{"id":48804,"date":"2019-05-31T03:00:00","date_gmt":"2019-05-31T11:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/opinion\/opinion-tlingit-history-and-culture-thrive-as-hoonah-expands-cruise-destination\/"},"modified":"2019-05-31T03:00:00","modified_gmt":"2019-05-31T11:00:00","slug":"opinion-tlingit-history-and-culture-thrive-as-hoonah-expands-cruise-destination","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/opinion\/opinion-tlingit-history-and-culture-thrive-as-hoonah-expands-cruise-destination\/","title":{"rendered":"Opinion: Tlingit history and culture thrive as Hoonah expands cruise destination"},"content":{"rendered":"
“Yesterday brought word that the Hoonah Packing Company at Hoonah packed 115,000 cases of fish.” — Alaska Daily Empire, August 15, 1918<\/em><\/p>\n This brief 100-year-old news note about an Alaska salmon cannery hardly begins to tell the story of the importance of fishing and its relationship to the community of Hoonah.<\/p>\n As told in James Mackovjak’s local history of commercial seine fishing, Hoonah’s “Million Dollar Fleet,” salmon were more than the backbone of the economy. Fishing was an integral component of the culture that developed in this remote but rich region. Salmon provided nourishment and income and were the subject of much artwork. Fishing was a way of life.<\/p>\n Today, the history of that cannery and the culture of the people who made it successful are on full display.<\/p>\n The Huna Totem Corporation recently held a ground-breaking ceremony<\/a> for a second cruise ship dock near the original cannery location at Icy Strait Point, the only privately-owned cruise port in Alaska. Icy Strait Point (ISP) and its location at Hoonah share a very strong and long connection with the Tlingit people that make it one of the most unique cruise destinations in North America.<\/p>\n Russell Dick, President and CEO, spoke at the ceremony that included a traditional Native blessing of the land. He stressed the Corporation’s commitment to “respecting the land” as part of their three pillars of leadership, “Value, Respect, and Community.”<\/p>\n Icy Strait Point includes, as its centerpiece, the carefully restored 100-year old cannery and cookhouse, now repurposed into a museum, restaurant and shops. At the dock, greeters in Tlingit regalia welcome visitors. Nature trails, adventure tours and Alaska Native storytellers all incorporate a glimpse into Huna Tlingit history and culture.<\/p>\n