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Lake Clark National Park & PreserveArctic Forget-Me-Not, one of many tundra wildflowers in southwest Alaska.
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Lake Clark National Park & Preserve
People
 
Alaska became part of the United States as a territory in 1867.
Photo courtesy of Ida Carlson Crater.
Schoolchildren at the village of Nondalton in 1931.
 

Lake Clark is tucked into a wild, remote corner of Alaska - you might hike for days and never see another soul. Don't be fooled, though. You are following in the footsteps of hundreds, even thousands of people before you. Imagine them stretching back through time in an unbroken line, all the way to the end of the last ice age.

Look at the faces that walk with you - the people in the park today. In the Applied Anthropology program, ethnographers, subsistence specialists, and linguists study the communities in the park and preserve area.

If you look back a little further, you'll see the Euro-american trappers, Dena'ina Athabascans, Russian explorers, and American entrepreneurs who are the ancestors of today's residents. Park historians sift through old letters, papers, photos, and tapes, learning the stories of these "old-timers."

As the line recedes into the distance, imagine that you can see the people who lived in the Lake Clark area before the first written records. Archeologists painstakingly search for clues about their lives and communities.

Now look around at the beautiful Lake Clark landscape. How do the people in that long line perceive the mountains, rivers, and sky? Do they see the same things you do? Cultural landscapes specialists tie places to the people who used them.

Finally, on your imaginary hike, sneak a look into the knapsacks, bundles, and sleds of your imaginary companions. You'll find the letters they wrote, the stone tools they used, the maps they made, and much more. These precious and irreplaceable objects are cared for in perpetuity by the park's Collections personnel.

As we continue to preserve and study the park and preserve's cultural resources, we bring the faces of Lake Clark's people into focus, and begin to understand how their stories are a part of human history. Click the links above or on the navigation bar to the left to learn more.

Kids get excited about history through hands-on exercises.
Teach with Historic Places.
Online lesson plans and materials help teachers interpret our national heritage.
more...
Matt Nieminen on the floats of his plane.  

Did You Know?
Pilot Matt Nieminen was the first to fly into Lake Clark country in 1930, in a Waco 10 biplane on floats. Nieminen is seen here on the floats of a Fairchild 71 at Two Lakes, just after he became the first to fly over Mt. McKinley in it.

Last Updated: July 24, 2006 at 22:37 EST