Yellowknife is the capital, largest community, and the only city in the Northwest Territories, Canada. It is on the northern shore of Great Slave Lake, about south of the Arctic Circle, on the west side of Yellowknife Bay near the outlet of the Yellowknife River.
Yellowknife and its surrounding water bodies were named after a local Dene tribe, who were known as the "Copper Indians" or "Yellowknife Indians", today incorporated as the Yellowknives Dene First Nation. They traded tools made from copper deposits near the Arctic Coast. Modern Yellowknives members can be found in the city as well as in the adjoining, primarily Indigenous communities of Ndilǫ and Dettah.
The city's population was 20,340 per the 2021 Canadian census. Of the eleven official languages of the Northwest Territories, five are spoken in significant numbers in Yellowknife: Dene Suline, Dogrib language, Slavey language, English, and French. In the Dogrib language, the city is known as Sǫǫ̀mbak’è (, "where the money is").
The Yellowknife settlement is considered to have been founded in 1934, after gold was found in the area, although commercial activity in the present-day waterfront area did not begin until 1936. Yellowknife quickly became the centre of economic activity in the NWT, and was named the capital of the Northwest Territories in 1967. As gold production began to decrease, Yellowknife shifted from being a mining town to a centre of government services in the 1980s. However, with the discovery of north of the city in 1991, this shift began to reverse. In recent years, tourism, transportation, and communications have also emerged as significant industries in Yellowknife.
A Klondike-bound prospector, E.A. Blakeney, made the first discovery of gold in the Yellowknife Bay area in 1898. The discovery was viewed as unimportant in those days because of the Klondike Gold Rush and because Great Slave Lake was too far away to attract attention.Price, Ray. Yellowknife, Peter Martin Associates, Toronto, 1967. Page 22.
In the late 1920s, aircraft were first used to explore Canada's Arctic regions. Samples of uranium and silver were uncovered at Great Bear Lake in the early 1930s, and prospectors began fanning out to find additional metals.Watt, Frederick B. Great Bear: A Journey Remembered, Outcrop, Yellowknife, 1980. . In 1933 two prospectors, Herb Dixon and Johnny Baker, canoed down the Yellowknife River from Great Bear Lake to survey for possible mineral deposits. They found gold samples at Quyta Lake, about up the Yellowknife River, and some additional samples at Homer Lake.
The following year, Johnny Baker returned as part of a larger crew to develop the previous gold finds and search for more. Gold was found on the east side of Yellowknife Bay in 1934 and the short-lived Burwash Mine was developed. When government geologists uncovered gold in more favourable geology on the west side of Yellowknife Bay in the fall of 1935, a small staking rush occurred. From 1935 to 1937, one prospector and trapper named Winslow C. Ranney staked in the area between David Lake and Rater Lake with few commercial results. The nearby hill known as Ranney Hill is his namesake and a popular hiking destination today. Con Mine was the most impressive gold deposit and its development created the excitement that led to the first settlement of Yellowknife in 1936–1937. Some of the first businesses were Corona Inn, Weaver & Devore Trading, Yellowknife Supplies and post office, and The Wildcat Cafe. Con Mine entered production on 5 September 1938. Yellowknife boomed in the summer of 1938 and many new businesses were established, including the Canadian Bank of Commerce, Hudson's Bay Company, Vic Ingraham's first hotel, Sutherland's Drug Store, and a pool hall.
The population of Yellowknife quickly grew to 1,000 by 1940, and by 1942, five gold mines were in production in the Yellowknife region. However, by 1944, gold production had ground to a halt as men were needed for the war effort. An exploration program at the Giant Mine property on the north end of town had suggested a sizable gold deposit in 1944. This new find resulted in a massive post-war staking rush to Yellowknife.Decoursey, Duke. The Yellowknife Years, Parkview Publishing, Squamish, BC. p. 112. It also resulted in new discoveries at the Con Mine, greatly extending the life of the mine. The Yellowknife townsite expanded from the Old Town waterfront, and the new townsite was established during 1945–1946. The Discovery Mine, with its own townsite, operated to the north-northeast of Yellowknife from 1950 to 1969.
Between 1939 and 1953, Yellowknife Administration district was controlled by the Northern Affairs department (now Crown–Indigenous Relations and Northern Affairs Canada) of the Government of Canada. A small council, partially elected and partially appointed, made decisions. By 1953, Yellowknife had grown so much that it was made a municipality, with its own council and town hall. The first mayor of Yellowknife was Jock McNiven. In September 1967, Yellowknife officially became the capital of the Northwest Territories. This important new status sparked what has been called the third boom in Yellowknife. New sub-divisions were established to house an influx of government workers.
