
Today Ketchikan is celebrated as a fishing and tourism hub, proud of its Native traditions and frontier endurance. Its story reflects Indigenous heritage, frontier grit, and modern adaptation. Our Ketchikan designs embody this layered identity, pairing the bear motif with vintage styling. They invite you to explore the Ketchikan collection and carry forward a reminder of Alaska's resilience. Retro in tone, the logo reflects toughness and authenticity. Ketchikan's emblem honors both heritage and modern growth, making it a vintage symbol of Alaska's identity. Explore the collection and share in Ketchikan's story of resilience and pride.
By the early twentieth century, Ketchikan thrived as "the Salmon Capital of the World," supported by canneries lining its waterfront. Logging camps and pulp mills added industrial strength. The 1950s and 1960s brought suburban neighborhoods, schools, and modest tourism, with ferries and early cruise ships docking. Its timeline reflects Alaska's adaptability: frontier fishing hub evolving into a suburban and tourist community. Ketchikan's mid-century decades highlighted resilience, community pride, and economic continuity. Despite booms and busts, Ketchikan endured, balancing Indigenous heritage, fishing traditions, and suburban optimism, reflecting Alaska's broader resilience in wilderness and industry.
Why People Visit Ketchikan Alaska
Ketchikan offers Alaska's First City and the earliest extant incorporated city status (August 25, 1900), the Salmon Capital of the World credential rooted in the Ketchikan Creek cannery era of the early twentieth century, the National Historic Landmark District downtown with its Creek Street boardwalk-on-pilings red-light history of 1903-1954, the world's largest collection of standing totem poles across four distinct totem destinations, the Tongass National Forest rainforest backdrop (the largest national forest in the United States, headquartered in town), Misty Fjords National Monument 40 miles east, the 3,001-foot Deer Mountain backdrop, the Tongass Tlingit cultural continuity along Ketchikan Creek, and the rain-soaked Inside Passage identity that makes the town look like nothing else in America. It is Alaska's First City — and the first port of call for more than a million cruise visitors a summer heading north from the Lower 48.