
For all its frontier toughness, Homer is also an arts town. Over the second half of the twentieth century the place drew painters, potters, writers, and musicians, and today its galleries, the Bunnell Street Arts Center, and a lively creative community sit alongside the fishing docks. Add the Pratt Museum and the Alaska Islands and Ocean Visitor Center — gateway to the great Maritime National Wildlife Refuge — and Homer becomes that rare thing: a working fishing port that is also a genuine cultural outpost at the end of the road.
The town's odd name comes from a boom that went bust. In the 1890s a gold-rush promoter named Homer Pennock landed on the spit with grand plans for coal mining, built a settlement, and left his first name on the place when the venture collapsed. The coal never paid, but the fish did. Through the early twentieth century Homer grew slowly as a fishing and homesteading outpost at the end of the trail, a hardscrabble frontier town on a spectacular bay, far from anywhere and content to be. The road only reached Homer in 1950, when the Sterling Highway finally tied the town to the rest of the Kenai Peninsula and the world beyond.
Why People Visit Homer
Homer offers Alaska at its most scenic and approachable — a working fishing port and arts town on one of the most beautiful bays in the state. Visitors come for the halibut charters, the Spit, and the wildlife and water excursions, and stay for the galleries, beaches, and unhurried end-of-the-road feel. From the harbor docks to the mountains across the bay, it rewards a slow few days. It is wild, creative, and welcoming in every season on Kachemak Bay.