Category: Cordova

Cordova – historic settlement, originally a cannery site, then a railroad town. Main industry is now fishing.

Decaying railway dock in Cordova is a melancholy reminder of bygone days

Decaying railway dock in Cordova is a melancholy reminder of bygone days

From the 1911 completion of the Copper River and Northwestern Railway (CR&NW) until the mid 1930s, Cordova’s economy was primarily dependent on the railway and the shipment of copper ore from the mines at...

Cordova’s Alaskan Hotel and Bar gives peek at “Frisco of the North” in 1908

Cordova’s Alaskan Hotel and Bar gives peek at “Frisco of the North” in 1908

The Spanish explorer Salvadore Fidalgo led a 1790 expedition to the Pacific Northwest and Alaska in an effort to bolster Spanish claims to North America’s west coast. Fidalgo arrived in Prince William Sound at...

Samuel Blum was a leading citizen in early Valdez, Cordova

Samuel Blum was a leading citizen in early Valdez and Cordova

The building shown in the drawing, at 500 Third St. in Cordova, was originally the home of Samuel Blum and his family. Blum was a banker and merchant who was active in Southeast and...

Old Cordova Air Service hangar, built in 1935

Mudhole Smith helped build Alaska’s aviation industry

Merle “Smitty” Smith, who is now known by his more colorful nickname, “Mudhole,” became enamored of flying at an early age. According to Lone Janson’s 1981 biography of him, Smitty, who was born and...

“Million Dollar Bridge” survives Copper River adversities and the 1964 earthquake

Numerous routes were considered for a railway to the Kennecott copper mines in the Wrangell Mountains. The most direct route was along the Copper River, but engineers hired by the Alaska Syndicate (which controlled...

Cordova’s version of the Dragon and St. George’s

Cordova’s version of the Dragon and St. George’s

During Cordova’s early days (1908-1911), when it was a boisterous railroad boomtown, the religious and social needs of both construction workers and the more genteel town residents were served by an Episcopal social club...

Little remains of the once-important Cordova Naval Radio Station in Alaska

In 1904 the U.S. Army’s Washington-Alaska Military Cable and Telegraph System (WAMCATS) was completed. According to George Todd’s undated publication, “Early Radio Communications in the Thirteenth Naval District Washington, Oregon and Alaska,” that same...

House in Cordova is one of the few reminders of legendary Alaska pioneer, Jack Dalton

Jack Dalton, perhaps best-known for opening Southeast Alaska’s Dalton Trail in 1894-95, was a wanderer. During his 30-plus years in Alaska, his meanderings covered large swaths of Southeast and Southcentral Alaska. Dalton came to...

Cordova is home to one of the oldest federal buildings in Alaska

  Cordova’s old Post Office and Courthouse building as it looked in 2019 A 196-mile-long mining railroad, the Copper River and Northwestern Railway, once connected the port of Cordova in Prince William Sound with the...

George Cheever Hazelet helped develop Valdez and Cordova

Hazelet’s house in Cordova as it looks today George Cheever Hazelet was a resident of Omaha, Nebraska when news of the Klondike gold strike reached the contiguous United States in 1897. Even though he...