In 1978 the Soviet Union nuclear-powered satellite Kosmos 954 crashed to Earth near Yellowknife. There were no known casualties, although a small quantity of radioactive nuclear fuel was released into the environment, and Operation Morning Light—an attempt to retrieve it—was only partially successful.
A new mining rush and fourth building boom in Yellowknife began with the discovery of diamonds north of the city in 1991. The Giant Mine was the subject of a bombing during a labour dispute in 1992 that resulted in one of the deadliest mass murders in Canada with 9 deaths. The last of the gold mines in Yellowknife closed in 2004. Today, Yellowknife is primarily a government town and a service centre for the diamond mines. On 1 April 1999, its purview as capital of the NWT was reduced when the territory of Nunavut was split from the NWT. As a result, jurisdiction for that region of Canada was transferred to the new capital city of Iqaluit. Consequently, Yellowknife lost its standing as the Canadian capital city with the smallest population.
Air Canada and WestJet were initially criticized for high prices and unwaived cancellation fees for flights to and from Yellowknife, but they have since changed policies to alleviate financial burden for evacuees. Both carriers also increased the number of flights to Yellowknife.
The smoke from the 236 active wildfires in the Northwest Territories spread quickly across Canada due to powerful winds and was compared by news sources to the 2023 Hawaii wildfires, which similarly started in a dry and windy environment. , the fire was in size, at distance from the city.
On 19 August 2023, 87 percent of the city was evacuated as of 6:58 am (ET), with only 2,600 of the original 20,000 remaining, 1,000 of whom were essential workers. NWT Premier Caroline Cochrane announced that she had evacuated to Alberta to avoid taking up a space on one of the last planes to leave.
The evacuation order was rescinded 6 September and Yellowknife residents began to return later that day. An estimated 1,000 people had been flown home by September 8.
In 2014, Environment Canada ranked Yellowknife as having the coldest winter and longest snow cover season, along with the sunniest spring and summer, of any city in Canada.
Yellowknife is represented in the territorial government by seven of the 19 members of the Legislative Assembly of the Northwest Territories. These members, referred to as MLAs, are elected every four years and sit in the Northwest Territories Legislative Building, located in Yellowknife. The MLAs elect the Speaker of the House as well as six cabinet ministers and a premier, which forms the Executive Council of the Northwest Territories, also known as the cabinet. In addition, a Commissioner is appointed by the Federal Government to fulfil a similar role to that of the Lieutenant Governor. The Northwest Territories is one of only two federal, provincial or territorial jurisdictions in Canada that operate under a consensus system of government.
The Northwest Territories is in the federal electoral riding of the Northwest Territories and has one Member of Parliament, Rebecca Alty, and one Senator, Margaret Dawn Anderson. Yellowknife is home to seven of the 19 electoral districts in the Northwest Territories, the Frame Lake, Great Slave, Kam Lake, Range Lake, Yellowknife Centre, Yellowknife North and Yellowknife South ridings.
After a downturn in the 1990s during the closure of the gold mines and the downsizing of the government workforce in 1999, Yellowknife's economy has recovered, largely because of the diamond boom; the Ekati Diamond Mine, owned and operated by BHP (sold to Dominion Diamond Corporation in 2013), opened in 1998. A second mine, Diavik Diamond Mine, began production in 2003. Production from the two operating mines in 2004 was , valued at over billion. This ranked Canada third in world diamond production by value, and sixth by weight. A third mine, the De Beers owned Snap Lake Diamond Mine, received final approval and funding in 2005 and went into production in 2007. De Beers also applied in 2005 for a permit to open the Gahcho Kue Diamond Mine Project on the property formerly known as Kennady Lake. The mine was officially opened on 20 September 2016, and began commercial production in March 2017. As well, growth and expansion in natural gas development and exploration sectors has contributed to this growth. Economic growth in the Northwest Territories was 10.6% in 2003.
The major employers in Yellowknife include the Territorial Government, the Federal Government, Diavik Diamond Mines, Dominion Diamonds, DeBeers Canada, First Air, Northwestel, RTL Robinson Trucking, and the City of Yellowknife. Government employment accounts for 7,644 jobs, a large percentage of those in Yellowknife.
During winter, the Tibbitt to Contwoyto Winter Road is opened for semi-trailer truck traffic to take supplies from Yellowknife north to various mines located in the Northwest Territories and Nunavut. This ice road is usually open from the end of January through late March or early April, and Yellowknife becomes the dispatch point for the large number of truck drivers that come north to drive on the ice roads. During the 2007 ice road season, several drivers were featured on the History Channel TV series Ice Road Truckers.
