|
Fairbanks, situated in the heart of the Tanana Valley with the
Alaska Range to the south and the gold-bearing hills to the north,
is still, in spirit, a frontier town.
Here you walk the streets side by side with merchants, miners,
Indians, Eskimos, pioneers and cheechakos. Historic buildings contrast
with the modern-day facades of department stores and office buildings.
Today, Fairbanks is a transportation hub able to serve North Slope
oil fields and Arctic villages.
Fairbanks is a modern, bustling city. Twelve radio stations, six
television stations, a public Broadcasting System operated by the
University of Alaska Fairbanks and of course cable TV. Fairbanks
has one daily newspaper, the Fairbanks Daily News-Miner; churches,
32 public schools, numerous private schools and a regional library.
Fairbanks is Alaska's second largest city and has expanded its
borders to include a city population of 30,224, and an overall area
population of 82,840 incorporated as the Fairbanks North Star Borough.
During the summer in Fairbanks, you can see crystal clear skies,
with Denali etched against the blue horizon. There are division
less days and nights of light when flowers bloom profusely in vibrant
reds, yellows and blues from June until mid-September. Daylight
goes on for more than 21 hours. The average summer temperature is
61, with records in the mid-90's in June and July.
In winter, you will find a quiet white city, sometimes with an
eerie sting of ice fog. The average winter temperature is 12 below,
with the record 66 below.
One of the favorite aspects of Fairbanks is its rich cultural life.
Here live writers, painters, weavers, sculptors, poets, historians,
print makers, potters, musicians, photographers and actors, some
of them award winning.
HISTORY
In 1901 Captain E.T. Barnette disembarked from the steamship, Lavelle
Young, and set up a temporary trading post on the banks of the Chena
River. His temporary post became permanent when Felix Pedro discovered
gold in the nearby hills the following year, sparking a stampede
of miners into the Interior. Fairbanks, incorporated as a city in
1903, was named after Indiana Senator Charles Fairbanks who later
became vice-president. Now, "discovery day" is commemorated
every July with a bang-up celebration called Golden Days.
There is still active mining in the area and glimpses of the former
bonanzas can be seen along the Steese Highway in the tailing piles
leftover by the gold dredges. Fairbanks economy is tied to government,
military, the petroleum industry, transportation, the University
of Alaska and tourism.
Even though the town itself is modern, you can still find plenty
of that gutsy pioneer spirit. Despite the boom and bust eras of
the pipeline, goldrushes and a devastating flood in 1967, Fairbanks
continues to develop and prosper.
Fairbanks
Travel
|