
Petersburg, Alaska
They call Petersburg ‘Little Norway,’ but that only tells half the story.
This Southeast Alaska fishing town blends Norwegian heritage with Tlingit culture, all while bringing in millions of pounds of salmon and halibut each year. The glaciers of the Coast Range tower over one side of town, while pods of whales feed on the other.
In short, it’s one of the most unique towns in the US you can ever visit.

You Can Walk on Ancient Fish Traps Found Nowhere Else on Earth
When the tide drops near Petersburg, you can see heart-shaped fish traps that are 10,000 years old. The Tlingit people built these unique traps that you won’t find anywhere else in the world.
To see them, head to Sandy Beach Park during minus tides. The Visitor Center has tide charts so you can plan your trip perfectly. Local guides can show you how these clever traps worked with Mitkof Island’s specific tidal patterns, letting ancient fishers catch salmon efficiently.

A Woman Born Here Created America’s First Anti-Discrimination Law
Elizabeth Peratrovich was born right here in Petersburg on July 4, 1911, and became Alaska’s most important civil rights champion. Her powerful speech to Alaska’s Legislature led to the Anti-Discrimination Act on February 16, 1945—19 years before federal civil rights laws.
She died from cancer in 1958 when she was just 47. Since 1988, Alaska celebrates Elizabeth Peratrovich Day every February 16, and in 2020, the U.S. Mint put her face on a $1 coin to honor her work.

Devils Thumb Mountain Has Turned Back Almost All Climbers Since 1946
Devils Thumb mountain looms over Petersburg and fewer than 50 people have reached its top since Fred Beckey first climbed it in 1946. It rises 9,000 feet with sheer rock faces, and the Tlingit called it “Taalkhunaxhkʼu Shaa,” meaning “the mountain that never flooded.”
Three climbers have died trying to scale its Northwest Face, which nobody has conquered yet. Dieter Klose moved here in 1980 just to climb it and never left. In 2023, Kyle Knight became the first Petersburg-born person to reach the summit.

LeConte Glacier Shoots Icebergs Up From the Ocean Floor
Just 20 miles from town, LeConte Glacier creates “shooter” icebergs—huge ice chunks that break off underwater and rocket up to the surface like launching missiles. The water in LeConte Bay is 810 feet deep, perfect for this rare show.
The glacier has moved back 2.5 miles since 1887 but isn’t retreating much now. Local high school students have been tracking the glacier since 1983, measuring how thick the ice is and how often chunks break off, giving scientists valuable long-term data.

You Can Watch Whales Create Bubble Nets to Catch Fish
Frederick Sound near Petersburg is one of the best spots to see humpback whales using bubble nets to catch fish. About 600 whales gather here each summer and work together in groups of 3-30.
They blow perfect circles of bubbles to trap fish, then swim up through the middle with their mouths open. Each bubble net spans 10-100 feet across. This feeding peaks in July and August when each whale eats up to 1.5 tons of fish daily. Scientists have tracked 84 different whale groups that use this hunting method here.

Sing Lee Alley Blends Chinese and Norwegian History in One Street
Sing Lee Alley sits on wooden stilts over Hammer Slough and gets its name from a Chinese merchant who ran a shop there in the 1900s. You’ll find the Sons of Norway Hall built in 1912, where they’ve played bingo every week since 1935.
The street mixes Chinese curved rooflines with Norwegian rosemaling (decorative painting). Since 1992, it’s been on the National Register of Historic Places because it shows how these two cultures shaped Petersburg’s unique identity.

Little Norway Festival
Petersburg’s Norwegian celebrations are actually bigger than many in Norway itself. The Little Norway Festival started in 1958 and has run for 66 straight years, making it Alaska’s longest-running cultural event.
Almost 75% of downtown buildings show off traditional rosemaling paintings by the local Muskeg Maleriers artist group. About 5,000 visitors come each year and together eat more than 2,000 pounds of lutefisk and 3,500 krumkake cookies during the three-day party.

The Tlingit People Used Devils Thumb Mountain to Survive an Ancient Flood
Devils Thumb mountain plays a key role in Tlingit history as “Taalkhunaxhkʼu Shaa” or “the mountain that never flooded.” Stories collected by anthropologist Franz Boas in 1904 tell how people took refuge on it during a massive flood about 10,000 years ago.
Geologists have found evidence of major flooding in this area during that time, likely caused by melting glaciers. You can see six different petroglyph sites near Petersburg with spiral symbols showing flood waters rising around the mountain.

Half the Fishing Boats Here Have Been Owned by the Same Families for Generations
Petersburg’s harbor holds 512 independently owned fishing boats—the most per person in Alaska. Unlike other ports where big companies own most vessels, 87% of Petersburg’s fleet is family-run, with 38 boats that have been passed down since the 1920s.
The Blessing of the Fleet ceremony on the last Sunday in April has happened every year since 1945. Local fishing brings in over 50 million pounds of seafood yearly, and the harbor can process 400,000 pounds a day during busy times.

You Can Play America’s Northernmost Bingo Game Every Friday Night
The Sons of Norway Hall, built in 1912, hosts Friday night bingo that’s been running non-stop since 1935—making it America’s northernmost and longest-running bingo tradition. The white building with red trim has the original wooden bingo tumbler and number tokens from 1912.
Games start at exactly 7pm and draw 80-120 players weekly. This tradition began to raise money during the Great Depression and has generated over $2 million for local projects over its lifetime.

You Can Taste a Unique Norwegian-Filipino Food Fusion Found Nowhere Else
Petersburg created a one-of-a-kind food blend when Norwegian and Filipino cultures mixed. This food style developed after Filipino salmon cannery workers settled here starting in 1915.
By 1925, 86 Filipino families had made Petersburg home and many married into Norwegian families. You can try dishes like smoked salmon lumpia, adobo-spiced lutefisk, and lingonberry-filled ensaymada pastries. The yearly Fil-Nor Friendship Dinner, running since 1932, celebrates this cultural mix every October.

Visiting Petersburg
You can reach Petersburg by Alaska Marine Highway ferry or Alaska Airlines flights from Juneau and Seattle. May is best for the Little Norway Festival while July-August offers prime whale watching.
- Visitor Center: 1st and Fram Streets, open Mon/Wed/Fri 9am-1pm (May-September)
- Plan your visit during minus tides to see the ancient fish traps
- Contact: Petersburg Chamber of Commerce, 907-772-3646
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