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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Story of Sitka, by C. L. Andrews
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Story of Sitka
+ The Historic Outpost of the Northwest Coast
+
+Author: C. L. Andrews
+
+Release Date: April 2, 2010 [EBook #31862]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE STORY OF SITKA ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Roger Frank and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at http://www.fadedpage.com
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE STORY OF SITKA
+
+THE HISTORIC OUTPOST OF THE NORTHWEST COAST
+
+THE CHIEF FACTORY OF THE RUSSIAN AMERICAN COMPANY
+
+By
+
+C. L. ANDREWS
+
+Seattle, Washington
+
+PRESS OF
+
+Lowman & Hanford Co.
+
+SEATTLE
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+ Foreword 1
+ I Discovery 7
+ II Settlement 13
+ III Progress of the Colony 27
+ IV Natives 45
+ V Churches and Schools 54
+ VI Social Life 60
+ VII Trade and Industry 66
+ VIII Sitka under United States Rule 77
+ IX What to See 92
+
+ILLUSTRATIONS
+
+ Facing Page
+ Lovers' Lane 1
+ Mount Edgecumbe 11
+ Sitka in 1805 25
+ Bakery and Shops of the Russians 36
+ The Ranche 46
+ Cathedral of St. Michael 54
+ The Madonna 56
+ The Baranof Castle 60
+ The Grave of Princess Maksoutoff 62
+ Sitka in 1860 66
+ Sitka in 1869 77
+ Sitka--East on Lincoln Street 93
+ Interior of Cathedral 95
+ Russian Blockhouse 100
+ Map of Sitka 108
+
+
+
+
+TO MY MOTHER
+
+THIS VOLUME IS AFFECTIONATELY
+
+DEDICATED
+
+THE AUTHOR
+
+Copyright 1922
+
+By C. L. ANDREWS
+
+Seattle, Wash.
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: Lovers' Lane, Sitka.]
+
+
+
+
+SITKA
+
+Foreword
+
+
+The panorama of sea, island, and mountain, which holds Sitka, Alaska, as
+a jewel in its setting, is one of the most beautiful of those which
+surround the cities of the world. Toward the sea from the peninsula on
+which Sitka is situated stretches an expanse of waters, studded with
+forest-clad islands which break the swell of the Pacific that foams and
+tumbles on the outer barriers. To the westward Mount Edgecumbe lifts its
+perfect cone, its summit truncated by the old crater whose fires have
+been dead for centuries; to the northward Harbor peak lifts its signal
+to mariners; the Sisters, with a gleam of snow and ice among their
+pinnacles, lie in the distance of Indian River; to the east is the
+arrowhead of Mount Verstovia; the glaciers glisten beyond; and the sweep
+of mist-clad mountains, in their softness, beyond the bay to the
+southeast completes the circle.
+
+Radiating like the spokes of a wheel, waterways with historic memories
+reach out from the town. Krestof Bay, where the early navigators cast
+anchor; Neva Strait, commemorating the first Russian ship that visited
+Sitka from around the world; Katleanski Bay, on which was situated Old
+Sitka; Silver Bay, a Norwegian fjord transplanted to Alaska; Lisianski
+Bay, named for the Russian navigator of a century ago; the inlet at
+Ozerskoe Redoubt and Globokoe (Deep) Lake; the island-studded way to the
+Hot Springs; each with its individual charm; the ocean, with the deep,
+rich, marine tints of northern waters; the forest of blue, that folds
+like a robe over the mountains; the mountain summits beside the
+glaciers, clad in the exquisitely wonderful green of the Northland, all
+are delightful. But when the sun sinks low in the west, with the long,
+lingering twilight of the North, and the soft, delicate rays touch and
+blend with the water and islands, the mountains and sky--then, in the
+mystery of the evening, is the supreme beauty of the land. To those who
+have really known and loved Sitka, there is no place on earth to
+compare.
