
Today Anchorage is Alaska's front door — the city most travelers pass through on the way to Denali, the Kenai Peninsula, or Seward, and the place where nearly half the state actually lives. Each March the Iditarod's ceremonial start sends sled teams down Fourth Avenue before the real race restarts to the north, and in late winter the Fur Rendezvous fills downtown. Our Anchorage designs gather that identity into wearable form — the bear, the mountains, and the inlet. Anchorage, Alaska: between the tide and the mountains, at the top of the world.
The Second World War remade the town. Its position on the air route to Asia made Anchorage strategically vital, and the military built Elmendorf Field and Fort Richardson — today combined as Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson — on the high ground north of the city. The bases brought roads, runways, payrolls, and people, and Anchorage grew through the war and the Cold War from a small rail town into the population center of the territory. By the time Alaska approached statehood, the city had quietly become the place where the rest of the state did its business.
Why People Visit Anchorage
Anchorage offers Alaska in one place — a real city with museums, trails, and good food, set inside the scenery most people come north to see. Visitors come for the mountains and the inlet, the wildlife and the long summer light, and stay for the easy access to everything beyond. From the coastal trail to the Chugach, it rewards a day or a week. It is rugged, scenic, and genuinely Alaska.