Historic Ketchikan

Historic Ketchikan

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A local non-profit dedicated to economic development through historic preservation and heritage tourism!

03/11/2026

You might recognize the Yates Memorial Hospital in this featured photo from the Tongass Historical Museum!

Fun bit of Alaska trivia: Which Ketchikan street became the first paved road in Alaska in 1923?

Plank Road Contributes to Town Growth

In 1902, downtown property owners paid 25 cents a foot towards the construction of a 10-foot-wide plank sidewalk for pedestrians from the corner of Grant Street and Front Street around K**b Hill to Newtown, a total length of less than a quarter of a mile. Today, the path no longer exists, but if it did it would run roughly on the outside of the tunnel. A few months after the sidewalk was built, Ketchikan’s first horse and wagon was hired to carry goods by Mike Connell and Fred Billiard’s draying business. As Ketchikan grew so did the amount of plank sidewalks and “roads.”

A photograph of an early automobile on Main Street, taken around 1911, is this month’s featured artifact. Governor Wilfred B. Hoggatt is shown driving a 1911 International Harvester Co (IHC) car. Among the passengers are businessman and inventor of the floating fish trap, J.R. Heckman, and his wife, Marie, and George Rounsefell of Fidalgo Island Packing Company. Standing next to the car is Dr. John Myers in front of his practice.

Newt Casperson, owner of Ketchikan Carbonation Works, brought a passenger automobile to town in 1913. The only cleared path suitable for the car was from one cannery in Newtown to another in “Indian Town,” or the area south of Ketchikan Creek. Using the original unpaved 10-foot-wide plank sidewalk turned road, the car ran day and night as a taxi. By fall of 1913, Newtown was connected by a viable road to the west end of town. Within a few years, a dirt road extended south to Herring Cove and north to Ward Cove, opening up numerous commercial opportunities and establishing a need for the Fire Department’s Pumper Truck #1. Front Street became the first paved road in Alaska in 1923.

Explore more featured artifacts: http://www.ketchikanmuseums.org/virtual_exhibit/vex9_artifact_of_the_month/toc.htm

Object ID #: THS 62.4.1.41

02/21/2026

In 2020, the Yates was named one of the nation’s most endangered historic places by the National Trust for Historic Preservation after sitting vacant for over 15 years. That listing brought national attention to an uncertain future.

Fast forward, and now Historic Ketchikan, Inc. has completed the purchase of the building, a major step toward stabilization and restoration.

What once felt precarious now feels possible!!

We’re grateful for the early grants that helped make this move possible, and we’re continuing to build momentum with community support. The hope is not just to save a building, but to see the Yates contribute to the broader revitalization of downtown Ketchikan.

Take a moment to read the National Trust’s update and see how far this project has already come.
https://savingplaces.org/americas-most-endangered-historic-places/updates/yates-memorial-hospital-purchased-by-historic-ketchikan-inc

Photos from First Bank's post 07/11/2024

Congratulations First Bank!! We love celebrating the historic buildings that make up our Downtown Historic District! Curious and want to learn more about what other buildings make up and contribute to our downtown?? Check out the Historic Survey on our website: https://www.historicketchikan.org/publications/

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306 Main Street Ste 232
Ketchikan, AK
99901