Skagway

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Skagway Travel Guide

City Map

City Introduction

Skagway is one of Alaska’s oldest cities, and it is also unique to the cities of southeastern Alaska by being connected to other cities over land. Via the main road through Canadian British Columbia and Yukon, you can drive to the lower 48 states in the continental United States. And Skagway is linked to both Anchorage and Fairbanks in Alaska via Canadian Whitehorse.

The town of Skagway is located in a river valley between the mountains of Alaska. It has well over 1,000 inhabitants, with a significant increase in the summer season, when more than 1,000,000 tourists come to the city. Cruise ships arrive with most visitors, and tourism is an essential part of the city’s economy.

Skagway’s past as a major mining town can be seen and experienced in several ways. You can take a ride on the charming White Pass and Yukon railroad, which connects the port of Skagway with the town of Whitehorse. The railroad was built from 1898 in connection with the gold fever in Klondike.

Today, Skagway is a cozy town, located in very beautiful settings. There is easy access to the city’s streets and sights from the cruise liners, and a stroll down Broadway Avenue is a must. Most of the city’s sights and activities are found here, and if you want to see or try the old railway, it is also from the city center.

Top Attractions

Broadway Avenue, Skagway

Broadway Avenue

Broadway Avenue is Skagway’s main street. This is where you find shops and eateries, and the street is also an interesting sight with Skagway’s architecture and preserved buildings from the city’s early history. Today Boradway looks much like it did around 1910.

With the Coast Mountains as a backdrop, you can walk along Broadway from 1st Avenue to 8th Avenue and enjoy a string of houses from old Skagway. It is here that you find the greatest concentration of houses from 1897-1898, and among them are the Golden North Hotel from 1898 and the Arctic Brotherhood Hall with its timber facade from 1899-1900.

 

Klondike Gold Rush Historical National Park

Klondike Gold Rush Historical National Park is an area known from the Klondike Gold Rush that raged in 1897-1898. The park’s visitor center is in Skagway, and you can see a number of restored houses from the Klondike era. The other parts of the park can also be visited, but they are not located in Skagway.

Housed in the original White Pass & Yukon Route station building from 1898, the Skagway Visitor Center is where you can learn more about the Skagway of that time and the gold rush and journeys to Klondike. They often went through Skagway or the neighboring town of Dyea and from there by the White Pass and Chilkoot routes to the north.

 

Moore's Cabin, Skagway

Moore’s Cabin

Moore’s Cabin is a modest log cabin that is beautifully preserved. The cabin was built in 1887 as Skagway’s first building, and you can thus go no further back in the city’s history than a visit to the old cabin. The cabin is located on the Moore Homestead, which William Moore and his son Bernard established from their arrival in 1887.

Moore established himself on 160 acres and built a wharf and a sawmill in anticipation of a coming gold rush through this valley. Bernard and his new wife, Minne Elizabeth, built the house next to the old cabin in 1904. Today, Moore’s Cabin is part of the Klondike Gold Rush Historical National Park.

 

Gold Rush Cemetery

Gold Rush Cemetery is Skagway’s oldest cemetery. It was laid out during the gold rush years, and many celebrities from those days are buried here, eg Jefferson Randolph “Soapy” Smith and Martin Itjen, who preserved much of Skagway’s early history.

The cemetery is located a little northeast of downtown Skagway, and it’s a nice walk, going through all of Skagway from the gold mining era to newer residential areas along the way. You can also see the Lower Reid Falls, located just next to the Gold Rush Cemetery.

Other Attractions

Skagway Museum

Skagway Museum

The Skagway Museum is a museum where you can learn about Skagway’s interesting history and great importance for transportation to the Yukon and the interior of Alaska. There are different themes and objects in the exhibition, which give a good impression of the history.

The museum is located in the McCabe College building, which was built in 1899 as a Methodist school. The school was in operation until 1901, when the building was sold to the federal government. Since then it has housed a courthouse and prison before it was converted into a museum in 1961.

 

Red Onion Saloon

During the Klondike gold mining era, Skagway was a transit point with a lot of activity. The gold diggers and their gold finds caused Skagway to almost explode in size, bringing with it a lot of trade and services.

