Denali Might Lose Its Alaska Athabascan Name In Favor Of Ohio President
Trump: Make Denali McKinley Again Lacking Its Own Mountains, Ohio Wants Ours Back, And Trump Wants To Rename Denali After The Ohio Presiden...
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https://www.countryjournal2020.com/2024/12/denali-might-lose-its-alaska-athabascan.html
Trump: Make Denali McKinley Again
Lacking Its Own Mountains, Ohio Wants Ours Back, And Trump Wants To Rename Denali After The Ohio President, William McKinley
Highest Point In Ohio is 1,549 Ft.(By Comparison, Eureka Summit Is 3,322 Ft.)
To honor Alaska history & culture, "Mount McKinley" was officially acknowledged as "Denali" – its centuries old Athabascan name – in 2015
December 23rd, 2024:President-elect Donald Trump told a group in Phoenix that he intends to rename Mount Denali, America's highest peak. He wants it to honor William McKinley of Ohio, as it did before. The McKinley name was unofficially thought up (by a passing prospector named William Dickey) in 1896, two years before the Valdez-Copper Valley Gold Rush of 1898. The federal government officially adopted the name Mt. McKinley in 1917.
But naming America's highest peak after a guy from Ohio hasn't always set well in Alaska. Decades ago, Alaskans were lobbying to name the mountain in the Alaskan national park "Denali" -- not "McKinley".
By 1975, the state of Alaska began petitioning the U.S. Board of Geographic Names to officially change the name of the peak to Denali, its Athabascan name. The US Congressional delegation in Ohio, 3,900 miles away from the mountain, opposed the change.
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T-shirt for sale in Alaskan store in summer of 2016, during the last transition era. (Photo, Copper River Country Journal)
When it was officially renamed Denali – Koyukon for "The High One" – both of Alaska's US Senators, Lisa Murkowski and Dan Sullivan, expressed their satisfaction.
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Fairbanks Airport Way McDonald's celebrated renaming Mt. McKinley to "Denali" by introducing a burger they dubbed the "Denali Mac". (Photo, June 29th, 2016, Copper River Country Journal)
T-shirt for sale in Alaskan store in summer of 2016, during the last transition era. (Photo, Copper River Country Journal) |
Fairbanks Airport Way McDonald's celebrated renaming Mt. McKinley to "Denali" by introducing a burger they dubbed the "Denali Mac". (Photo, June 29th, 2016, Copper River Country Journal) |
FOR MORE ON NAMING MOUNTAINS IN ALASKASEE THE JOURNAL ARCHIVES:December 15th, 2022 StoryAnother Alaskan Mountain Named After A Politician... It's A Tradition
Congressional Delegation Wants To Rename A Volcano For Don Young
Mt. Cerberus, erupting. (Photo, Alaska Volcano Observatory)
U.S. Senators Lisa Murkowski and Dan Sullivan want to rename an active volcano in the Aleutians to honor their fiery companion, Don Young, who served as Alaska's Congressman for decades.
The volcano is currently named "Mt. Cerberus" -- which is not a Native American name, but Greek.Incredibly, there are two "Mt. Cerberuses" in Alaska.One is a 3,687-foot peak in Katmai National Monument which received its name in 1917. The other Mt. Cerberus -- the 2,673 foot volcano in the Aleutian Islands that the Congressional delegation wants to rename for Don Young -- was originally named in 1935 by the U.S. Navy Survey Expedition.Naming mountains after Ancient Greek and Roman lore comes from a much more intellectual time than we're experiencing today -- a time when Greek and Latin names were considered very cool. (There's also a lava sheet on the planet Mars that's called "Cerberus.")So who was Cerberus? He was "The Hound Of Hell" -- a huge dog in Greek mythology, with between 3 and 50 heads. Cerberus guarded the gates of hell, making sure that everybody who was already down there in the underworld never got back out.
Presumably both "Cerberus" and "Don Young" are good names for an active volcano.HOW THE WRANGELLS WERE RENAMEDRenaming mountains is part of modern Alaska history. When Lt. Henry T. Allen came to the Copper Valley in 1885, he was all gung-ho on renaming things -- especially mountains.
Of course, the nearby mountains had all been given names by the Ahtna. But the Russians laid down the gauntlet. They had already renamed the great Mt. Wrangell after the governor of Russian America, Admiral Ferdinand von Wrangel, when they saw it from the sea. The mountain's Ahtna name was "K'elt'aeni."
Lt. Allen took it upon himself to rename all the remaining Wrangell Mountains with English names. He thought that's what explorers got to do. They got to be modern-day versions of Adam.
Lt. Allen named his mountains after people, not mythical dogs. When he was finished, Lt. Henry T. Allen had lined up the newly-named Wrangell Mountains so they sounded like a lawyer's office in New York City: Drum, Sanford, Wrangell, Blackburn...and Tillman.
Mt. Drum was named after an army general who had fought the Sioux. Mt. Sanford was named after Lt. Henry T. Allen's dead father, Sanford Allen. Allen was from Kentucky, so he named Mt. Blackburn after a Kentucky politician. He named Mt. Tillman after his old professor at West Point.(Unfortunately, there was no "Mt. Tillman." Allen made a mistake there, especially since he carefully measured the non-existent Tillman, declared it to be 16,600 feet tall -- bigger than any of the other Wrangells -- and said it was the third highest mountain in North America.)
Mt. Tillman wound up on numerous maps of the Copper Valley, for years, confusing incoming travelers for quite a while — until National Geographic showed up in 1903 and was stupefied to discover there was no "Mt. Tillman." (See a typical map showing Mt. Tillman above.)
Mount Billy Mitchell on the Richardson Highway at the Valdez/Copper Valley border. (Photo, Country Journal)
Lt. Allen wasn't the only person who came to Alaska and named things after people. Mt. Billy Mitchell, on the way to Valdez, is named after Billy Mitchell, who thrashed his way through the Copper Valley, surveying the telegraph line that came up from Valdez along the trail at the beginning of the 20th century.
Mt. McKinley recently had its name changed back to "Denali" after much kicking and screaming from people in Ohio, where William McKinley came from.
It's not surprising that a politician might have a mountain named after him in Alaska. What is surprising, though, is the timing. Today's trend, in general, is to go back to the original names of mountains. And, often. that means the Native names.