The historical inhabitants were Arviligjuarmiut. Kugaaruk is a traditional "Central Inuit" community. Until 1968, the people followed a nomadic lifestyle. The population is approximately 97% Inuit and most people self-identify as Netsilik Inuit. The residents blend a land based lifestyle with modern technology and interests. Most families supplement their diet with ringed seal, caribou, and Arctic char. Other game includes narwhal, polar bear, wolverine and muskox. Despite the isolation of the community, the Inuktitut language is declining. Most people 30 and over speak Inuktitut as their first language, but the language is not being passed on to their children. In most households, a mixture of English and Inuktitut is spoken. Children understand their parents and grandparents, but respond to them in English. One goal of the Nunavut educational system is to encourage and spread the use of Inuktitut. There are a few Inuit artists in Kugaaruk, including the world-renowned Emily Illuitok,, who worked mostly in walrusivory and bone; and Nick Sikkuark, whose works are mainly in whale bone, caribou antler, and walrus ivory, and are characterized by "droll, macabre wit". Most women sew traditional parkas, amautiit, and kamik.
Kugaardjuq School
Kugaardjuq School includes kindergarten to grade 12. It was very modern and included a large south facing library, computer lab, gymnasium and science lab. Currently there are two language specialists who teach the Nattilingmiut dialect, while the rest of the staff is southern teachers. In 2010 many of the NTEP graduates, who are locals, were to become teachers in levels from kindergarten to grade 7. As the only outsiders in the community are government workers, the student population is almost entirely Inuit. All high schools in Nunavut use the Alberta educational curriculum. However, one challenge faced by educators in this community is that most students read at about 3 or 4 grade levels lower than their Albertan counterparts. As with most schools in Nunavut, the school is under the partial authority of the locally elected District Education Authority, who design policy as well as make decisions regarding discipline, spending, and cultural activities. Kugaaruk was involved in the MississaugaYMCA exchange in 2007. 15 children from Kugaaruk made their way to Mississauga with three teachers for seven days. Then 15 people from Mississauga traveled to Kugaaruk for 11 days to experience the land and culture. Sites visited in Ontario included the CN Tower, the Hockey Hall of Fame, Queen's Park, Square One Shopping Centre, MuchMusic, Niagara Falls, Great Wolf Lodge, and the two exchange schools: Clarkson Secondary, and Hillside Senior Public School. On 28 February 2017, the school caught on fire, described as "suspicious". Most of the school burned down, the gym, reception area and high school portion were all completely destroyed, and the elementary portion was damaged. The replacement cost was provisionally estimated between $25 to $30 million.
Broadband communications
The community has been served by the Qiniq network since 2005. This is a fixed wireless service to homes and businesses, connecting to the outside world via a satellite backbone. The Qiniq network is designed and operated bySSI Micro. In 2017, the network was upgraded to 4G LTE technology, and 2G-GSM for mobile voice.
Climate
Kugaaruk is the location of the coldest wind chill ever recorded in Canada, of -79 °C or -92 °C on 13 January 1975, based on an air temperature of and a wind speed of. On 16 February 2018, the Human Weather Observation System, a type of semi-automated weather observing system, reported an unreviewed new minimum temperature for the month of February at at 06:00 MST. It beat the previous record of that was set 28 January 1989.
History
First contact between Europeans and the local Inuit occurred in 1829. During colonization, Kugaaruk was named Pelly Bay after the bay on which it sits. Pelly Bay is named after Sir John Pelly, governor of the Hudson's Bay Company, company operating the British colony of Rupert's Land in which it was located when it was so named. In 1854, Scottish explorer John Rae interviewed Inuit at Pelly Bay, to document some details of a camp of the doomed Franklin Expedition that they Inuit had discovered. In 1935 Father Pierre Henry established a Roman Catholic mission at Pelly Bay. The mission changed status to being a permanent mission in 1937, with the arrival of Father Franz van de Velde. A stone church was built in 1941. In 1955, the Pelly Bay DEW Line Station was built near the hamlet, making the traditional campsite of nomadic Inuit into a permanent settlement. In 1968, the local airport was built, and the Canadian government imported prefab housing to build out the townsite. In 1972 the hamlet was incorporated as "Pelly Bay". In 1975, the coldest windchill ever recorded in Canada occurred, windchill on a day of. In 1999 the hamlet's official name was changed to Kugaaruk.