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Fun Facts

Skagway holds the Guinness World Record for the most people in an egg toss. The record was set on July 4th, 2008 and stretched for several blocks on Broadway.

Our Most Famous Citizen is a Criminal and Villain, Jefferson Randolph Smith (AKA Soapy Smith)

The founder of the department store Nordstrom, John W. Nordstrom, spent two years in the Klondike during the Gold Rush. He earned $13,000 from a gold-mine stake before returning to Seattle and starting Nordstrom.

Nearly 1 million people visit Skagway annually.

During the Boom of the Gold Rush Skagway had a population of around 10,000 people. By June 1898 Skagway was the largest city in Alaska. Today, the year-round population is around 900 people and we can host just over 10,000 people a day!

Skagway was the first incorporated city in Alaska, June 28,1900. We beat Juneau by ONE day!

Skagway’s White Pass & Yukon Tour is designated an International Historic Civil Engineering Landmark. A title shared with only 35 others, including the Eiffel Tower, Statue of Liberty and the Panama Canal.

Skagway is one of only three cities in Southeast Alaska accessible by road.

Beautifully situated in a valley at the northernmost point of the Inside Passage on traditional Tlingit land, Shgag̱wéi means “bunched up or roughed up water” and refers to the whitecaps that form on the ocean in strong winds.

Officials in Canada required prospectors to carry 1 ton (2,000 lbs) of food and gear with them when entering Canada, to ensure they did not starve during the winter.

Jack London, the Author of The Call of the Wild, traveled the Chilkoot Trail. There are even scenes from some of the movie adaptations that were shot in Dyea.

The McCabe College, located on 7th Avenue, was the first school in Alaska to offer a college preparatory classes.

The surveying equipment used to layout Skagway’s grid-like pattern was won in a poker game by Frank Reid.

The Lynn Canal is the deepest and longest fjord in North America.