Douglas Island was named for
John Douglas,
Bishop of Salisbury, by Captain
George Vancouver.
Joseph Whidbey, master of during Vancouver's expedition, was the first to sight it in 1794. In 1886, non-Native people began to travel to Douglas Island to settle near the developing
Treadwell gold mine. By 1902, the Douglas Island community had grown to a population of more than 2,800 residents, as businesses, schools, and homes began to develop alongside the expansion of the nearby gold mine. After the Gastineau Channel flooded the Treadwell mining tunnels in 1917, many residents were forced to move after the town's dramatic economic downturn, causing the Douglas population to decrease steadily until the late 1930s. During the summer of 1962, the
Douglas Indian Village was seized and burned down by Douglas city officials and residents in order to forgo the development of the
Douglas Harbor project. The Douglas Harbor project, which was initiated by the
Douglas Indian Association and the
Bureau of Indian Affairs, was a plan to construct a harbor on the Douglas Indian Village site with the intention of having the village rebuilt. In order to obtain control of the project, Douglas city officials invoked
eminent domain on the village site while tribal citizens were fishing at their camps along the
Taku River. The tribal citizens were not compensated for the property and belongings that were lost in the burning of their village and were forced to relocate once they returned to the island. ca. 1897 The
Juneau-Douglas Bridge, which was first built in 1935, connected Douglas Island with West Juneau. In 1970, the communities of Douglas and Juneau joined to form the City and Borough of Juneau. There have been plans to build a new bridge from North Douglas to the
Mendenhall Valley. ==Geography==