The rich gold finds and the gold diggers’ money also made brothels flourish, and a visit to the Red Onion Saloon is like a trip to the brothels of the 1890s. The saloon is located on the main street Broadway Avenue, where you easily can imagine the city life of the time.

 

Klondike Gold Rush Museum, Skagway

Historic White Pass Yukon Route Depot

After the construction of the railroad between Skagway and Whitehorse, there was of course a station in Skagway, located at the harbor, where people traveled to and from the city. Today, the track runs around the center, but it hasn’t always been that way.

The trains originally ran along Broadway Avenue on the way to and from the station and the old railroad station, which today serves as a visitor center for the Klondike Gold Rush Historical National Park. You can enter to see the old and interesting railway station building.

 

Jeff Smith's Parlor, Skagway

Jeff. Smith’s Parlor

This modest house was built as Jefferson Randolph “Soapy” Smith’s saloon and office in March 1898, and while it provided Soapy Smith with income, the saloon also served as the town’s informal town hall. Soapy Smith was early Skagway’s most famous and notorious resident.

Smith earned his soapy moniker by swindling prizes for selling soap early in his career. In Skagway he got the town’s US Marshal on the payroll, and he opened a bogus telegraph and extorted money from gold diggers in various ways before being shot in a duel on the town’s harbor on July 8, 1898.

 

Alaska 360

Alaska 360 is a place where you can get close to parts of Skagway’s interesting history with gold diggers and dog sleds, but also experience parts of modern Alaska with a brewery and restaurant.

You can see gold digging machines of the type that have been used to dig for gold in many places in Alaska, and you can also try your luck at washing gold and thereby follow in the footsteps of many of the gold diggers of the time. You can enjoy a demonstration of the breeding and use of sled dogs as well.

Day Trips

White Pass and Yukon Route, Skagway

White Pass and Yukon Route

The White Pass and Yukon Route is an atmospheric railway trip with views of mountains, canyons, waterfalls, glaciers and much more in beautiful nature from the town of Skagway in the United States over the White Pass Summit to Canada. Today, the line is operated as a tourist railroad, but like much else in Skagway, it was built during the gold mining era.

The track was laid from 1898, when the gold diggers’ way to the Klondike went through several dangerous routes, and with the number of gold diggers and equipment, it could pay off to build the White Pass and Yukon Route between Skagway and Whitehorse. The track was supposed to continue to Fort Selkirk, but by the time the train reached Whitehorse, the Klondike gold rush was over. The route closed in 1982 but was revived in 1988 as a tourist railway.

 

White Pass, Alaska USA

White Pass Summit

White Pass Summit is located on the border between the US and Canada and offers beautiful scenery and a chance for a picture of a Welcome to Alaska sign. The trip to White Summit is relatively short from Skagway and a good opportunity to visit Canada as well.

The White Pass route was one of those used by prospectors searching for gold in Dawson City and the Klondike in the area in 1897. There were several routes to the Klondike, but especially after the opening of the railroad from Skagway to Whitehorse in 1900, White Pass the preferred route.

Shopping

Fairway Market

4th & State Street

 

Shopping streets

Broadway Avenue

With Kids

Vintage bus tours

Skagway Street Car Tour
270 2nd Avenue
skagwaystreetcar.com

 

Vintage Railroad

White Pass and Yukon Route
231 2nd Avenue
wpyr.com

 

Dog sleds

Sled Dog and Musher’s Camp
Dyea Road

 

Hiking and wildlife

Yakutania Point

 

Zipline

Grizzly Falls Zipline
Dyea Road

City History

Shԍagéi

Skagway’s name comes from Alaska’s indigenous population, which called the site of Shԍagéi, referring to the strong north winds blowing here. The word also has the meaning of a beautiful woman who, according to mythology, turned into stones in the bay at Skgaway, and which today is the reason for the strong winds through the valleys between the mountains.

