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History
Chitina is located on the west bank of the Copper River at it confluence
with the Chitina River, at mile 34 of the Edgerton Highway, 53 miles southeast
of Copper Center outside the western boundary of the Wrangell-St. Elias
National Park and Preserve, 66 miles southeast of Glennallen. It lies
at approximately 61° 31' N Latitude, 144° 26' W Longitude (Sec.
14, T004S, R005E, Copper River Meridian). The community is located in
the Chitina Recording District. The area encompasses 29 sq. miles of land
and 1 sq. miles of water.
Athabascan Indians have reportedly occupied this region for the last 5,000
to 7,000 years. Archaeological sites are located to the south and east
of Chitina. 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 to the area. The Copper River & Northwestern Railway
enabled Chitina to develop into a thriving community by 1914. It had a
general store, clothing store, meat market, stables, a tinsmith, five
hotels, rooming houses, a pool hall, bars, restaurants, dance halls and
a movie theater. Almost all of Chitina was owned by Otto Adrian Nelson,
a surveying engineer for the Kennecott Mines. He 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.
Background Info:
Water Data Research for Copper River
History of the river
http://www.sf.adfg.state.ak.us/region3/areas/ucus/chitina/chitinaHistory.cfm
http://www.nps.gov/wrst/history.htm
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