The winter of 1952-1953 was one to remember in Alaska. Near the town of Valdez, the Thompson Pass is the throughway from Valdez up the Richardson Highway to inland Alaska. In that fateful winter, more snow fell on Thompson Pass than any other snowfall on record in one place in Alaska, as well as the most snowfall of any place in the U.S. at the time. The winter of 1952-1953, and the epic quantity of fallen snow, have gone down in the history books as an event to remember.
Thompson Pass is a gap in the Chugach Mountains northeast of Valdez that lies 2,805 feet high (855 meter-high).
The pass is the only way to get from the coastal town of Valdez to Anchorage or Fairbanks via the road system. Of course air and water travel are possible, but winter seas in the Prince William Sound often prevent travel by those means.
It also held the record for being the most snow to fall on any location in the U.S. in a single season until Mount Baker ski area in Bellingham, Washington had the world record snowfall in 1998-1999 at 1140 inches.
The Worthington Glacier lies 28.7 mi (46 km) east of Valdez, adjacent to the Thompson Pass. The Worthington Glacier State Recreation Site is a popular place where you can walk up to a glacier.