 

Early European History

Significant changes occurred in northwestern North America during the 1860-1870s. The United States purchased Alaska from Russia in 1867, and in 1871 British Columbia joined Canada. With the new situation, Canada wanted to establish the US-Canada border, but it felt the US could not respond strategically and financially.

In 1887 an expedition to the mountains was sent in connection with the surveying of the frontier. The former river skipper William Moore took part in the expedition, and he made the first exploration of the mountain pass, now called White Pass.

Moore, moreover, estimated that gold had to be found in the Klondike area because the mountains here were similar to gold finds in California, Mexico and British Columbia. The same year as the expedition, William Moore and his son, Bernard Moore, claimed a plot of 650,000 m2 at the mouth of the Skagway River. The reason was that William Moore saw the place as the natural passage for any gold finds across the mountains.

Moore and Moore built a log cabin, sawmill and berth in the expectation that many gold hunters would pass by over the years, and that the Moore family was strategically good at earning traffic.

 

Gold Rush in Klondike

Gold was found in Klondike in the Canadian Yukon in 1896, and it had a huge impact on Skagway. On July 29, 1897, the steamer Queen added to Moore’s wharf with the first group of people who would seek happiness in the pursuit of gold. Several ships and thousands of gold hunters arrived after Quuen’s arrival.

Moore lost land to many of the lucky knights who both stole and resold land from Moore’s area, but the population also exploded in a very short time. It is believed that around 30,000 people came to the area because of the gold finds in Klondike.

Many gave up the long journey towards the gold finds and instead stayed at the estuary to earn money for goods and services for the miners. Within a few weeks, shops, saloons, offices and much more had been built along the hastily muddy streets of Skagway.

In the spring of 1898, about 8,000 inhabitants lived in Skagway, and about 1,000 miners passed through the city each week. In the summer of that year, up to 10,000 lived in Skagway, which in less than a year had become Alaska’s largest city.

 

Chaos and order

With the many new fortune knights in town, some Skagway residents began arranging transports for the gold finds, and this happened at usury prices, which probably much else was also traded in the city. A group of citizens complained about their distress to the city council, which even for many people moved north to make money from the gold.

Instead, Skagway’s fate fell into the hands of unscrupulous men such as Jefferson Randolph “Soapy” Smith. Smith managed Skagway with almost all funds used. He provided help to someone, but at the same time he organized scams against those who came through the city. There was obvious prostitution in the streets along with gambling and alcohol.

Soapy Smith made good money. He ran a newspaper in the city and organized a private militia. He had opened the saloon Jeff. Smith’s Parlor in March 1898, and although the town had a town hall, it was really from the saloon that Soapy Smith ruled the town. He also offered everyone to send telegraph messages for $ 5 for each message. It sounded fine, but customers did not know that the telegraph first came to Skagway in 1901. Soapy Smith was shot on July 8, 1898 by Jesse Murphy in a famous duel in Juneau.

After the almost lawless time under Soapy Smith, more control of the Skagway came into being, and more demands were also placed on the Gold Hunters. Canada demanded that travelers to the golden areas around Dawson City should each bring about 900 kilos of various supplies, etc., so that people could die of starvation through the cold winter.

 

New means of transport

The first roads to Klondike were divided in two. Many used the road from Skagway over the White Pass, but the old crossing of the Tlingite tribe from Dyea over the Chilkoot pass was also used. The ships got bigger and most could only add to Skagway, which is why White Pass became the preferred route.

The many kilos made transport across the mountains much more difficult, so that alternatives to hiking with packing and animals were built. In 1898, a roughly 20-kilometer cable car was built from Skagway towards White Pass to facilitate the trip – of course, against proper payment. A cable car was also built along the Chilkoot road over the mountains.

In May 1898, The White Pass and Yukon Route Railway Company began to build tracks in Skagway and across White Pass to British Columbia and Yukon. With both a major port and a railroad, Skagway-White Pass won over Dyea as the preferred transport route towards Klondike. The railroad was completed in 1900, but already the gold fever had worn off.

