The U.S. state of Alaska is not divided into counties, as 48 other states are (Louisiana having parishes instead), but it is divided into boroughs. Many of the more densely populated parts of the state are part of Alaska's eighteen organized boroughs, which function somewhat similarly to counties in other states. However, unlike county-equivalents in the other 49 states, the organized boroughs do not cover the entire land area of the state. The area not part of any organized borough is referred to as the unorganized borough.
For the 1970 census, the U.S. Census Bureau, in cooperation with the state, divided the unorganized borough into 11 census areas, each roughly corresponding to an election district. However, these areas exist solely for the purposes of statistical analysis and presentation. They have no government of their own. Boroughs and census areas are both treated as county-level equivalents by the Census Bureau.
Some areas in the unorganized borough receive limited public services directly from the Alaska state government, usually law enforcement from the Alaska State Troopers and educational funding.
Six consolidated city-county governments exist—Juneau City and Borough, City and Borough of Haines, Sitka City and Borough, Yakutat City and Borough, Wrangell City and Borough, as well as the state's largest city, Anchorage. Though its legal name is the Municipality of Anchorage, it is considered a consolidated city-borough under state law.
The Federal Information Processing Standard (FIPS) 55-2,3,4 codes, which are used by the United States Census Bureau to uniquely identify states and counties, is provided with each entry.[1] Alaska's code is 02, which when combined with any county code would be written as 02XXX. The FIPS code for each county links to census data for that county.
Contents |
Borough |
FIPS code [2] |
Borough seat [3] |
Class [4][5][6][7] |
Established [3] |
Origin |
Etymology |
Population [3] |
Area [3] |
Map |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Aleutians East Borough | 013 | Sand Point | Second | 1987 | - | Its location in the east Aleutian Islands, which are themselves of uncertain linguistic origin; possibly derived from Chukchi word aliat ("island") | 2,744 | ( 18,099 km2) |
6,988 sq mi|
Anchorage | 020 | (Consolidated city-borough) |
Unified Home Rule | 1975 | - | Derived from the presence of a safe place to anchor and unload supplies for construction of the Alaska Railroad circa 1913, thereby creating a community. | 260,283 | ( 4,395 km2) |
1,697 sq mi|
Bristol Bay Borough | 060 | Naknek | Second | 1962 | - | Named in 1778 by Capt. James Cook for George Digby, 2nd Earl of Bristol. | 1,258 | ( 1,308 km2) |
505 sq mi|
Denali Borough | 068 | Healy | Home Rule | 1990 | - | From Denali, the tallest North American mountain, which means "great one" in the Dena'ina language | 1,893 | ( 33,022 km2) |
12,750 sq mi|
Fairbanks North Star Borough | 090 | Fairbanks | Second | 1964 | - | Named for its borough seat of Fairbanks, named in turn for Charles Fairbanks (1852 - 1918), U.S. Senator from Indiana and vice president under Theodore Roosevelt, and for Polaris, the North Star | 82,840 | ( 19,078 km2) |
7,366 sq mi|
Haines Borough | 100 | (Consolidated city-borough) |
Home Rule | 1968 (Consolidated 2002) |
- | After Haines, which was itself named for Mrs F.E. Haines, the key fundraiser for the construction of a Presbyterian mission in the town. | 2,392 | ( 6,071 km2) |
2,344 sq mi|
Juneau | 110 | (Consolidated city-borough) |
Unified Home Rule | 1970 | The City of Juneau merged with the City of Douglas and the surrounding borough to form the municipality | Joseph "Joe" Juneau, prospector and co-founder of the city. | 30,711 | ( 7,034 km2) |
2,716 sq mi|
Kenai Peninsula Borough | 122 | Soldotna | Second | 1964 | - | The Kenai Peninsula, whose named may be derived from Kenayskaya, the Russian name for Cook Inlet. | 49,691 | ( 41,473 km2) |
16,013 sq mi|
Ketchikan Gateway Borough | 130 | Ketchikan | Second | 1963 | - | The borough seat of Ketchikan and the borough's gateway location on the Alaska-Canadian border. | 14,077 | ( 12,536 km2) |
4,840 sq mi|
Kodiak Island Borough | 150 | Kodiak | Second | 1963 | - | Named after Kodiak Island, which may itself be named for the Koniag people | 13,913 | ( 16,990 km2) |
6,560 sq mi|
Lake and Peninsula Borough | 164 | King Salmon | Home Rule | 1989 | - | The borough's many large lakes, and the Alaska Peninsula | 1,823 | ( 61,595 km2) |
23,782 sq mi|
Matanuska-Susitna Borough | 170 | Palmer | Second | 1964 | - | Named for the valley that the Matanuska and Susitna Rivers form. | 59,322 | ( 63,926 km2) |
