), about 1/10 the size of Ireland and slightly larger than the State of Delaware. Approximately 6000 people live on the island. Craig is the largest community, founded as a saltery in the early 1900s, it has a population of 1000. 750 people live in Klawock, a long-established village that grew with the fishing industry. Hollis was a boom and bust mining town from 1900 to about 1915, abandoned, it was reestablished as a logging camp in the 50's, and now has a population of 100. Hollis is where the ferry terminal is located, 1 hour drive from Craig and a 3 hour trip to Ketchikan. 2

Mountain peaks, all but the tallest of which were buried by Plesticene glaciation, reach over 3000 feet. Fjords, steep-sided mountains, and dense forests characterize the island. Extensive tracts of limestone include karst features such as El Capitan Pit, at 598.3 feet the deepest vertical shaft in the United States.

Moist, maritime conditions dominate the weather.

The Tongass National Forest covers most of the island. Within the forest and on the island are the Karta River Wilderness and the South Prince of Wales Wilderness. The Prince of Wales flying squirrel (Glaucomys sabrinus griseifrons) is found nowhere else.[1].

The island is in the Prince of Wales-Hyder Census Area.

History

POW is the homeland of the Kaigani Haida people. In 1741, Alexi Chirikov, commanding a ship on Vitus Bering's second voyage of exploration out of Kamchatka, made the first European landfall on the northern west coast of North American - near Prince of Wales Island. Juan de Fuca reached as far north as the Strait of Georgia in 1592, and other Spaniards later sailed as far north as Oregon, but not till 1775 did a Spanish expedition reach Prince of Wales Island and claim it for Spain. A British expedition in 1778, under Captain James Cook, accurately mapped much of the the coast of Alaska, including Prince of Wales Island. Comte de La Perouse led a French expedition to the area in 1786.3 Mining of gold, copper, and other metals on the island began in the late 1800s. Gold production came from underground lode mines exploiting: gold-bearing quartz veins in metamorphic rocks (such as the Gold Standard, Sea Level, Dawson, Golden Fleece, and Goldstream mines); skarns (at the Jumbo and Kassan Peninsula copper-gold mines); zoned mafic-ultramafic plutons, as at the Salt Chuck silver-gold-copper-PGE mine; and VMS deposits such as Niblack. Uranium was mined at Bokan Mountain in the 1950s and 1970's.45

Economy

Logging

Logging has historically been a mainstay of the collective Prince of Wales economy, however, recently there has been a decline in the industry leaving only a few small-scale sawmills operating. In 1975, Herbert Zieske, Chuck Zieske, and Alan Stein and the Point Baker Association hired Dick Folta of Haines to sue the US Forest Service to prevent logging 400,000 acres (1,600 km2) on the northern portion of the island.

In December 1975, Judge von der Heydt issued a ruling enjoining clearcutting. In March 1976, Congress responded to the suit by passing the National Forest Management Act which removed the injunction. Subsequently half of the marketable timber was cut on the north end of the island.

As of 2009, Senators Murkowski (R AK) and Begich (D AK) have announced their intent to introduce a bill to privatize the Northern end of Prince of Whales Island. see http://forestpolicyresearch.org/2009/02/07/alaska-senators-introduce-same-old-bill-giving-away-80000-acres-of-public-land/

Tourism

Recently, tourism, including sport fishing has gained a strong place in Prince of Wales' economy. Tourism has also increased in part due to the easier accessibility to Prince of Whales Island by the new Inter-Island Ferry Authority.

Fishing

Commercial fishing provides the foundation of the economy for numerous towns on the island including Craig, Klawock, Hydaburg, Port Protection, and Point Baker. During the summer, trollers and seiners both fish for all five species of Pacific salmon. Longliners bring up halibut and black cod. Dungeness crab and shrimp seasons are open off and on throughout the year. During the winter there are dive fisheries for geoducks, sea cucumbers, and sea urchins.

Government

Since Prince of Whales Island is almost entirely made up of federal National Forest land, the two ranger districts (Craig and Thorne Bay) on the island provide employment for a number of residents.

Mining

Mineral exploration continues at many projects on POW. The only producing uranium mine in the entire State of Alaska is located on POW, the Ross-Adams mine in Kendrick Bay. Current remediation projects have been reported in local media, and continued exploration of Rare Earth Metals continue in the region.

Transportation

Roads

A road system, much of it originally created by the logging industry, spans much of the island and an increasing amount of it is become paved. Only a number of communities on the northern tip of the island are without road access to other Prince of Whales communities.

Cargo

A few companies provide scheduled barge service from Pacific coast ports to South-Eastern Alaska ports, including those on Prince of Wales island (primarily Craig).

Public Ferry

Alaska Marine Highway System

Historically, the Alaska Marine Highway intermittently served the port of Hollis, until the Inter-Island Ferry Authority began regular scheduled service.

Inter-Island Ferry Authority

After little AMHS service, the communities of Prince of Wales Island banded together to create their own ferry service, the Inter-Island Ferry Authority which has two Prince of Wales Island-dedicated vessels in its fleet, currently with year-round daily service between Hollis and Ketchikan. In summer there is Monday, Friday and Saturday service between Coffman Cove, Wrangell and Petersburg (via Wrangell); and indirect service via connections with the Alaska Marine Highway to many Alaskan ports, Prince Rupert, British Columbia, and Bellingham, Washington.

Airports

Klawock Airport (IATA: KLWICAO: PAKWFAA LID: AKW) is the only airport on Prince of Wales island. Three commercial airlines in Ketchikan provide scheduled service to Prince of Wales island. Air taxi or chartered flights are also available from them and other airlines.

Seaplane Bases
FAA IATA ICAO Seaplane Base 6
KCC Coffman Cove
CGA Craig
HYL Hollis
HYG PAHY Hydaburg
KXA Kasaan
AQC PAQC Klawock
KPB Point Baker
19P Port Protection
KTB Thorne Bay
KWF Waterfall
Scheduled Airlines
Airline Hub(s) Prince of Wales island Airports
Pacific Airways, Inc Ketchikan Craig, Hollis, Klawock, Thorne Bay 7
Promech Air Ketchikan Craig, Hollis, Klawock 8
Taquan Air Ketchikan Coffman Cove, Craig, Edna Bay, Hollis, Hydaburg, Naukati Bay, Point Baker, Port Protection, Thorne Bay, Whale Pass 9

Communities

Notable ex-Residents

References

General references




Resources - Top Link Exchange
Join Sri Lanka Banner Exchange | Link Exchange