Tourism is the largest renewable industry in the NWT and Yellowknife is the main entry point for visitors. Many tourists come to experience the Northern climate and traditional lifestyle, as well as to see the aurora. In 2004–2005, visitors to the territory spent million.
The City of Yellowknife raises 50% of its operating revenue through . Both Yellowknife Education District No. 1 and Yellowknife Catholic School Board also raise a portion of their operating revenue through property taxation. Property taxes in Yellowknife are calculated through property assessment and the municipal and education mill rates. Mill rates in 2005 were 13.84 (residential) and 19.87 (commercial).
Canadian North, a regional airline, was headquartered in Yellowknife," contact us: administration" () Canadian North. Retrieved on 17 September 2009. " Head Office – Yellowknife 300, 5201 50 Ave. Yellowknife, NT X1A 3S9 Canada" in the Northwest Tower in downtown. The airline announced that when its lease was to expire in the end of August 2013, the airline will vacate the office and move it and 20 employees out of Yellowknife.Vela, Thandiwe. " Airline moving jobs south" ( Archive) Northern News Services. Retrieved on 21 March 2014. The airline is now headquartered in Calgary." Administration" ( Archive). Canadian North. Retrieved on 21 March 2014. "Head Office – Calgary 200, 580 Palmer Road N.E. Calgary, AB T2E 7R3 Canada" and "Regional Head Office – Iqaluit P.O. Box 70 Iqaluit, NU X0A 0H0 Canada" and "Regional Office – Yellowknife 202 Nunasi Building, 5109 48th St. Yellowknife, NT X1A 1N5 Canada" and "Operations Office – Edmonton 101 – 3731 52 Avenue East Edmonton AB T9E 0V4 Canada"
Yellowknife's television services, in addition to over-the-air transmission begun in 1967, included the Mackenzie Media cable television system placed in service 1 September 1972, which was sold to Northwestel in late 1995.
Until 2012, Yellowknife did not have a permanent road connection to the rest of Canada's highway network, as the Yellowknife Highway relied, depending on the season, on ferry service or an ice road to cross the Mackenzie River. With the completion of the Deh Cho Bridge, which officially opened on 30 November 2012, the city now has its first direct road connection to the rest of the country. One still-used ice road connects Yellowknife with the neighbouring community of Dettah, to the southeast across an arm of Great Slave Lake; or a drive via the Ingraham Trail.
The NWT Montessori Society offers the Montessori program up to Grade 5 at Yellowknife Education District No. 1's Macpherson School.
As of the 2016 Census, there were 19,569 people and 7,130 in the city. The population density was . The 2016 Census found that 22.7% of residents identified as Indigenous. In 2017, the Government of the Northwest Territories reported that the population was 20,834 with an average yearly growth rate of 0.6% from 2007. Yellowknife – Statistical Profile at the GNWT
In Yellowknife, the population is slightly younger at 34.6 than the average age for the rest of the NWT which is 34.9. However, the population is slightly disproportionate in terms of age distribution compared to the national average of 41.0. As of the 2016 figures, 13.9% of residents were 9 or under, 6.0% were from 10 to 14 years old, 13.1% were from 15 to 24, 34.1% were from 25 to 44, 22.0% were from 45 to 59, and 10.9% were 60 or older.
In 2016, the average household size was 2.7 and the majority of the population with children had either one or two. In 2015, the average income in the city was and the average income for a family was with 7.9% of all families earning less than $30,000. Minimum wage in Yellowknife and the NWT is (2018). Average household expenditures were in 2015. In 2016, the unemployment was at 5.9%; the employment rate for males was 80.1%, for females it was 75.2%.
The crime statistics in Yellowknife for 2016 was 46.7 (per 1,000 persons) for , and 167.2 (per 1,000 persons) for property crimes. There were 299 births and 62 deaths in 2014.
Yellowknife is home to 695 recent immigrants (arriving between 2011 and 2016) who now make up 3.7% of the population. Of the recent immigrants 70.5% came from Asia; 15.1% from Africa and 7.2% from both the Americas and Europe. Of the recent immigrants 40.0% came from the Philippines, while 10.8% came from several African countries,Countries not included in this figure are Algeria, Cameroon, Congo, Ivory Coast, Egypt, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Morocco, Nigeria, Somalia, South Africa, and Tunisia. 5.8% each from India, the United Kingdom and Vietnam, 4.3% from each of Japan and South Korea and 2.2% from Israel.
Not including the 11 official languages there are over 70 different languages that Yellowknifers stated were their mother tongue. These include Indo-European languages (4.2%); Austronesian languages (3.9%); Indo-Iranian languages and Germanic languages (1.1% each); Sino-Tibetan languages and Chinese languages and Indo-Aryan languages (1.0% each). The five main individual languages are Tagalog language (3.2%); Vietnamese (0.8%); German (0.6%); Cantonese and Spanish (0.5% each).
