The settlement of
Bogoslovsk () was founded in either 1759 or in 1769. It remained one of the largest
copper production centers in the
Urals until 1917.
Coal deposits started to be mined in 1911. In 1941, the settlement of
Bogoslovsky () merged with the nearby settlement of
Ugolny () to form the town of Karpinsk. From 1945 to 1949, there existed close to Karpinsk a labor camp for Russo-Germans and German civilians, who for the most part were forcibly displaced from
East Prussia and
Pomerania to be used as forced labor. They were women and men between fifteen and sixty-five years of age. Those capable of work were forced to engage in strip-mining of
lignite, used in housing construction and road construction, labored in a stone quarry, and at times served as skilled laborers in various workshops. Seasonally, work brigades were sent into the taiga as forest laborers. Moreover, prisoner-of-war camp #504 for German
POWs from World War II was located in Karpinsk. ==Administrative and municipal status==