24,682 sq mi|
North Slope Borough | 185 | Barrow | Home Rule | 1972 | - | The Alaska North Slope along the Brooks Range. | 7,385 | ( 230,035 km2) |
88,817 sq mi|
Northwest Arctic Borough | 188 | Kotzebue | Home Rule | 1986 | In 1986, residents of Kotzebue and 10 other area villages voted to form the Northwest Arctic Borough (with boundaries coincident with those of NANA), to be economically based on taxing the Red Dog mine, then under development. | Its geographic location and position above the Arctic Circle. | 7,208 | ( 92,975 km2) |
35,898 sq mi|
Sitka | 220 | (Consolidated city-borough) |
Unified Home Rule | 1971 | - | Derived from Tlingit word Shee At'iká, meaning "People on the outside of Shee (Baranof Island)." | 8,835 | ( 7,444 km2) |
2,874 sq mi|
Skagway | 230 | - | First | 2007 | - | Derived from Tlingit word Shgagwèi, meaning "a windy place with white caps on the water." | 862 | ( 1,171 km2) |
452 sq mi|
Unorganized Borough | - | - | - | 1961 | The Borough Act of 1961 created The Unorganized Borough including all of Alaska not within a Unified, Home rule, First class or Second class borough. | A legal entity in Alaska, covering those parts of Alaska not within an incorporated borough; it is administered by the state of Alaska.[8] | 78,486 | ( 837,706 km2) |
323,440 sq mi|
Wrangell | - | (Consolidated city-borough) |
Unified Home Rule | 2008 | formerly part of Wrangell-Petersburg Census Area | Ferdinand von Wrangel, Russian administrator of Alaska, 1840-49. | 2,448 | ( 6,656 km2) |
2,570 sq mi|
Yakutat City and Borough | 282 | (Consolidated city-borough) |
Home Rule | 1992 | - | Yakutat Bay and the Yakutat Alaska Native people | 808 | ( 19,813 km2) |
7,650 sq mi
The Unorganized Borough is that part of the U.S. state of Alaska not contained in any of its 18 organized boroughs. It encompasses over half of Alaska's area, 970,500 km² (374,712 mi²), an area larger than any other US state. As of the 2000 census 13% of Alaskans (81,803 people) reside in it.
Unique among the United States, Alaska is not entirely subdivided into organized county equivalents. In 1970, the United States Census Bureau divided the unorganized borough into 11 census areas to facilitate census taking in the vast unorganized area.
Census area |
FIPS code [2] |
Largest town (as of 2000) |
Etymology |
Population [3] |
Area [3] |
Map |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Aleutians West Census Area | 016 | Unalaska | Location in the western Aleutian Islands. | 5,465 | ( 11,388 km2) |
4,397 sq mi|
Bethel Census Area | 050 | Bethel | City of Bethel, the largest settlement in the census area, which is itself named for the Biblical term Bethel ("house of God"). | 16,006 | ( 105,239 km2) |
40,633 sq mi|
Dillingham Census Area | 070 | Dillingham | The city of Dillingham, the largest settlement in the area, which was itself named after United States Senator Paul Dillingham (1843-1923), who had toured Alaska extensively with his Senate subcommittee in 1903. | 4,922 | ( 48,368 km2) |
18,675 sq mi|
Hoonah–Angoon Census Area | 105 | Hoonah | The cities of Hoonah and Angoon | 2,574 | ( 19,280 km2) |
7,444 sq mi|
Nome Census Area | 180 | Nome | City of Nome, the largest settlement in the census area. | 9,196 | ( 59,572 km2) |
23,001 sq mi|
Prince of Wales-Hyder Census Area | 201 | Craig | Prince of Wales Island and the town of Hyder (Known as Prince of Wales-Outer Ketchikan prior to the expansion of Ketchikan Gateway Borough in 2008) |
6,115 | ( 9,738 km2) |
3,760 sq mi|
Southeast Fairbanks Census Area | 240 | Deltana | Its location, southeast of Fairbanks | 6,174 | ( 64,268 km2) |
24,814 sq mi|
Valdez-Cordova Census Area | 261 | Valdez | Cities of Valdez and Cordova | 10,195 | ( 88,886 km2) |
34,319 sq mi|
Wade Hampton Census Area | 270 | Hooper Bay | Wade Hampton III (1818–1902), a Confederate cavalry leader during the American Civil War | 7,028 | ( 44,532 km2) |
17,194 sq mi|
Petersburg Census Area | 280 | Petersburg | The city of Petersburg, the largest settlement in the census area (Known as Wrangell-Petersburg prior to the incorporation of Wrangell City-Borough in 2008) |
4,260 | ( 8,550 km2) |
3,301 sq mi|
Yukon-Koyukuk Census Area | 290 | Galena | Yukon River ("great river" in Gwich’in), which flows through the census area; and the city of Koyukuk | 6,551 | ( 377,879 km2) |
145,900 sq mi
^ A: Because census areas in the Unorganized Borough have their own FIPS codes, this code listed and linked is for the entire State of Alaska.
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