ANSWERS: 2
  • Excursion Inlet was originally an Alaska Native village. During World War II it was used as a prisoner-of-war camp, and a strategic base for the Battle of the Aleutian IslandsAleutian Campaign. Excursion Inlet has had a fishing cannery since 1891. The current plant, constructed in 1918, still functions to this day. It mostly processes pink and chum salmon, as well as salmon roe, salmon caviar, halibut and sablefish. It is located near the mouth of the inlet, about 40 miles west of Juneau, AlaskaJuneau. Its seasons run from late June to mid-September. Excursion Inlet Cannery is one of the largest fish canneries in the world and was acquired by Ocean Beauty Seafoods in 2003. Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Excursion_Inlet%2C_Alaska
  • The Whooshkeetaans, Luknaxadi/T’Ak deintaan, Chookeneidi, and the Kaagwantaan were all the family groups which made the Huna Tlingits. The Huna Tlingits occupied Glacier Bay for thousands of years until glacial advance forced them out into Icy Straits, Excursion Inlet, and the Pacific coast. Whooshkeetaans moved to Excursion and the Kaagwantaan relocated to Homeshore, just south along the eastern shore of Excursion Inlet (Brock 2005). This would have placed my family’s property directly between the Kaagwantaan and the Whooshkeetaan clans. The Huna peoples had 2-4 permanent villages, one of which was located just behind the present day cannery. In 1880’s there was a Whooshkeetaans grave house at the head of the inlet and smoke house at the mouth (American antiquity 1965). It is possible the smoke house was on my property due to the large Sockeye salmon spawning stream running along our property. According to a National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration document Whooshkeetaan peoples left Excursion Inlet after devastating flood. I was unable to attain any specific time or evident of this flood (NOAA). How long the Whooshkeetaans actually used Excursion Inlet is very debatable. Though, the inlet is an ideal place to live and has plentiful amounts of wildlife and shelter from the prevailing winds. I never found any evidence of Russian occupation of Excursion Inlet. This could have been attributed to the Huna people’s reputation for fiercely defending their land and willingness to fight. In 1909 euro-american men were the next into Excursion Inlet erecting a fish cannery.

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