Welcome to Northwest Arctic Borough, Alaska
A Proud Part of the Genealogy Trails Group



Welcome to Genealogy Trails!

Welcome to Alaska Genealogy Trails!




Welcome to the Genealogy Trails website for the Northwest Arctic Burough, Alaska.
Our goal is to help you track your ancestors through time by transcribing genealogical and historical data and placing it online for the free use of all researchers. This is a continuation of our original
Illinois Trails History and Genealogy Project and we are excited about this opportunity to expand into other states.

We welcome your feedback and comments, and of course, your data contributions. If you have transcribed data that you would like to have posted on this website, please
send it to us.

If you would like to be kept informed of our state and county website updates, subscribe to our
mailing lists

This Site is Available for Adoption!

We are looking for a coordinator for this site.... folks who share our dedication to putting data online and are interested in helping this project be as helpful and useful to researchers as it can be. If you are interested in joining our group as host of this site, view our
Volunteer Page for further information and contact Kim.



Location and Climate
The Northwest Arctic Borough is the second-largest borough in Alaska, comprising approximately 39,000 square miles along the Kotzebue Sound, Wullik, Noatak, Kobuk, Selawik, Buckland and Kugruk Rivers. It lies at approximately 66.900000° North Latitude and -162.583330° West Longitude . The area encompasses 35,898.3 sq. miles of land and 4,863.7 sq. miles of water. The area experiences a transitional climate, characterized by long, cold winters and cool summers. Temperatures range from -52 to 85 degrees Fahrenheit. Total precipitation averages 9 inches per year and average annual snowfall is 47 inches.

History, Culture and Demographics
This area has been occupied by Inupiat Eskimos for at least 10,000 years. "Kikiktagruk" was the hub of ancient arctic trading routes. Kotzebue Sound was "discovered" in 1818 by the German Lt. Otto Von Kotzebue on behalf of Russia. In 1899 a post office was established in Kotzebue. Most cities in the borough developed as supply stations for Interior gold mining, and were settled around schools and churches. The Borough was incorporated as a First Class Borough in 1986 and became a Home Rule Borough in 1987.

The population of the community consists of 85.8% Alaska Native or part Native. The Borough population is primarily Inupiat Eskimo, and subsistence activities are a vital part of the lifestyle. Residents rely on caribou, reindeer, beluga whale, birds, four species of seals, berries, greens, and fish.

Facilities, Utilities, Schools and Health Care
This information is available on a community basis. Communities located within the Borough include the second-class cities of Ambler, Buckland, Deering, Kiana, Kivalina, Kobuk, Kotzebue, Noorvik, Selawik, and Shungnak and the unincorporated community of Noatak.

Economy and Transportation
Activities related to government, mining, health care, transportation, services and construction contribute to the economy. The Red Dog Mine, 90 miles north of Kotzebue, is the world's largest zinc and lead mine, and provides 370 direct year-round jobs and over a quarter of the borough's wage and salary payroll. Cominco Alaska, Maniilaq Association, the Northwest Arctic Borough School District, Veco Construction, and Kikiktagruk Inupiat Corp. (KIC) are the borough's largest employers. The smaller communities rely on subsistence food-gathering and Native craft-making. 162 borough residents hold commercial fishing permits.

The City of Kotzebue is the "hub" of northwest Alaska and is the transfer point between ocean and inland shipping. It does not have a natural harbor, and is ice-free for only 3 months each year. Deep draft vessels must anchor 15 miles out, and cargo is lightered to the docking facility. Local barge services provide cargo to area communities. Ralph Wien Memorial Airport supports daily jet service and air taxis to Anchorage via Nome.

Online Data

Biographies

Births

Cemeteries

Census Data

Deaths

History

Obituaries

Marriages

Military Data

Newspapers

1902 Survey of the Area

Email Us

Website Updates:
28 Jun 2008:
1902 Geo-Survey of the Area; Gold Rush Stories; 1899 Kotzebue Gold Rush Tragedy

 

Adjacent boroughs and census areas
North Slope Borough, Alaska - north
Yukon-Koyukuk Census Area, Alaska - east
Nome Census Area, Alaska - south





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