This Day in Alaska History: 1924 Power Plant Fire in Kennicott

  • Source: Alaska Native News
  • Published: 08/02/2022 12:00 AM

On August 2nd, 1924, a fire broke out in the power plant in Kennicott, the world’s leading producer of copper in the world. The steam-powered power plant produced electricity for the mines in the mountains, the Bonanza, Jumbo, Mother Lode, and Erie, as well as for the town that had sprung up to house and care for all of the mine workers and their families. The power plant, innovative for its time, heated all of the homes in the town and even supplied steam to keep the streets and sidewalks snow-free year-round. The power plant was quickly rebuilt and was once again operational within a year. But, while the new plant was once again supplying electricity and heat for the mines and the town, copper deposits began to dwindle and within the decade petered out. By 1938, the ore deposits were depleted and the mining town that sported railroads and steamships that had been brought in piece by piece by dogsled turned into a ghost town.



Comments

We welcome comments from registered users. Comments are solely the responsibility of those who post them; their viewpoints are not endorsed by the Daily Dispatch and DailyDispatch.com. (read more)
Highlight
ship name
no comments have been added


FREE QUICK SUBSCRIBE
Sign up to subscribe to custom state Daily Dispatch emails for free

click to subscribe