Tyonek, Alaska | |
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CDP | |
Location of Tyonek, Alaska |
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Coordinates: 61°04′05″N 151°08′28″W / 61.068°N 151.141°WCoordinates: 61°04′05″N 151°08′28″W / 61.068°N 151.141°W | |
Country | United States |
State | Alaska |
Borough | Kenai Peninsula |
Government | |
• Borough mayor | Mike Navarre |
• State senator | Gary Stevens (R) |
• State rep. | Louise Stutes (R) |
Area | |
• Total | 68.8 sq mi (178.2 km2) |
• Land | 67.6 sq mi (175.1 km2) |
• Water | 1.2 sq mi (3.1 km2) |
Population (2000) | |
• Total | 193 |
• Density | 2.9/sq mi (1.1/km2) |
Time zone | Alaska (AKST) (UTC-9) |
• Summer (DST) | AKDT (UTC-8) |
ZIP code | 99682 |
Area code(s) | 907 |
FIPS code | 02-79890 |
Tyonek (Dena'ina: Qaggeyshlat) is a census-designated place (CDP) in Kenai Peninsula Borough in the U.S. state of Alaska. As of the 2000 census the population was 193. In 1973, Tyonek formed Tyonek Native Corporation (TNC) under ANCSA and is federally recognized.
A Dena'ina Alaska Native village at Tyonek was noted by the explorer James Cook in 1778. The Lebedev-Lastochkin Company, a Russian fur trade venture, maintained a small trapping station on the site of Tyonek. A detachment of the Vancouver Expedition under Joseph Whidbey visited the trading post in May 1794. Whidbey found that the LLC maintained "one large house, about fifty feet long, twenty-four wide, and about ten feet high; this was appropriated to the residence of nineteen Russians..." A smallpox epidemic in the late 1830s killed about half the population. Tyonek became a major port during the Resurrection Creek gold rush of the 1880s, but declined after the founding of Anchorage on the other side of Cook Inlet in 1915. Tyonek was moved to its current site when the original village, located on lower ground, flooded in the 1930s.
Tyonek is located at 61°3′38″N 151°13′51″W / 61.06056°N 151.23083°W (61.060470, -151.230697).