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Kennecott Ghost Town in Chitina, Alaska

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Kennecott Ghost Town

The town Kennecott in Alaska was once flourishing, full of workers who came to the town in search of wealth and work in the mines. There were businesses, shops, a train connection, and a lot of life. Then in 1938 the town was abruptly abandoned by its citizens, leaving most of their possessions behind. Since the middle of the 1950s the place has been completely deserted.

In the Kennecott mines it was not gold that people were digging for, like in so many other places, but copper. After copper was discovered in the area in 1900, a group of wealthy investors formed the Kennecott Copper Corporation (named when a clerical worker misspelled Kennicott) to mine the incredibly rich veins in the jagged mountains above Root Glacier.

In the 27 years the mine was in full operation, the company made more than $100 million, and the town grew around the mines. Partly because alcoholic beverages and prostitution were forbidden in Kennecott, a nearby village, McCarthy, grew as an area to provide illicit services not available in the company town. It grew quickly into a major town, with a school, a hospital, a saloon, and a brothel.

By 1938, the copper deposits were mostly gone, and the town was abandoned. The railroad discontinued service that same year.

Today, Kennicott is a ghost town and McCarthy has a year-round population of just a couple of dozen people. Located deep in the heart of Wrangell-St. Elias National Park and Preserve, what remains of the towns offers visitors a taste of Alaska’s historic mining era. A number of the buildings from that era are still in use and are listed on the National Register of Historic Places.


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