
Now the wild coast that built Seward draws the world to it. The town is the gateway to Kenai Fjords National Park — day-boats run out of the harbor past tidewater glaciers, whales, and seabird cliffs, and Exit Glacier and the vast Harding Icefield sit just west of downtown. The Alaska SeaLife Center stands on the waterfront, the brutal Mount Marathon Race charges up the peak behind town every Fourth of July, and the Silver Salmon Derby fills the small-boat harbor each August. A working port became a basecamp for the wild.
What's with Resurrection Bay? Seward sits at the very head of it — a long, deep fjord on the Kenai Peninsula where the mountains drop straight into salt water and the harbor never freezes. The Russian navigator Alexander Baranov gave the bay its name in 1792, after sheltering here on the Orthodox Sunday of the Resurrection; he liked the cove so well that he built a shipyard, and in 1793 his men launched the schooner Phoenix, probably the first ship ever built on the northwest coast of North America. Deep, ice-free, and ringed by ice, the bay is the whole reason Seward exists: it is the door Alaska's interior opens through.
Why People Visit Seward
Seward blends marine science with glacier access and harbor life. Visitors mix easy waterfront walks with boat tours, public art, and museums, all beneath the mountains. It is dramatic, friendly, and photogenic, with year-round appeal in its parks, paths, and public spaces. Frontier railroad history and the wild coast sit side by side here — history and everyday Alaska life together in a welcoming way.