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Historic Sites, Museums & Shows in Skagway

Step into Alaska’s rich past and vibrant culture with Voyij’s curated experiences. Visit Gold Rush-era towns, Indigenous heritage centers, museums, and live shows that celebrate the stories, people, and traditions of the Last Frontier. Whether you’re exploring on your own or with a guide, these tours offer meaningful insights into Alaska’s unique identity.

7 Activities

Skagway
Skagway
Popular

Yukon Suspension Bridge, Pet the Puppies, and White Pass Summit TRIPLE Combo

5 hr 30 min

*Experience Skagway & the Yukon's top attractions in ONE tour!* Follow in the footsteps of the 1898 Gold Rush stampeders up the White Pass and into the Yukon! Start your adventure by traveling up the Klondike Highway while you take in wildlife, waterfalls, glacier-covered mountains & views of the White Pass Railroad. Once into Canada (Province of British Columbia aka B.C.) you'll pass through the subarctic alpine tundra of the Tormented Valley, with views of Summit Lake. You'll continue through B.C. where you'll stop at Canada Customs at Fraser B.C, and the Yukon Territory. Photo opportunities will be available at the British Columbia and Yukon signs. Our featured stop is the Yukon Suspension Bridge, located in the remote British Columbia wilderness. This 200 foot long bridge traverses the Tutshi River where you'll be able to spot a number of animals in their natural habitat. The roaring rapids below provides an amazing backdrop for photos & memories while on your Alaskan vacation. The Outdoor Interpretive Museum provides maps & guides to give you a better understanding of the region between Skagway & Whitehorse, with information on the First Nations & the stories of the Gold Rush as this part of continent was settled. The 2nd stop is the Tagish Lake Dog Sledding Camp. Here, you'll get a glimpse into the history of sled dog use throughout Canada and Alaska. You'll get to see the dogs in action and play with puppies. You'll also get to meet real life trainers & mushers! There is a gift shop for snacks and souvenirs to take home as a way to remember this once-in-a-lifetime adventure. Itinerary DEPARTURE • Meet outside your ship or at Centennial Park EN ROUTE • Informative commentary from driver-guide • Multiple photo stops along Klondike Highway • Welcome to Alaska sign • White Pass Summit • Cross into Canada DESTINATION 1: SLED DOG CAMP • 30 minutes at Tutshi Lake Sled Dog Camp • Play with puppies and learn about what it takes to be a race winner DESTINATION 2: SUSPENSION BRIDGE • 45 minutes at Yukon Suspension Bridge • Walk bridge, explore, enjoy cafe • Optional bison chili purchase CONTINUING • Welcome to the Yukon sign • Tagish Lake views • Tormented Valley RETURN You choose: get dropped off at your ship or in town. Just let the driver know. From town, it's a short walk (5-10 minutes depending on where you are) back to the ships. Highlights • EXCLUSIVE to Skagway Tours—no other company offers this triple combo • Three experiences in one: sled dog camp, Yukon Suspension Bridge, and Summit highlights • Great for families and groups who want variety and shared memories • Expect a relaxed, friendly pace with stories, quiet stretches, questions, and photo stops • Multiple classic photo stops along the Klondike Highway, including Summit Lake and Welcome signs • Meet Iditarod & Yukon Quest mushers' dogs and puppies • Walk Yukon Suspension Bridge over Tutshi River • Gift shop, cafe, bison chili at the Bridge

Skagway

Legends & Lies

2 hr 30 min

Travel back to those bygone days and experience life in a Gold Rush saloon. The Legends and Lies Gold Rush Saloon Experience takes you back in time to the wilds of Alaska circa 1897. The Klondike Gold Rush was going full fury with more than 100,000 stampeders on their way North to find gold and glory. The saloon was a vital part of life for the stampeder, the place to get news, make deals, play cards, and find companionship. Skagway boasted 80 saloons in a town only 10 blocks long. Skagway was a boom town full of hope, despair, and drama - all played out in a saloon! You'll learn to make classic stampeder libations, beverages that warmed the hearts of the prospectors, both the lucky and the downtrodden. You will use ingredients straight from the Inn's culinary garden and make two different traditional drinks (with a choice of alcohol or no ­alcohol recipes.)  As you sample the beverages and nibble on an array of snacks including salmon or cheese quesadillas, halibut mini-­cakes, chips with homemade rhubarb salsa, and reindeer pig-in­-a-blanket, you'll hear stories, ­fact and fiction, ­­ and music played on an upright piano. Finish with a Prohibition era Shrub and Iceworm toast to your willing or unwilling induction into the great Order of the Sourdough.

