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File:AKMap-doton-Metlakatla.PNG
Annette Island location in southeast Alaska
File:Annette Island panorama.JPG
Annette Island Panorama

Annette Island or Tàakw.àani (Tlingit) is an island in the Gravina Islands of the Alexander Archipelago of the Pacific Ocean on the southeastern coast of the U.S. state of Alaska. It is at Template:Coord. It is about Template:Convert long and about Template:Convert wide. The land area is Template:Convert. Annette Island is located west across the Revillagigedo Channel from the Alaska mainland and south of Revillagigedo Island. The Island was named in 1879 by William Healey Dall, an American naturalist and explorer in Alaska, in honor of his wife Annette Whitney Dall.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

The meaning of the Tlingit name for the island is Winter Town. Since the late 19th century, it has been the base of the Annette Island Reserve of the Metlakatla Alaska Native Community, composed mostly of Tsimshian people. This is the only Indian reservation in Alaska as Metlakatla voted to opt out of giving up their lands under the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act of the 1970s. In 2016 they elected Audrey Hudson as their first Tribal Chairwoman.<ref name="hudson"/>

Community and demographicsEdit

The largest settlement on the island is Metlakatla. The federally recognized Metlakatla Indian Community was founded by an unordained Anglican missionary William Duncan and Tsimshian followers who moved with him from their community of Metlakatla in British Columbia after he developed new doctrine and schismatized from his church.

Since the late 19th century, the entire island has been an Indian reserve, a status enacted by Congress when the Tlingit agreed to let the Tsimshian use this territory.

GovernmentEdit

The Tsimshian set up their government under the Indian Reorganization Act (1934), writing a constitution for electoral government. They have a twelve-person Council. "The mayor, secretary, and treasurer are elected by the general voting membership of the community. Each of these is elected for a two-year term. Council seats are staggered, resulting in the election of six Council seats each year and three executives every second year."<ref name="hudson"/>

Since the late 1970s, this has been the only remaining reservation in Alaska, as the Metlakatla opted out of giving up their lands for payment under the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act.<ref name="hudson">Dennis Zotigh, "Audrey Hudson: NMAI’s Meet Native America Series" Template:Webarchive, Indian Country Today, 26 June 2016; accessed 27 June 2016</ref>

In 2016 its Tribal Chairwoman is Audrey Hudson, the first woman to be elected to this role. She also serves as mayor, city manager, and police commissioner of the Metlakatla Indian Community.<ref name="hudson"/>

The island's population was 1,447 at the 2000 census.<ref name=2000census>Annette Island: Block Groups 1 and 2 and Blocks 3004 thru 3013, Block Group 3, Census Tract 4, Prince of Wales-Outer Ketchikan Census Area, Alaska United States Census Bureau</ref> The island population is composed mainly of Tsimshian people. It is a cultural crossroads for Tlingit and Haida Natives as well.

InfrastructureEdit

A network of unimproved roads and trails on the island were developed during years of logging. More than 50 years after the United States made a treaty with the Metlakatla Community that promised a cross-island road in exchange for their allowing construction and operation of an airfield on the island, it made good on its word. A joint armed forces task force constructed a 15-mile road across the island, completed from 1997 to 2007, which connected Metlakatla on the ocean side to the side facing Ketchikan, where a ferry landing has been built.<ref>[1] Fact Sheet: "Operation Alaskan Road: Joint Task Force Alaskan Road," Elmendorf Air Force Base; Retrieved on February 6, 2008.</ref> This has not improved access by ferry to the mainland.

After the Second World War, the airfield was used as a United States Coast Guard Search and Rescue base. It served commercial aircraft as well until the 1970s, when the new Ketchikan Airport was built at Gravina Island in the Inside Passage.

ClimateEdit

File:AnnetteIslandScenery.jpg
Annette Island landscape

The lower elevations of Annette Island have a Marine west coast climate (Köppen Cfb), with windy and wet weather year-round, cool winters, and mild summers, and straddle the border between USDA Plant Hardiness Zones 7 and 8.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Due to its southerly and maritime location, with an annual mean temperature of Template:Convert, the Annette Island Airport is one of the warmest locations statewide. Precipitation falls on most days during the winter, and the seasonal total snowfall of Template:Convert occurs mostly from November to March, with some accumulation during April. Snowfall in May and October is relatively rare; warm spells raise the high to Template:Convert for several days each month. During summer, there is an average of 17 days with Template:Convert+ highs, and rain still falls on around half of the days. Precipitation averages more than Template:Convert annually, with June and July being the driest months and October and November the wettest. Extreme temperatures have ranged from Template:Convert on January 30, 1947, up to Template:Convert on June 19, 2004, with the temperature having fallen below Template:Convert only on a handful of occasions. In addition, the Annette Island Airport holds the Alaska state monthly record high temperatures for January (Template:Convert on January 14, 2017), April (Template:Convert on April 29, 1976), and November (Template:Convert on November 1, 1970).<ref name=UA>All-time Statewide Daily Temperature Extremes Template:Webarchive</ref>

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DemographicsEdit

Template:US Census population Annette first appeared on the 1950 U.S. Census as an unincorporated village.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> In 1980, it was made a census-designated place (CDP).<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> It last returned in 1990<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> and was dissolved as a CDP effective as of the 2000 census.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

ReferencesEdit

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External linksEdit

Template:Prince of Wales–Hyder Census Area, Alaska

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