Kotzebue, with a population of about 3000, is the largest
Eskimo community above the North American Arctic Circle. Though
incorporated as a city, Kotzebue is essentially still a village,
and offers a wide variety of interesting experiences to visitors.
The village is situated on the northern tip of the Baldwin Peninsula,
26 miles above the Arctic Circle, 1479 miles south of the North
Pole and 175 miles from the Siberian mainland.
Kotzebue has a tundra climate. Summer temperatures average in the 50's, though some days reach into the 70's and even the 80's. Winter temperatures
vary between 10 degrees above and 30 degrees below zero. Current records maintain a high of 85 degrees, set in July of 1958 and a low of 52 below, set in February of 1968. This does not however include the windchill factor which has on occasion reached 100 below. Area rivers begin freezing early in October; break-up occurs late in May or early June. During the winter months, ice in the Kotzebue Sound freezes to a depth of approximately five feet. The Sound may remain frozen into the second week of June, while the surrounding tundra is alive with spring growth.
June 2nd brings with it a sunrise which sets some 37 days later in August. On August 8th, those who wish, have the opportunity to see not one, but two sunsets.
Believe it or not, Kotzebue actually lies some distance west of Hawaii. The International Date Line passes through the Bering Straits between Kotzebue and Siberia.
The Kotzebue of today is filled with modern frame houses that have replaced the traditional sod igloos. Many features of the past, however, have not changed. "Main Street" is simply the gravel
beach fronting the village.
History For hundreds of years Kotzebue, or Qikiqtagruk as it is called in Inupiaq,
the Eskimo language of the area, has been the trading and gathering center for the entire area. Noatak, Selawik and Kobuk River drainages and a portion of Kotzebue Sound converge at Kotzebue to form a logical transportation center for some 11 villages. To the people of the villages were added inhabitants of Siberia who came to trade. Furs, seal-oil, hides, rifles, ammunition, and oogruk (seal) skins were some of the items exchanged. Games and contests were held throughout the year and especially during gatherings.
With the arrival of the whalers, traders, gold seekers, and missionaries
the trading center expanded and acquired it's name Qikiqtagruk.
This was later changed to Kotzebue in honor of Captain Otto Von
Kotzebue, a Russian naval officer, who sailed into the Sound
in 1816 on a round-the-world voyage in which he attempted
to find a northwest passage. In the summer, as they have for centuries,
Eskimos, come to Kotzebue from near and far in their outboard motor-powered
craft, bringing family, provisions, tents and occasionally,
a dog team.
Information
The
Visitor Information Center, is jointly run by the Fish and
Wildlife Service, the National Park Service and Bureau of
Land Managemen. It provides information and exhibits from
federal lands to the people of the NANA Region. This includes
Noatak National Preserve, Kobuk Valley National Park, Selawik National
Wildlife Refuge, and Cape Krusenstern National Monument. The center
has a variety of videos and films on the culture of the Inupiaq
people, National Parks, and National Park issues, for those
who wish to view them.
Accommodations Nullagvik
Hotel, Box 336, 907 442-3331 operated by the NANA regional
native corporation, has rooms with private baths and a restaurant.
Open year around, the hotel is constructed on a support system
which protects the building from damage which could result from
melting permafrost.
Things To Do The NANA Museum of the Arctic, was built in 1976 and is designed to be educational as well as entertaining. There are exhibits that depict many facets of life in one of the harshest climates in the world.
Transportation/Tours Alaska Airlines 1-800-426-0333.There are daily flights from Anchorage, Nome and Fairbanks by Alaska Airlines.