In the 2001 Census, almost 73% of residents identified as Christians while 24% said they had no religious affiliation. For specific denominations, Statistics Canada found that 36% of residents identified as Catholic Church, 11% as Anglicanism, 10% for the United Church, about 2% each as Baptists, Lutheranism, and Pentecostalism, and more than 1% for The Salvation Army. There were also 135 Buddhism, 125 Muslims, and 15 Jews.
Other notable attractions include the Ingraham Trail, local fishing lodges, bush plane tours, the unique architecture of Old Town with the Bush flying monument, and any of the numerous lakes surrounding Yellowknife, many of which include beaches.
Cabin Radio, an internet radio service, was launched in 2017.Nick Dunne, "The Northwest Territories’ Cabin Radio: A part of Canada’s North" . The Hub, February 23, 2024. It applied in 2019 for a CRTC license to launch as a community radio station, but its application was denied.Natalie Pressman, "Cabin Radio's 'fiercely loyal' fans show support for Yellowknife station as it fights for FM licence" . CBC North, October 25, 2023. A new application was heard by the CRTC in February 2025;Jocelyn Shepel, "Cabin Radio, Vista Radio each seek new FM licence at CRTC hearing in Yellowknife" . CBC North, February 12, 2025. on July 30, 2025, the CRTC approved Cabin Radio's application, assigning it the call letters CJFC-FM and the frequency of 93.9 FM. "Broadcasting Decision CRTC 2025-188" . CRTC, July 30, 2025.
No part of the Northwest Territories is designated as a mandatory market for digital television conversion; only CFYK-DT converted its main transmitter in Yellowknife to digital.
On 10 August 2012, NASA announced that the section of Mars where the Curiosity of the Mars Science Laboratory mission landed would be renamed Yellowknife, in recognition of the city of Yellowknife. Yellowknife is usually where scientists start geological mapping expeditions when researching the oldest known rocks in North America.
History
2023 wildfire
Geography
Climate
Arsenic contamination
Cityscape
Houseboats
Government
Economy
Former regional mines
gold gold gold gold gold gold gold gold gold gold, copper, tungsten gold uranium
Infrastructure
Emergency services
Utilities and services
Communications
Electricity
Solid waste services
Water and sewage treatment
Transportation
Air
Transit
Road
Education
Primary and secondary
Post-secondary
Demographics
Immigration
Ethnicity
+ Panethnicity groups in the City of Yellowknife (2001−2021)
! rowspan="2" Panethnicity
group
! colspan="2"2021
! colspan="2" 2016
! colspan="2" 2011
! colspan="2" 2006
! colspan="2" 2001 European 11,110 11,595 11,830 12,575 11,570 Indigenous 4,810 4,460 4,780 4,105 3,640 1,645 1,290 950 915 555 African-Canadian 875 610 465 310 140 South Asian 615 510 125 135 140 East Asian 385 450 375 260 250 Middle Eastern 215 110 130 80 60 Latin American 90 110 85 70 50 Other 155 165 100 60 40
Language
Religion
Culture
Events
Attractions
Historical sites
Media
Print
Radio
FM broadcasting 95.3 CBU-FM CBC Music Assorted music, public radio Canadian Broadcasting Corporation Rebroadcaster of CBU-FM (Vancouver) FM broadcasting 98.9 CFYK-FM CBC Radio One Talk radio, public radio Canadian Broadcasting Corporation Part of CBC North FM broadcasting 100.1 CJCD-FM 100.1 True North FM Adult contemporary Vista Broadcast Group FM broadcasting 101.9 CKLB-FM CKLB Radio: The Voice of Denendeh Community radio Native Communications Society of the Northwest Territories First Nations community radio FM broadcasting 103.5 CIVR-FM Radio Taïga Community radio Société Radio Taïga French language community radio
Television
8 (VHF) CFYK-DT CBC Television Flagship television station for CBC North 11 (VHF) CHTY-TV Aboriginal Peoples Television Network Flagship television station for the Aboriginal Peoples Television Network 13 (VHF) CBFT-DT Ici Radio-Canada Télé Community-owned rebroadcaster of CBFT-DT (Montreal). Status after 2010 is unknown; Ici Grand Nord and Unis TV were instead known to be broadcast on cable as of December 2023. 17 (UHF) CHNP-TV Independent station Branded on air as “Isuma Local Media” 35 (UHF) CHUT-TV Legislative Assembly of Nunavut and the Northwest Territories Branded on-air as “Legislative Assembly Television” 44 (UHF) CKLT-TV Uvagut TV
Notable people
See also
Notes
Further reading
External links
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