 

The beginning of the 20th century

In 1899, the flow of people to the areas at Klondike stopped, causing a sharp decline in Skagway’s economy. That same year, the city invested where Alaska’s first college was built. Like the railroad, this school opened in the year 1900, which was also the year Skagway formally became a city – incidentally as the first in Alaska. At that time, there were 3,117 residents left in the city.

Skagway had been a boomtown for the short time the gold fever raged in Klondike. The city’s downturn was just as rapid as the upturn, and many buildings were threatened with decay and destruction. However, there were some inhabitants, such as Martin Itjen, who wanted to ensure the preservation of Skagway’s history.

They kept the city’s cemetery straight, bought Soapy Smith’s saloon and moved many effects to what became Skagway’s first museum. Ijten was the pioneer of preserving history, and he also started tourist bus travel for tourists. Itjen called the Ford bus for Skagway’s tram. One of the visitors to Skagway during this time was President Warren G. Harding, who was in Skagway in 1923.

 

Downturn with continued activity

Skagway’s economic downturn after the end of the gold rush was significant, and the city could well have ended up as a ghost town had it not been for the city’s port, railway and strategically good location for transport to Yukon.

There were still many Canadian natural resources and large mines in Canada, and the railroad to and from Skagway created jobs and foundations for the city, which, however, had become much smaller than in the gold fever days. For many years the railroad was the only road over White Pass, but that changed in 1979 when a highway was completed. The road took over the role of the railway and the railway closed in 1982.

 

The tourists’ Skagway

In the last decades of the 20th century, most tourists still came to Alaska and Skagway, which with its harbor and history was interesting for cruise ships. Many new tourist activities and tours were developed to entertain guests in the city and also serve Skagway’s winter economy when the tourists did not come.

In 1988, the White Pass and Yukon Route reopened the tourist train to White Pass and on to Canada with tourists who could thus experience Canada and, not least, the gold fever road towards Yukon.

The number and size of cruise ships has increased explosively in recent decades, and Skagway is therefore a busy tourist town during the summer season. Broadway Avenue’s main street stands beautifully, and many shops, cafes and museums welcome tourists to the city, which today has about 1,000 residents.

Geolocation

In short

Railroad Depot, Skagway, USA

Overview of Skagway

Skagway is one of Alaska’s oldest cities, and it is also unique to the cities of southeastern Alaska by being connected to other cities over land. Via the main road through Canadian British Columbia and Yukon, you can drive to the lower 48 states in the continental United States. And Skagway is linked to both Anchorage and Fairbanks in Alaska via Canadian Whitehorse.

 

The town is located in a river valley between the mountains of Alaska. It has well over 1,000 inhabitants, with a significant increase in the summer season, when more than 1,000,000 tourists come to the city. Cruise ships arrive with most visitors, and tourism is an essential part of the city’s economy.

 

About the upcoming Skagway travel guide

  • Contents: Tours in the city + tours in the surrounding area
  • Published: Released soon
  • Author: Stig Albeck
  • Publisher: Vamados.com
  • Language: English

 

About the travel guide

The Skagway travel guide gives you an overview of the sights and activities of the American city. Read about top sights and other sights, and get a tour guide with tour suggestions and detailed descriptions of all the city’s most important churches, monuments, mansions, museums, etc.

 

Skagway is waiting for you, and at vamados.com you can also find cheap flights and great deals on hotels for your trip. You just select your travel dates and then you get flight and accommodation suggestions in and around the city.

 

Read more about Skagway and the USA

 

Buy the travel guide

Click the “Add to Cart” button to purchase the travel guide. After that you will come to the payment, where you enter the purchase and payment information. Upon payment of the travel guide, you will immediately receive a receipt with a link to download your purchase. You can download the travel guide immediately or use the download link in the email later.

 

Use the travel guide

When you buy the travel guide to Skagway you get the book online so you can have it on your phone, tablet or computer – and of course you can choose to print it. Use the maps and tour suggestions and you will have a good and content-rich journey.

Broadway • Gold Rush • White Pass • Soapy Smith • Yukon

Railroad Depot, Skagway, USA

Overview of Skagway

Skagway is one of Alaska’s oldest cities, and it is also unique to the cities of southeastern Alaska by being connected to other cities over land. Via the main road through Canadian British Columbia and Yukon, you can drive to the lower 48 states in the continental United States. And Skagway is linked to both Anchorage and Fairbanks in Alaska via Canadian Whitehorse.

