Aerial View of Chitina, AlaskaChitina, Alaska

Population: 123

Location: On the west bank of the Copper River at its confluence with the Chitina River, Mile 34 of the Edgerton Highway, 53 miles southeast of Copper Center and 66 miles southeast of Glennallen.

Description: Most residents in this village, which is half Alaska Native, engage in subsistence activities year-round. During the summer, dipnetting for salmon on the Copper River brings a large number of Alaskans from Fairbanks and Anchorage and other areas of the state. Gardening, berry picking, herb gathering and other ''wildcrafting'' are popular pursuits, as are various arts and crafts. Winter activities include trapping, snowmachining, dog mushing, skiing, and ice fishing. 

Employment is primarily with the village council, village corporation, Prince William Sound Community College, state Fish & Game and highway maintenance offices, and the National Park Service. Many residents are self-employed or work in retail establishments. The summer influx of fishermen, tourists and campers provides some cash income in fish guiding and other services.
Fishwheels in action near Chitina
downtown Chitina today Historic Chitina

History: Athabaskan Indians have occupied this region for 5,000 to 7,000 years. Chitina was historically a large Native village whose population was slowly decimated by the influx of people, disease and conflicts.

Rich copper deposits were discovered at the turn of the century along the northern flanks of the Chitina River valley, bringing a rush of prospectors and homesteaders. The Copper River & Northwestern Railway enabled Chitina to develop into a thriving community by 1914, with a general store, clothing store, meat market, stables, a tinsmith, five hotels, rooming houses, a pool hall, bars, restaurants, dance halls and movie theater.

Early Chitina

Almost all of Chitina was owned by Otto Adrian Nelson, a surveying engineer for the Kennecott Mines, which supplied electric power to all structures with a unique hydroelectric system. After the mines closed in 1938, support activities moved to the Glennallen area, and Chitina became a virtual ghost town with only the Natives and a few non-Natives staying on.

In 1963, the Nelson estate was purchased by ''Mudhole'' Smith, a pioneer Bush pilot, who sold off the townsite and buildings.

When visiting Chitina, be sure to stop by the historic park ranger station!


 Wrangell-St. Elias National Park & Preserve

106.8 Richardson Highway, PO Box 439
Copper Center, AK 99573
(907) 822-5234

e-mail us: wrst_interpretation@nps.gov