Koggiung, Alaska
The schooner C.A. Thayer, carrying 28-foot (8.5 m) gillnet boats, bundles of staves for barrels, salt, and a crew of fishermen and cannery workers sailed from San Francisco to Alaska each April from 1912 through 1924. It was anchored at a fishery camp like Squaw Creek or Koggiung, where the fishermen worked their nets and the cannery workers (on the shore) packed the catch.
Each September it returned to San Francisco with supplies of barrels of salted salmon.
In 1909 a reindeer station was formed with a 500-strong herd driven down the Kvichak River to Koggiung. The station was vacated in 1918 after the ash from the 1912 Mount Katmai volcanic eruption caused the deer to starve.
The area became a ghost town after the Libby's Graveyard Point, Koggiung cannery closed in 1959. Archival photos of Koggiung remain. It has seen a resurgence of fishing activity and summer fish camping in the 21st century.
References
- ^ "Koggiung". Geographic Names Information System. United States Geological Survey, United States Department of the Interior. Retrieved 2019-01-15.
- ^ "Koggiung". uaf.edu. Retrieved 2018-11-01.
- ^ "Summer at Graveyard: In a seemingly abandoned place, a new economic model emerges and a family adapts". Anchorage Daily News.
- ^ "Alaska's Digital Archives".
58°52′01″N 157°00′27″W / 58.86694°N 157.00750°W