James Girdwood, an Irish immigrant
and linen merchant staked 4 gold claims on Crow Creek in 1900. Soon
afterwards, several claims were staked in the California and Virgin
Creek drainages. At the mouth of the Valley a supply camp arose. Originally
called Glacier City it was later renamed Girdwood after James Girdwood.
Another mine on Crow Creek located below Girdwood's claims and about
5 miles from the town was operated by the Crow Creek Mining Company
from 1906 to 1924, when it was purchased by Arne Erickson. This mine
is still in operation and run by the Toohey family as a popular attraction
for locals and tourists that want to try their hand at panning for
gold.
Though founded as a mining
town, the development of Girdwood was spurred by railroad construction
which was begun by the Federal Government in 1915. The little town
boomed with new businesses. In 1917 Girdwood had about 60 permanent
residents. Even then the weekend population swelled to about 300 with
visitors from Anchorage. Main Street in Girdwood had 16 buildings,
5 of which were saloons, the most popular being the Little Dipper
Inn. Girdwood was built by hard working and fun loving men and women,
a characteristic that persists to this day.
The mines closed in the late
1930's and Girdwood became a ghost town until 1949 when construction
began on the Seward Highway connecting the seaport of Seward to Anchorage.
Eleven local men formed the
Alyeska Ski Corporation in 1954. The first lift, a Pomalift, and a
small lodge were opened in January of 1959. Girdwood became a 3rd
class city in 1958 and a first class city in the Borough of Anchorage
in 1970. Eventually Girdwood became part of the Municipality of Anchorage
through unification in 1975.
The Good Friday Earthquake
of 1964 caused the Girdwood Townsite to subside below the high tide
line of Turnagain Arm. The town was subsequently moved 2 1/2 miles
up the Valley to the present location.
In 1960 the first chairlift
and a daylodge was built. Francoise de Gunzburg, a Frenchman and a
member of the Rothechild Banking family managed to secure a used chairlift
from France that was dismantled, shipped to Alaska and rebuilt at
Alyeska. In 1962 Alyeska Ski Corp. acquired 233 acres of land at the
base of Mt. Alyeska. Much of this land was sold to subsidize the development
and operation of the Resort.
In 1967 de Gunzburg sold
the resort to Alaska Airlines. Chris von Imhof, the director of tourism
for the State of Alaska was hired to run the resort. The original
hotel and a second chair lift was constructed on the upper Mountain.
This chair was destroyed by an avalanche one year later in 1973 and
was rebuilt 500 feet higher in 1974.
Alyeska Resort hosted the
1963 Olympic Trials, the 1969 Junior Nationals, and a 1973 World Cup
Race. Alyeska was finally on the map. In 1994, Chair 3 was added and
Chair 4 was constructed as a back up to the aging chair one. The original
Chair One was replaced by a new Riblet Chair and night lighting was
added in 1979.
In October 1980, Alyeska was
sold to Seibu Group, a Japanese Corporation heavily involved in hotels
and resorts worldwide. Since 1980 Seibu has built a new high speed
quad chair to replace chair 2, a fixed quad to replace chair 4 and
a 60 passenger tram. Alyeska can now boast a 308 room luxury hotel
and a 30,000 square foot facility that includes a fine restaurant
dinning and a skiers cafeteria at the top of the tram.
Alyeska has gained a name
as a training ground for Olympic and World Cup skiers, including Gold
Medallists Tommy Moe, Silver Medallist Hillary Lindh, as well as Megan
Gerety and snowboarder Rosie Fletcher.
Girdwood is now a thriving
Resort Town of about 2000 residents and well on its way to becoming
a 4 season destination resort. An 18 hole Championship Golf Course
is being planned, Girdwood is a popular base for Helisking, and ski
area expansion into the Winner Creek basin is in the planning stages,
Alyeska has the potential to develop 6000 acres of skiable terrain,
rivaling the largest ski resorts in North America.
In the summer Girdwood is
the perfect base camp for exploration of Prince William Sound, fishing
on the Kenai Peninsula, deep sea fishing in Seward, rafting wild rivers
or wildlife watching for whales, eagles, and sheep along Turnagain
Arm.