Gambell, Alaska – Gambell, AK – City, City | Facebook
<p><b>Gambell</b> is a <a href=”
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/City_%28Alaska%29
” class=”wikipedia”>city</a> in the <a href=”/pages/w/138851602810698″>Nome Census Area</a> of the <a href=”/pages/w/109424399076333″>U.S. state</a> of <a href=”/pages/w/108083605879747″>Alaska</a>. Located on <a href=”/pages/w/104110752958555″>St. Lawrence Island</a>, it had a population of 681 at the <a href=”/pages/w/104097652960274″>2010 census</a>.</p><h2>History</h2><p><i>Sivuqaq</i> is the <a href=”/pages/w/451938408292532″>Yupik language</a> name for St. Lawrence Island and for Gambell. It has also been called <i>Chibuchack</i> and <i>Sevuokok</i>.</p><p>St. Lawrence Island has been inhabited sporadically for the past 2,000 years by both Alaskan <a href=”/pages/w/199024020167813″>Yup’ik</a> and <a href=”/pages/w/266351840058304″>Siberian Yupik</a> people. In the 18th and 19th centuries, the island had a population of about 4,000.</p><p>Between 1878 and 1880 a famine decimated the island’s population. Many who did not starve left. The remaining population of St. Lawrence Island was nearly all Siberian Yupik.</p><p>In 1887, the <a href=”/pages/w/109295412434092″>Reformed Episcopal Church</a> of America decided to open a mission on St. Lawrence Island. That year a carpenter, lumber and tools were left at Sivuqaq by a ship. The carpenter worked with local Yupik to build a wood building, the first they had ever seen. When the building was finished, the carpenter left the keys to the door with a local chief and departed. Since the carpenter had not spoken Siberian Yupik, the residents did not know the purpose of the building.</p><p>The Reformed Episcopal Church had not been able to find missionaries willing to live on St. Lawrence Island, so the building built for the mission was left unoccupied. In 1890, the building was acquired by <a href=”/pages/w/127115203998336″>Sheldon Jackson</a>. He spoke to the Reverend Vene and Nellie Gambell, of <a href=”/pages/w/104112739626086″>Wapello, Iowa</a>, about moving to St. Lawrence Island. Gambell was hired as a schoolteacher and the Gambells came to the island in 1894. They had a daughter in 1897. Nellie Gambell became ill and the Gambells spent the winter of 1897-1898 in the United States, where Nellie was hospitalized. In the spring of 1898 they embarked on a return journey to St. Lawrence Island on the schooner <i>Jane Gray</i>. The ship sank in a storm and 37 people on it drowned, including the Gambells and their daughter.</p>