Skip to product information
1 of 6

Petersburg Alaska Vintage Retro Unisex Heavy Cotton Tee - White Logo

Petersburg Alaska Vintage Retro Unisex Heavy Cotton Tee - White Logo

Regular price $22.00 USD
Regular price Sale price $22.00 USD
Sale
Shipping calculated at checkout.
Color
Size
Quantity
Unisex heavy cotton t-shirt made from medium-weight jersey for everyday comfort. Classic fit with a crewneck, tubular construction, and taped shoulders for durability; DTG-printed design. Solid colors are 100% cotton, while select heather/antique shades may use cotton–poly blends.

View full details

Today Petersburg keeps the largest home-based halibut fleet in Alaska, the 1912 Sons of Norway Hall in continuous use, the Little Norway Festival every mid-May, the Tlingit petroglyphs at Sandy Beach still readable in the right light, and a population of about three thousand who still mostly know each other. Our Petersburg designs gather that identity into wearable form: the bear, the harbor, the Narrows, the Norwegian heritage, the LeConte ice. Explore the collection and carry a little of Alaska's Little Norway with you.

The town's lore is fishing-fleet lore. Stories of crews lost in the Narrows and on the Gulf — the Bojer Wikan Memorial honors one of them, with a nine-foot bronze sculpture of a fisherman and a roll of names. Stories of the LeConte Glacier sending bergs the size of small buildings down LeConte Bay into the open water just south of town. Stories of the Norwegian-language phone book that ran for years after every other Alaska town had given up the language, of high school basketball games played for decades inside the Sons of Norway Hall (the hoop is still there). Stories of the Stikine River breakup every spring sending Tlingit families down to the salmon camps as their ancestors had for generations, and of the Norwegian fishing families running their own boats up the same river for crab. Petersburg is a small town where four cultures — Tlingit, Norwegian, Russian-era charting, American statehood — sit on the same waterfront without competing for it.

Why People Visit Petersburg Alaska

  • Walk Sing Lee Alley and the Sons of Norway Hall — the 1912 white-and-red gambrel-roofed wood-frame building on pilings over Hammer Slough, the first Sons of Norway lodge in Alaska, still in continuous community use, listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1979.
  • Visit Bojer Wikan Fishermen's Memorial Park at the south end of Sing Lee Alley — the nine-foot bronze fisherman sculpture, the Valhalla Viking ship replica, and the roll of Petersburg fishermen lost at sea.
  • Take a day boat tour to LeConte Bay and the LeConte Glacier — the southernmost tidewater glacier in North America, calving icebergs the size of small buildings into a long fjord roughly 25 miles southeast of town.
  • Visit the Clausen Memorial Museum just off the harbor for the Tlingit fish-trap and petroglyph collections, the cannery-era industrial history, the world-record king salmon, and the original Cape Decision Lighthouse Fresnel lens.
  • Walk the North Boat Harbor and South Harbor — the largest home-based halibut fleet in Alaska, plus working salmon and crab boats, and one of the best harbor walks in Southeast Alaska.
  • Hike Three Lakes Trail on Mitkof Island in the Tongass National Forest — three small lakes linked by boardwalk through the muskeg, blueberry-thick in late summer, a classic Southeast Alaska temperate-rainforest walk.
  • Walk the Sandy Beach Recreation Area south of town to see Tlingit petroglyphs and the remains of stone fish traps visible at low tide — Mitkof Island's pre-1897 layer.
  • Cross to Kupreanof on a skiff or kayak — the smaller island community right across the Narrows, no roads connecting to it, a five-minute crossing from the Petersburg harbor.
  • Come back for the Little Norway Festival in mid-May for the Valhalla parade, the rosemaling on every shutter, lutefisk and lefse on the menu, and the Leikarring folk-dancers in costume.
  • Petersburg is also a natural stop on the Inside Passage between Juneau, Sitka, Ketchikan, and Wrangell — each town its own character, each a separate ferry day.

Petersburg Alaska Merlin Classics retro vintage logo featuring distressed black-and-white bear emblem with Alaska Territory framing and Est. 1959 statehood date