 

The town is located in a river valley between the mountains of Alaska. It has well over 1,000 inhabitants, with a significant increase in the summer season, when more than 1,000,000 tourists come to the city. Cruise ships arrive with most visitors, and tourism is an essential part of the city’s economy.

 

About the upcoming Skagway travel guide

  • Contents: Tours in the city + tours in the surrounding area
  • Published: Released soon
  • Author: Stig Albeck
  • Publisher: Vamados.com
  • Language: English

 

About the travel guide

The Skagway travel guide gives you an overview of the sights and activities of the American city. Read about top sights and other sights, and get a tour guide with tour suggestions and detailed descriptions of all the city’s most important churches, monuments, mansions, museums, etc.

 

Skagway is waiting for you, and at vamados.com you can also find cheap flights and great deals on hotels for your trip. You just select your travel dates and then you get flight and accommodation suggestions in and around the city.

 

Read more about Skagway and the USA

 

Buy the travel guide

Click the “Add to Cart” button to purchase the travel guide. After that you will come to the payment, where you enter the purchase and payment information. Upon payment of the travel guide, you will immediately receive a receipt with a link to download your purchase. You can download the travel guide immediately or use the download link in the email later.

 

Use the travel guide

When you buy the travel guide to Skagway you get the book online so you can have it on your phone, tablet or computer – and of course you can choose to print it. Use the maps and tour suggestions and you will have a good and content-rich journey.

Gallery

Gallery

Other Attractions

Skagway Museum

Skagway Museum

The Skagway Museum is a museum where you can learn about Skagway’s interesting history and great importance for transportation to the Yukon and the interior of Alaska. There are different themes and objects in the exhibition, which give a good impression of the history.

The museum is located in the McCabe College building, which was built in 1899 as a Methodist school. The school was in operation until 1901, when the building was sold to the federal government. Since then it has housed a courthouse and prison before it was converted into a museum in 1961.

 

Red Onion Saloon

During the Klondike gold mining era, Skagway was a transit point with a lot of activity. The gold diggers and their gold finds caused Skagway to almost explode in size, bringing with it a lot of trade and services.

The rich gold finds and the gold diggers’ money also made brothels flourish, and a visit to the Red Onion Saloon is like a trip to the brothels of the 1890s. The saloon is located on the main street Broadway Avenue, where you easily can imagine the city life of the time.

 

Klondike Gold Rush Museum, Skagway

Historic White Pass Yukon Route Depot

After the construction of the railroad between Skagway and Whitehorse, there was of course a station in Skagway, located at the harbor, where people traveled to and from the city. Today, the track runs around the center, but it hasn’t always been that way.

The trains originally ran along Broadway Avenue on the way to and from the station and the old railroad station, which today serves as a visitor center for the Klondike Gold Rush Historical National Park. You can enter to see the old and interesting railway station building.

 

Jeff Smith's Parlor, Skagway

Jeff. Smith’s Parlor

This modest house was built as Jefferson Randolph “Soapy” Smith’s saloon and office in March 1898, and while it provided Soapy Smith with income, the saloon also served as the town’s informal town hall. Soapy Smith was early Skagway’s most famous and notorious resident.

Smith earned his soapy moniker by swindling prizes for selling soap early in his career. In Skagway he got the town’s US Marshal on the payroll, and he opened a bogus telegraph and extorted money from gold diggers in various ways before being shot in a duel on the town’s harbor on July 8, 1898.

 

Alaska 360

Alaska 360 is a place where you can get close to parts of Skagway’s interesting history with gold diggers and dog sleds, but also experience parts of modern Alaska with a brewery and restaurant.

You can see gold digging machines of the type that have been used to dig for gold in many places in Alaska, and you can also try your luck at washing gold and thereby follow in the footsteps of many of the gold diggers of the time. You can enjoy a demonstration of the breeding and use of sled dogs as well.

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