Keywords: Kodiak residential section, ca 1912 (THWAITES 90).jpeg check categories 27 October 2016 2 Photograph Creator John E Thwaites Caption on image Brooklyn suburb of Kodiak Alaska PH Coll 247 133<br/>Kodiak is located near the eastern tip of Kodiak Island in the Gulf of Alaska Kodiak Island the emerald isle is the largest island in Alaska and is second only to Hawaii in the U S Kodiak National Wildlife Refuge encompasses nearly 1 9 million acres on Kodiak and Afognak Islands The Island has been inhabited by Sugpiaq Eskimos Alutiiq for the past 8 000 years The first non-Native contacts were in 1763 by the Russian Stephen Glotov and in 1792 by Alexander Baranov a Russian fur trapper Sea otter pelts were the primary incentive for Russian exploration and a settlement was established at Chiniak Bay the site of present-day Kodiak At that time there were over 6 500 Sugpiaq Eskimos in the area and the Island was called Kikhtak It later was known as Kadiak the Inuit word for island Kodiak became the first capital of Russian Alaska and Russian colonization had a devastating effect on the local Native population By the time Alaska became a U S Territory in 1867 the Koniag region Eskimos had almost disappeared as a viable culture Sea otter fur harvesting was the major commercial enterprise and eventually led to the near extinction of the species However in 1882 a fish cannery opened at the Karluk spit This sparked the development of commercial fishing in the area The City of Kodiak was incorporated in 1940 During the Aleutian Campaign of World War II the Navy and the Army built bases on the Island Fort Abercrombie was constructed in 1939 and later became the first secret radar installation in Alaska Development continued and the 1960s brought growth in commercial fisheries and fish processing The 1964 earthquake and subsequent tidal wave virtually leveled downtown Kodiak The fishing fleet processing plant canneries and 158 homes were destroyed - 30 million in damage The infrastructure was rebuilt and by 1968 Kodiak had become the largest fishing port in the U S in terms of dollar value The Magnusson Act in 1976 extended the U S jurisdiction of marine resources to 200 miles offshore which reduced competition from the foreign fleet and over time allowed Kodiak to develop a groundfish processing industry Subjects LCTGM Kodiak Alaska ; Cities and towns--Alaska; Chiniak Bay Alaska ; Cows--Alaska--Kodiak; Bays Bodies of water --Alaska--Kodiak; Dwellings--Alaska--Kodiak depicted place Kodiak Alaska ca 1912 Institution University of Washington UWASH-THWAITES-source accession number thwaites 90 PD-old-auto-1923 1940 Information field Order Number THW079 Images from the John E Thwaites Photographs of Alaska Collection to check Kodiak Alaska Bays |