Alt Text Map of the Skagway Historic District within Klondike Gold Rush National Historical Park in Alaska. White lines form a street grid stretching diagonally from the center of the map to the northeast corner. An area of about two by five city blocks is outlined in pale green to indicate the historic district. Extended Description One set of streets running diagonally from the bottom left to the top right corners of this map are Main Street to the left, then State Street/State Route 98, Broadway, and Spring Street. The cross streets are numbered 1st through 8th Avenues. Skagway Historic District Buildings and other sites clustered along Broadway and connecting side streets are labeled with dates. Between 1st and 2nd Avenue are the Bookstore at Martin Itjen House dated 1901; Ton of Goods Sculpture with a National Park Service outdoor exhibit; National Park Visitor Center with restrooms; White Pass & Yukon Route Broadway Depot from 1898; Museum at White Pass & Yukon Route Administration Building dated 1900; and Museum at Jeff. Smiths Parlor from 1897, which has a National Park Service outdoor exhibit. Along Broadway between 2nd and 4th Avenue are the Visitor Center AB Hall from 1900; Verbauwhede’s Cribs dated 1902; Verbauwhede’s Cigar and Confectionary dated 1899; Boas Tailor and Furrier dated 1899; Pacific Clipper Line Office from 1898; Hern Liquor Store dated 1937; Museum at the Mascot Saloon from 1898 with restrooms; a National Park Service park with outdoor exhibit; Lynch and Kennedy Dry Goods Store from 1900; First Bloom Garden; Red Front Building reconstruction; and Junior Ranger Activity Center at the Pantheon dated 1897. Most of the remaining labeled sites fall between 5th and 6th Avenues, including the Julie Weir Memorial Park; Trail Center at the Boss Bakery from 1897; Goldberg Cigar Store from 1897; Cribs dated 1898 with an outdoor exhibit; Frye-Bruhn Cold Storage Building dated 1900; Moore Cabin and Homestead dated 1887; a museum at Moore Cabin dated 1887; and the Peniel Mission from 1900. A yellow path moves past the cigar store, Cribs, cold storage building, and Moore House. Mollie Walsh Park lies just beyond 6th Avenue; Veterans Park at the intersection of 7th Avenue and Spring Street; and the Skagway Museum and City Hall, McCabe College Building dated 1899 are southeast of 7th Avenue and Spring Street. Surrounding Areas Sites around the historic district include the Skagway Airport along the top left corner of the map; the YMCA Gymnasium dated 1900 and Meyer Building from 1899 to the west; Skagway Library to the northwest; and, to the southeast, Centennial Park with an outdoor exhibit, and Pullen Pond in Pullen Shoreline Creek Park with an outdoor exhibit and restrooms. Yellow walkways radiate out across Centennial Park and one curves across the southeast corner of Pullen Creek Shoreline Park. Congress Way curves south around these parks and off the bottom of the map. A railroad track runs parallel to the eastern edge of the city, crosses Congress Way, and forking into multiple routes to the south. A trail begins not far from the intersection of Congress Way and Spring Street. Text there reads, "To Dewey Lakes trail system.” From here the dashed green lines reach off the right and bottom edges of the map. At the south end of State Street/State Route 98, an arrow points northwest with text that reads, "To airport, Yakutania Point, Smuggler’s Cove, and AB Mountain Trail.” At the north end, an arrow points northeast with text reading “To Dyea, Gold Rush Cemetery, Lower Reid Falls, Klondike Highway, and Canada.” A road running parallel to the harbor in the south has an arrow pointing southwest with text reading “To Alaska Marine Highway ferry.” Blue waters represent a harbor in the southwest corner of the map, with two tan-colored bars extending into the water representing Ore Dock and Broadway Dock. The Skagway River cuts across the beige cityscape in the northwest corner, parallel to the gray tract outlining Skagway Airport. Legend A scale in the southwest quadrant shows distances of 25 and 50 meters and 25 and 50 miles. The legend below begins with symbols for Restrooms and NPS Outdoor exhibit. The legend continues: 3D brown structure for NPS buildings, 3D brown structure outlined in black for NPS buildings open to the public, Green dashed line for trail, Yellow line for walkway, Light green shading for non-National Park Service park, and Darker green shading for National Park Service park.