
Our Dillingham retro logo uses Alaska’s distressed bear motif, representing strength, resilience, and wilderness identity. The bear reflects both Indigenous reverence and frontier endurance, while “1959” grounds the motif in Alaska’s statehood. Its black-and-white styling is rugged and vintage, resembling crate labels or outfitter branding. The motif bridges Dillingham’s dual identity: Native subsistence and modern fishing industry. On merchandise, it conveys authenticity, pride, and toughness, retro in tone. The bear emblem honors Dillingham’s story: resilience, heritage, and fishing pride. Retro in style, it is a vintage emblem of Alaska’s maritime and frontier endurance.
Every summer the largest wild sockeye salmon run on Earth pours into Bristol Bay, and Dillingham is the town it runs through. Set at the head of Nushagak Bay where the Wood River meets the Nushagak, this is the regional hub of the bay — the government, medical, and freight center for a fishery that has topped fifty million fish for eleven straight years and crested near seventy-nine million in the record run of 2022. The Nushagak District off Dillingham's own waterfront is among the strongest in the bay, and each June the town's population nearly doubles as drift boats, set-netters, and processors converge on the red-salmon return. The Central Yup'ik people, who have lived on the Nushagak drainage for centuries, named the point of land where the two rivers meet Curyung — loosely, "the point where the clear and muddy waters meet," the clear water of the Wood and the silt-heavy Nushagak braiding together below the bluff. Later mapmakers called it Snag Point. The Russians built the Alexandrovski Redoubt trading post near the site at Nushagak in 1818, and a Russian Orthodox mission followed in 1837, but it was salmon that made the modern town: canneries rose along Nushagak Bay through the 1880s, and the growing settlement took the name Dillingham in 1904, after the United States senator from Vermont who had toured the territory on inspection. The City of Dillingham incorporated in 1963. Thirty miles to the north sits the credential few towns anywhere can claim — Wood-Tikchik State Park, established in 1978 and, at roughly 1.6 million acres, the largest state park in the United States, more than half of all Alaska's state-park land gathered into one roadless wilderness of interconnected clear-water lakes that are themselves the spawning grounds of the bay's salmon. Dillingham is the headquarters of the 4.7-million-acre Togiak National Wildlife Refuge as well, and there is no road from any of it to the rest of Alaska — the town is reached by plane or by boat, with one twenty-mile paved road running north to Aleknagik and the edge of the park. Clear water and muddy water, lake systems the size of small states, and a salmon run with no equal on the planet: Dillingham is the working front door to all of it.
Why People Visit Dillingham Alaska
- Drive the road north to Aleknagik and Lake Aleknagik — the single twenty-mile paved route out of town and the southern gateway to the Wood River Lakes.
- Fly into Wood-Tikchik State Park — at roughly 1.6 million acres the largest state park in the United States, a roadless wilderness of interconnected clear-water lakes; outfitters in Dillingham rent inflatable kayaks, rafts, and canoes, and a paddle from Lake Kulik back to Dillingham runs close to 140 miles over ten to fourteen days.
- Walk the small-boat harbor — the working docks of the Nushagak District fleet, drift boats and set-net skiffs, with views across the bay toward low mountains.
- Stroll the beaches along Kanakanak Road — tidal flats and the long changing light on Nushagak Bay.
- Learn the region's story at local cultural and heritage centers when open — the Yup'ik history of Curyung and the Bristol Bay fishery.
- Visit the headquarters of Togiak National Wildlife Refuge — 4.7 million acres of walrus, seals, migratory birds, and one of the largest wild herring fisheries.
- Watch for eagles, seabirds, and brown bears along shoreline pullouts and quiet overlooks — this is bear country, salmon country, and a major flyway all at once.
- Time a visit to summer salmon season — June and July, when the largest wild sockeye run on Earth fills the bay and the town runs around the clock.