
Today Wasilla is a Mat-Su Valley hub — a railroad-and-mining town turned valley gateway, with lakes in town and the Alaska Range on the horizon. Our Wasilla designs gather that identity — the bear-and-1959 emblem, the Mat-Su Valley, and the trail to Nome — into wearable form. Wasilla, Alaska — where the trail to Nome begins, in the heart of the Mat-Su Valley.
The gold thinned, but the valley kept growing. When the George Parks Highway opened around 1971, linking Anchorage to Denali and the interior straight through Wasilla, the town's fortunes turned: growth shifted from Palmer to Wasilla, and the Mat-Su became Alaska's fastest-growing region. Wasilla was incorporated as a city in 1974, and the old railroad stop became the valley's commercial hub on the highway between the city and the mountains — close enough that a good share of the town still drives the forty minutes south to Anchorage and back. Up the road, Hatcher Pass and the Independence Mine still mark the gold country that first drew people here.
Why People Visit Wasilla
Wasilla balances Alaska heritage with easygoing valley life — lakeside walks, broad mountain scenery, and the deep history of the long trail north. It's accessible, relaxed, and a practical base for exploring the Mat-Su Valley and Southcentral Alaska.