1917: Creation of Mount McKinley National Park
In the next two decades, many conservationists and explorers who ascended the mountain began calling for the formation of a national park there to preserve its beauty and wildlife and regulate hunting. Among the staunchest advocates were Belmore Browne, who had made three attempts to ascend Denali, and American conservationist and naturalist Charles Sheldon.
“Sheldon was the powerbroker; he really was a political powerhouse,” says Tracy Salcedo, author of Historic Denali National Park and Preserve: The Stories Behind One of America's Great Treasures. He had explored Denali for two years and went to Washington, D.C., to lobby for the park's creation.
Many advocates for the national park at Mount McKinley wanted to name it “Denali National Park.” They were, in part, inspired by Alaskan missionary Hudson Stuck, who led the mountain’s first successful ascent and referred to the mountain as Denali.
“[Stuck] felt strongly that it should retain the Native name—that there’s no reason it should be named after a politician who had never been to Alaska,” says Brian Okonek, who organized and led expeditions at Denali from 1979 to 2000.
According to the National Park Service, Thomas Riggs of the Alaska Engineering Commission said, “I don’t like the name of Denali. It is not descriptive. Everybody in the United States knows of Mt. McKinley and the various efforts made to climb it.”
Sheldon and Browne wanted to ensure the bill’s quick passage and, though they disagreed with Riggs, left the final decision in his hands. In 1917, President Woodrow Wilson signed the creation of Mount McKinley National Park into law.
1970s: The Debate Resurfaces
Alaskans also became inspired by the movement to pass the 1971 Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act. Alaska, which gained statehood in 1959, petitioned the U.S. Board on Geographic Names in 1975 to change the peak’s name to Denali. But Ohio representatives of Congress continuously blocked these efforts on a federal level, even after Alaska voted to change the mountain's name to Denali at the state level.
"We all noted that McKinley never visited Alaska, never actually saw the mountain," says Antonson, who then worked for the Alaska Historical Commission.
Senator Mike Gravel of Alaska told the New York Times in 1977 that changing the peak’s name to Denali “will rectify a long-standing injustice.” Rep. Ralph S. Regula, who represented McKinley’s home district, told the Times in 1980 that the name Denali “has only limited and local recognition” while the peak is “public land that belongs to all Americans.” Some travel and business groups also argued that a name change would require updates to books, guides and maps.
2015: Name Change to Denali
In 2015, President Barack Obama officially renamed the mountain Denali, under a Secretarial Order signed by U.S. Secretary of the Interior Sally Jewell. The Obama administration cited a 1947 law that allows the Interior Secretary to weigh in on geographic names.
“We are simply reflecting the desire of most Alaskans to have an authentically Alaskan name for this iconic Alaskan feature,” Interior Department officials said in prepared documents, per The Washington Post. They said they “intend no disrespect” toward President McKinley’s legacy.