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Juneau Alaska Vintage Retro Unisex Cotton Jersey Tank Top - Black Logo

Juneau Alaska Vintage Retro Unisex Cotton Jersey Tank Top - Black Logo

Regular price $28.00 USD
Regular price Sale price $28.00 USD
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Unisex jersey tank made from lightweight Airlume combed and ring-spun cotton with a retail fit. Side-seam construction and self-fabric binding help it hold shape, with a tear-away label, and it runs true to size for adults. Solid colors are 100% cotton; select heather/prism shades may include cotton–poly or cotton–poly–rayon blends.

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Juneau is the capital of Alaska — and the only U.S. state capital with no road access to the rest of the continent. You arrive by floatplane, ferry, or cruise ship; you leave the same way. The Auk Tlingit (the A'akw Kwáan, the "Small Lake People") and the Taku Tlingit have lived along Gastineau Channel for thousands of years; the Tlingit name for the downtown stream that runs through Silver Bow Basin and out to the sea is Dzánti K'ihéeni. Captain George Vancouver charted the channel in 1794, and John Muir visited the region in 1879. In 1880 Chief Kowee of the Auk Tlingit carried ore samples to the Sitka mining engineer George Pilz, and on October 18, 1880, Chief Kowee guided the prospectors Joseph Juneau and Richard T. Harris to the head of Gold Creek at Snow Slide Gulch in Silver Bow Basin — the mother lode. They staked a 160-acre town site on the beach the same day, and the camp called Harrisburg was renamed Juneau by miner vote in 1881. It was the first town the United States founded in Alaska after the 1867 Purchase from Russia, and the first Alaska town founded directly from a gold strike. John Treadwell opened his mine on Douglas Island across Gastineau Channel in 1882, and for thirty-five years the Treadwell complex was one of the largest gold operations in the world before the 1917 cave-in and flooding closed it. The Alaska Civil Code signed by President William McKinley on June 6, 1900, designated Juneau the capital; the seat of government completed its transfer from Sitka on September 8, 1906, under Governor Wilford Hoggatt, and Juneau has been Alaska's capital ever since. The 1931 Federal and Territorial Building — six exterior columns of Tokeen Alaska marble — stands today as the State Capitol. The A-J Mine on Mount Roberts closed in 1944, and Alaska entered the Union as the 49th state on January 3, 1959. On July 1, 1970, Juneau, Douglas, and the surrounding borough consolidated into the City and Borough of Juneau — 3,255 square miles, the second-largest U.S. city by area, larger than Rhode Island or Delaware. The town runs eleven miles along Gastineau Channel beneath the 3,576-foot summit of Mount Juneau, with the 1,500-square-mile Juneau Icefield behind it and Mendenhall Glacier twelve miles north. There is no other capital in America like it.

Juneau's lore includes Tlingit legends of spirits inhabiting mountains, gold rush myths of hidden mines, and storms testing resilience. Families recall parades, salmon festivals, and suburban optimism in the 1950s. Residents remembered statehood celebrations in 1959, emphasizing pride. Lore reflects both myth and memory, highlighting toughness, authenticity, and pride. Juneau's stories emphasize its dual identity: Indigenous heritage and government hub. Fact and legend alike reveal continuity and resilience. Juneau's lore reflects Alaska's broader story: frontier ambition and Native traditions enduring together, making it a lasting emblem of Alaska's cultural and political strength.

Why People Visit Juneau Alaska

  • Tour the Alaska State Capitol on Fourth Street — the 1931 Federal and Territorial Building, with six exterior columns of Tokeen Alaska marble. Free guided tours available during legislative session and summer months.
  • Walk past the Alaska Governor's Mansion on Calhoun Avenue — the 1912 Colonial Revival home with the white columned porch, one of Juneau's most distinctive silhouettes.
  • Visit Mendenhall Glacier and the Mendenhall Glacier Visitor Center — twelve miles north of downtown, the 1962 visitor center is the oldest U.S. Forest Service visitor center in the country, with viewing decks, the Photo Point Trail, and Nugget Falls a short walk along the lake shore.
  • Ride the Mt. Roberts Tramway (Goldbelt Tram) — 1,800 vertical feet from the cruise dock to a station near the summit of Mount Roberts, with alpine trails, a nature center, and views down Gastineau Channel.
  • Walk Franklin and Front Streets in historic downtown Juneau — clapboard storefronts on the steep hillside grid built against the side of Mount Juneau.
  • Visit St. Nicholas Russian Orthodox Church on Fifth Street — the 1894 octagonal log church, the oldest original Russian Orthodox church in Southeast Alaska.
  • Stop at the Juneau-Douglas City Museum downtown for the city's history collection, and the Alaska State Museum at the Father Andrew P. Kashevaroff State Library, Archives and Museum building for the broader statewide collection.
  • Tour the Wickersham House State Historical Site on Chicken Ridge — the 1898 home of territorial judge James Wickersham, now a museum.
  • Hike to the Last Chance Mining Museum at the end of Basin Road — the preserved compressor building of the A-J (Alaska-Juneau) Mine that operated through 1944.
  • Cross the Juneau-Douglas Bridge to Douglas Island and walk the Treadwell Historic Trail through the industrial ruins of the 1882-1917 Treadwell Mine.
  • Hike the Perseverance Trail up Gold Creek into Silver Bow Basin — the cirque where Joseph Juneau, Richard Harris, and Chief Kowee struck the mother lode on October 18, 1880.
  • Take a whale-watching charter from Auke Bay — humpback whales reliable June through August in Stephens Passage and the Inside Passage waters around Juneau.
  • Walk Auke Bay or take the Alaska Marine Highway ferry to other Inside Passage communities — Haines, Skagway, Sitka, Petersburg, Wrangell, and Ketchikan.

Juneau Alaska Merlin Classics retro vintage logo featuring distressed bear motif with 1959 Alaska statehood date

Wear Local. Feed Local. Stay Classic.

Product FAQs

How does your sizing work?

Because items are made to order, we can’t accept returns for sizing or color choices. We do accept returns for defects, misprints, or shipping damage. Please review the detailed photos and descriptions before purchasing. Women’s fitted tees run small; if you prefer a looser fit, consider sizing up.

How do I send gifts?

All items ship without prices and include a simple packing slip for easy gifting. Enter the recipient’s shipping address and your billing address at checkout. Use your contact info to receive tracking updates. Orders typically arrive within 6–11 business days—please allow extra time for time-sensitive gifts.

How do I care for my item?

For apparel: wash cold, inside-out, with like colors; avoid bleach and high heat; tumble dry low or hang dry. For embroidery, iron inside-out to protect the stitching. See specific care instructions in product descriptions and also follow general best practices in caring for your items for long term enjoyment.

How are items made and when will they arrive?

We make each item on demand using premium blanks, embroidery, and soft-hand prints. Production usually takes 2–5 business days (excluding weekends and holidays). You’ll receive tracking once shipped. We currently ship to U.S. addresses via USPS, UPS, or FedEx. Most orders arrive within 6–11 business days.

What’s the return/exchange policy?

We accept returns for defects, misprints, or damage on arrival. Report issues within 14 days with photos and your order number, and we’ll replace or refund. Size or color changes aren’t supported after purchase, so please consult size charts before ordering if you are at all unsure.

Who are we?

Merlin Classics is a volunteer-run, AI-assisted apparel project celebrating timeless local style. Every item is made to order, and profits (revenue minus external product/marketing cost) support hunger-relief programs in the communities our collections spotlight. Classic looks, real local impact—every purchase helps.