+
+There are pleasant recollections of those who have lived there. Jovial
+Edward Degroff and his stories at the Roastology Club; the Mills, whose
+hospitable home is known to every resident of the town; Wm. Gouverneur
+Morris, whose name recalls a leader of Revolutionary days; genial George
+Barron, who upheld every good tradition of the Navy; the gallant old
+soldier, Matthew P. Berry; dignified Judge Delaney, Alaska's staunchest
+advocate through all vicissitudes; Governor Brady, with his neverfailing
+faith in Alaska's greatness; Captain Francis, without whom the early
+naval commanders thought the warships could not thread the intricate
+passages; Nicholas Haley, with his optimistic dreams of El Doradoes;
+Pauline Archangelsky, for whom the "Old Timers" have pleasant
+recollections; Alonzo Austin and his mission; Captain Kilgore of the
+"Rush"; Merrill, who caught on the photograph plate the elusive spirit
+of the varying surroundings as only a true artist could; Katherine
+Delaney Abrams, whose touch in watercolor delineated the glory of the
+sunsets as none else could; Professor Richardson, who for a quarter of a
+century returned year after year thousands of miles to perpetuate in
+paintings the exquisite tintings of glaciers and mountain; George
+Kostromitinoff (Father Sergius); Father Metropolski, and many others who
+have made a part of the quaint old town.
+
+There is a saying that whosoever comes to love the waters of the Indian
+River will ever after yearn for them, and it seems true, for always is
+that harking back to its banks with an unsatisfied longing.
+
+From prehistoric time this has been the home of the Sitka Kwan of the
+Thlingit people. For sixty-three years it was the scene of the chief
+activities of the Russian American Company, who represented the rule of
+the Muscovites, who, when Chicago was but a blockhouse in a sedgy swamp
+on the banks of a sluggish, reedy river, and when San Francisco was but
+a mission and a Presidio of sun-burned bricks, maintained in Sitka a
+community of busy people who were casting cannon and bells, and who were
+building ships for commerce.
+
+In the establishment of this outpost the foundation was laid for the
+title of the United States to the southeastern part of Alaska, a land
+rich in fur and forest, in gold and copper, in marble and fish, the
+potential possibilities of which are not even approximately forecasted
+today. Enough to say of it, that in its limits are two mines, one of
+which has yielded over sixty-five millions of dollars in gold, and the
+other ranks among the richest of the mineral producing veins of the
+world.
+
+Some may have an interest in the story of the quaint, quiet, beautiful
+village on the shore of Baranof Island. I hope this may add something to
+history, keeping the events of the past bright in the memory of those
+who love the Northland and its story, and add a little of interest and
+information of the present to those who come as transient visitors to
+while away a few days among the myriad islands of the Sitkan
+Archipelago. It is a link to connect the Sitka of the past, the _Novo
+Arkangelsk_ of the great Russian American Company in the romantic
+days of the fur trade when it was the center of the vast domain of
+Russian America and gathered to its magazines the pelts of sea-otter and
+fox, with the Sitka of today with its fisheries and mines. The old
+landmarks are fast disappearing, scarce a year passes without some
+monument passing away, and even their location will soon be forgotten
+unless some record is made for those who do not know where they stood.
+
+
+
+
+SITKA
+
+THE HISTORIC OUTPOST OF THE
+NORTHWEST
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+DISCOVERY
+
+
+Sitka of the Russians, a century ago, was the center of trade and
+civilization on the Northwest Coast of America, the chief factory of the
+Russian American Company in the vast and little known land of the
+Russian Possessions in America. The sails of ships from far off
+Kronstadt on the Baltic brought Russian cargoes. The famous clipper
+ships of New England made it a stopping place on their way to the China
+seas. English traders and explorers visited it on their voyages, and in
+it was centered the trade of a wide region. It was the chief factory of
+the greatest rival in the fur trade of the world, with which the
+Honourable, the Hudson's Bay Company, which then was the controlling
+power in the English fur market, had to contend.
