Last updated: January 21, 2020
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Donald Orth: King of Alaska Place Names
By Erik Johnson, Denali Historian
If you ever find yourself wondering how or when an Alaska geographic feature got its name, there is an invaluable resource called the Dictionary of Alaska Place Names that researchers have been using the last 50 years.
Remembering Donald Orth
If you ever find yourself wondering how or when an Alaska geographic feature got its name, there is an invaluable resource called the Dictionary of Alaska Place Names that researchers have been using the last 50 years.

NPS Photo by Erik Johnson
In late 2019, Donald Orth passed away at his home in Virginia at the age of 94. The D-day veteran was serving as the US Board of Geographic Names (BGN) Director when the Denali-McKinley political controversy initially erupted in 1975. As the leader of the BGN, Orth oversaw the multi-year struggle over changing the name of North America’s highest mountain, which stalled due to the efforts of an Ohio Congressman who blocked the State of Alaska’s wishes to remove "McKinley" in favor of “Denali.” The Obama administration finally changed the name by executive order in 2015.

December 18, 1980 edition of the Spokane Chronicle
In a 2008 interview, Orth stated that “Language, history, geography, all of those things come together” in place names, and "they are part of the language, part of our psyche.” Orth’s legacy lives on in the phenomenal dictionary which contributes to our understanding of the great State of Alaska.
[1] Orth had been working on collecting Alaska place names information as a hobby while he was working as a USGS surveyor in the 1950s.