Industry on a massive scale quickly followed. Yet by 1939 the copper was exhausted, the place abandoned. This is what remains of the Kennecott Mine Camp.
The Kennecott Mine Camp was a booming Alaskan copper mining town in the first couple of decades of the 20th century. The richest vein of copper ever is estimated to have produced $100 million in profits! But by 1939 the copper was gone and the several mines were abandoned. However, the Kennecott is in a national park and has been designated a National Historic Landmark. That’s why the buildings there survived much better than the surrounding mines, and you can visit them. More
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