Available Timing

Skagway

Rainforest Bicycle Tour

3 hr

During the Gold Rush, Dyea was Skagway’s rival city, booming with 10,000 people. Now nature has reclaimed the land, leaving only ghosts of its Gold Rush past. This scenic tour starts with an informative van tour along the spectacular coastal inlets to the west of Skagway. Your professional guides tell you stories of the rush of 98’ and inform you about the ecology of this rich area. After a bicycle and safety orientation, your guide leads your small group on a bike route that covers five miles of flat terrain for easy pedaling. You ride through the lush rainforest, visit historic ruins, see the Chilkoot trailhead, and venture out to the coastal tidal flats where eagles, salmon, colorful wildflowers, and dazzling mountains are often in view. Do not be surprised if you spot a bear! Leave the crowds behind, get some mild exercise, and take in the natural wonders of Alaska on a bicycle!

Available Timing

$104 /adult (13+)
Skagway

The Days of 98 Show

1 hr

Experience a day in the life of Soapy Smith, Alaska's most notorious outlaw! About the Show For nearly 100 years The Days of '98 Show has been dazzling audiences with music, laughter, and the legendary CAN CAN! ​ Experience a day in the life of Jefferson "Soapy" Smith, Alaska's most notorious outlaw, who reigned during the wildest days of Skagway during the 1898 Klondike Gold Rush. This colorful vaudevillian musical brings you into the "Skaguay" of 1898 with the thrills and frills of the dancehalls and the chills felt by gold rush stampeders along the trail of '98. ​ This show has been a Skagway tradition for cruise ship, bus, and RV visitors for over 100 years and is an iconic performance and a "must see" while in Skagway. Who Was Soapy Smith? November 2, 1860 - July 8, 1898 All of the events depicted in this original play are taken from the Skagway historical record and center on Soapy Smith's reign over the town during the Klondike Gold Rush of 1897 and 1898. Jefferson Randolph Smith was born in Georgia in 1860 and ventured west as a young man. He learned his trade as a con man during the silver and gold rushes of Colorado and eventually made it to Skagway in the fall of 1897. Here, he and Colorado cohort "Rev." John Bowers assembled what was reputed to be the largest band of thieves in North America. Skagway was described by Canadian Mountie Sam Steele as "a little better than hell on earth," and Smith's gang reigned supreme for nine months. Smith had a wife and family in St. Louis but he befriended Miss Belle Davenport and her "soiled doves," Alice and Mollie in Seattle before heading North. While his men did most of the dirty work, Soapy tried to establish himself as a solid citizen of Skagway. He contributed to the building of Skagway's first church and founded an "Adopt a Dog" program. City surveyor Frank Reid and others saw through Smith's good deeds and tried to run the con man and his gang out of town, but Smith was able to rally much of the business community around him. Soapy was riding high on July 4, 1898, as he rode his white horse up Broadway and then stood on the platform with the Governor of Alaska. Four days later he was dead man. His gang robbed a Nanaimo, British Columbia stampeder named J.D. Stewart of $2,800 in gold dust. Smith stood by his troops and refused to give the gold back. Reid's vigilante Committee of 101 gathered at the Juneau Co. Wharf as there was no hall in Skagway big enough to contain the mob. Most of Smith's men ran for the hills, but Soapy grabbed his Winchester and headed for the wharf to break up the meeting. You'll witness the events leading up to this historic moment. In 1923, Princess steamships started bringing tourists to Skagway. The local residents decided to put on a show for them to raise money for their local hockey team. The team needed new uniforms to compete in the White Pass Athletic League against their rival team in Whitehorse, Yukon. The show became an instant tradition and has been running ever since.

