Etymology and prehistory Owing to its location and relative size, Kotzebue served as a trading and gathering center for the various communities in the region. The
Noatak,
Selawik and
Kobuk Rivers drain into the Kotzebue Sound near Kotzebue to form a center for transportation to points inland. In addition to people from interior villages, inhabitants of far-eastern Asia, now the
Russian Far East, came to trade at Kotzebue. Furs, seal-oil, hides, rifles, ammunition, and seal skins were some of the items traded. People also gathered for competitions like the current
World Eskimo Indian Olympics. With the arrival of the whalers, traders, gold seekers, and missionaries the trading center expanded. Kotzebue is also known as Qikiqtaġruk, which means "small island" or "resembles an island" in the
Iñupiaq language. In the words of the late Iñupiaq elder Blanche Qapuk Lincoln of Kotzebue: Kotzebue gets its name from the
Kotzebue Sound, which was named after
Otto von Kotzebue, a
Baltic German who explored the sound while searching for the
Northwest Passage in the service of Russia in 1818.
19th century A
United States post office was established in 1899.
20th century In 1958,
Kotzebue Air Force Station was completed. The radar site would be operated by on-site personnel until its deactivation in 1983 and the subsequent demolition of most of the station's structures. The
radome continues to operate, but is now mostly unattended. In 1990, the German drama film
Salmonberries starring
k.d. lang was mostly shot in Kotzebue. In 1997, three 66-kW
wind turbines were installed in Kotzebue, creating the northernmost wind farm in the
United States. Today, the wind farm consists of 19 turbines, including two 900 kW EWT turbines. The total installed capacity has reached 3-MW, displacing approximately 250,000 gallons of diesel fuel every year.
21st century On September 2, 2015, U.S. President
Barack Obama gave a speech on
global warming in Kotzebue, becoming the first sitting president to visit a site north of the
Arctic Circle. Since 2016, the
United States Coast Guard has deployed
MH-60 Jayhawk helicopters to Kotzebue from the beginning of July to the end of October as part of
Operation Arctic Shield. In 2017, the city received an
All-America City award from the
National Civic League. On December 3, 2018,
Mike Dunleavy was sworn in as the 12th
governor of Alaska in Kotzebue's high school gymnasium after inclement weather thwarted his plan to hold the ceremony in
Noorvik. In November 2023,
ProPublica and
Anchorage Daily News released an investigative report of
domestic abuse and potential murders in Kotzebue involving six
indigenous women who had dated Mayor Clement Richards Sr's three sons, resulting in a total of 16 charges that were ultimately dismissed by local prosecutors or received minimum sentences by local judicial magistrates. While a state medical examiner stated for one of the women that there were "signs of strangulation", the local police eventually closed the case as
suicide. In January 2024, the police released a statement saying they would not be reopening the case, with their timeline of events in the statement contradicting events that occurred just after the woman's death. The city police said the other case of strangulation on the Mayor's property was referred to state investigators, though the Alaska Department of Public Safety said no such case was ever given to them. ==Geography==