Skagway

The Days of '98 Show Evening Performance

1 hr 30 min

Experience a day in the life of Soapy Smith, Alaska's most notorious outlaw! About the Show For nearly 100 years The Days of '98 Show has been dazzling audiences with music, laughter, and the legendary CAN CAN! ​ Experience a day in the life of Jefferson "Soapy" Smith, Alaska's most notorious outlaw, who reigned during the wildest days of Skagway during the 1898 Klondike Gold Rush. This colorful vaudevillian musical brings you into the "Skaguay" of 1898 with the thrills and frills of the dancehalls and the chills felt by gold rush stampeders along the trail of '98. ​ This show has been a Skagway tradition for cruise ship, bus, and RV visitors for over 100 years and is an iconic performance and a "must see" while in Skagway. Who Was Soapy Smith? November 2, 1860 - July 8, 1898 All of the events depicted in this original play are taken from the Skagway historical record and center on Soapy Smith's reign over the town during the Klondike Gold Rush of 1897 and 1898. Jefferson Randolph Smith was born in Georgia in 1860 and ventured west as a young man. He learned his trade as a con man during the silver and gold rushes of Colorado and eventually made it to Skagway in the fall of 1897. Here, he and Colorado cohort "Rev." John Bowers assembled what was reputed to be the largest band of thieves in North America. Skagway was described by Canadian Mountie Sam Steele as "a little better than hell on earth," and Smith's gang reigned supreme for nine months. Smith had a wife and family in St. Louis but he befriended Miss Belle Davenport and her "soiled doves," Alice and Mollie in Seattle before heading North. While his men did most of the dirty work, Soapy tried to establish himself as a solid citizen of Skagway. He contributed to the building of Skagway's first church and founded an "Adopt a Dog" program. City surveyor Frank Reid and others saw through Smith's good deeds and tried to run the con man and his gang out of town, but Smith was able to rally much of the business community around him. Soapy was riding high on July 4, 1898, as he rode his white horse up Broadway and then stood on the platform with the Governor of Alaska. Four days later he was dead man. His gang robbed a Nanaimo, British Columbia stampeder named J.D. Stewart of $2,800 in gold dust. Smith stood by his troops and refused to give the gold back. Reid's vigilante Committee of 101 gathered at the Juneau Co. Wharf as there was no hall in Skagway big enough to contain the mob. Most of Smith's men ran for the hills, but Soapy grabbed his Winchester and headed for the wharf to break up the meeting. You'll witness the events leading up to this historic moment. In 1923, Princess steamships started bringing tourists to Skagway. The local residents decided to put on a show for them to raise money for their local hockey team. The team needed new uniforms to compete in the White Pass Athletic League against their rival team in Whitehorse, Yukon. The show became an instant tradition and has been running ever since.

Available Timing

Skagway

Brave The Bridge: 4 Hour Private Tour

4 hr

Join us on this 4 hour tour over White Pass into Canada! This tour goes all the way to the Yukon Suspension Bridge as a turn around point. There is time for a visit to the bridge. Admission to the Yukon Suspension Bridge is $16 per person. Every guest does need to pay for bridge admission, whether they want to "brave" the crossing or not. There are restroom facilities, gift and snack shops, and a nice seating area on the deck for viewing. This is a wonderful stop even if you keep your feet planted on solid ground. Passports are required for this tour option.

$552 /private tour: up to 5 passengers
Skagway

Burro Creek Wilderness Lodge

2 hr 30 min

Your Burro Creek adventure begins at the Skagway Small Boat Harbor, where you’ll take a scenic 10-minute boat ride across the Taiya Inlet to Burro Creek Lodge. Once there, enjoy a spread of charcuterie (for purchase), roast s’mores (included) by the campfire, and take a short walk to the waterfall. Relax on the lawn with croquet and cornhole, or simply soak in the stunning fjord and mountain views. Each departure carries up to 6 guests, and groups from different departures may overlap at the lodge, creating a friendly, social atmosphere. Your ticket includes one adult beverage (beer or wine), with additional drinks available for purchase. This 2.5-hour tour begins and ends at the Small Boat Harbor—the perfect blend of Alaskan wilderness, good food, and laid-back fun. Itinerary: ✅ Semi-Private group experience – up to 6 guests per departure ✅ 10-minute scenic boat ride across the Taiya Inlet ✅ Campfire s’mores under the Alaskan sky ✅ Mini hike to a hidden waterfall just steps from the lodge ✅ Lawn games like croquet and cornhole with a view ✅ Charcuterie spread (for purchase)– perfect for sharing ✅ Wine & beer available for purchase Highlights: Step off the beaten path and into a one-of-a-kind Alaskan experience at Burro Creek Lodge. Your adventure begins at the Skagway Small Boat Harbor, where you’ll board our boat for a quick and scenic 10-minute ride across the Taiya Inlet. As the bustle of town slips away, you’ll arrive at a secluded lodge surrounded by towering mountains, lush forest, and the sparkling waters of the fjord. Once ashore, you’ll be welcomed with a complimentary drink, and the chance to unwind in the lodge’s beautiful setting. Enjoy a short walk to the waterfall, challenge your friends to a game of croquet or cornhole, or simply relax on the lawn and take in the views. As the campfire crackles, gather with your group to make s’mores and enjoy the cozy atmosphere that makes Burro Creek so unforgettable. Each ticket includes one adult beverage (beer or wine), with additional drinks available for purchase. Whether you’re toasting with a glass of wine, sharing laughs by the fire, or soaking in the natural beauty, this is a chance to experience the best of Alaska at a slower, more intimate pace. With departures carrying up to six guests, Burro Creek offers a friendly, small-group atmosphere. Groups from different departures may overlap at the lodge, making for a relaxed and social vibe while still keeping the experience personal. This 2.5-hour tour begins and ends at the Small Boat Harbor in Skagway—perfect for couples, families, or friends looking to add a touch of magic and relaxation to their Alaskan journey.

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Available Monday through Friday 9am - 5pm AKDT