+
+The story of Sitka goes back past the middle of the Eighteenth Century.
+There are Russians, Spanish, English, French and Americans who have
+woven each their own part of the web of the tale, and the scenes have
+been as varied and strange as the people.
+
+July 16, 1741, a Russian ship stood into a broad harbor on the Northwest
+Coast of America. The commander, Captain Alexei Chirikof, had sailed
+three thousand miles across the unknown Pacific from the shores of the
+Okhotsk Sea. Civilized eyes had never before rested on these shores and
+he was keen with the excitement of adventure and discovery as he dropped
+anchor. He sent a party ashore in the ship's longboat to explore, and
+awaited the result. Days passed and no word or signal came, so the
+remaining boat was sent to recall the party and it was swallowed up in
+the labyrinth among the green islands. Signals indicated that it safely
+landed but none returned to the ship although the orders were imperative
+that both boats return at once. The last boat was gone. Three weeks
+passed. Captain Chirikof could not reach the shore and could no longer
+lie at anchor, so reluctantly and sadly he set his course for the far
+off Kamchatkan shores and sailed away from the port of missing men.
+
+Nearly two centuries have passed since the Russian seamen landed and no
+word has come from them. For more than seventy years the Russian
+Government sought for some sign of their fate.[1] Tales were told of a
+colony of Russians existing on the coast but each upon investigation
+proved but a rumor.
+
+There is a dim tradition among the Sitkas of men being lured ashore in
+the long ago. They say that Chief Annahootz, the predecessor of the
+chief of that name who was the firm friend of the whites at Sitka in
+1878, was the leading actor in the tragedy. Annahootz dressed himself in
+the skin of a bear and played along the beach. So skillfully did he
+simulate the sinuous motions of the animal that the Russians in the
+excitement of the chase plunged into the woods in pursuit and there the
+savage warriors killed them to a man, leaving none to tell the story.
+The disappearance of Chirikof's men has remained one of the many
+unsolved mysteries of the Northland, and their fate will never be known
+to a certainty.
+
+The faulty record of the navigation of a time that counted by dead
+reckoning, and without a knowledge of the currents of those seas, does
+not tell us the exact location of the anchorage, but beyond a reasonable
+doubt it was in Sitka Sound, and the Russian seamen died at the hands of
+the Sitka Kwan of the Thlingits. In this manner Sitka first became known
+to the White Man's World.
+
+On the 16th day of August, 1775, came the Royal Standard of Spain, flung
+to the breeze from the little schooner "Sonora," only 36 feet in length,
+under command of Don Francisco de la Bodega y Quadra. Quadra was one of
+the greatest and best of the Spanish navigators in the North. His
+voyages are among the most successful of those of the mariners of his
+nation in the waters of the north Pacific ocean, and his name was once
+linked with that of the English Commander on the island now bearing the
+name of Vancouver. Quadra came from the Mexican port of San Blas, and
+after many thrilling adventures and grievous hardships he sailed into a
+broad bay and dropped anchor. There was a mountain, of which he says:
+"Of the most regular and beautiful form I had ever seen. It was also
+quite detached from the great ridge of mountains. Its top was covered
+with snow, under which appeared some gullies, which continue till about
+the middle of the mountain, and from thence to the bottom are trees of
+the same kind as those at Trinity."
+
+[Illustration: Mount Edgecumbe.]
+
+He named the mountain _San Jacinthus_, and the point of the island
+that extends out toward the sea, Cape _del Engano_. No one who has
+looked upon the slopes of the mountain which stands to the seaward from
+Sitka can mistake the description. He anchored in what is now known as
+Krestof Bay, about six miles northwest from Sitka, and he called it Port
+_Guadalupe_.
+
+Captain Cook, on his Third Voyage of Exploration, in 1778, with the
+ships "Resolution" and "Discovery," passed along the coast and noted the
+bay, of which he says: "An arm of this bay, in the northern part of it,
+seemed to extend in toward the north, behind a round elevated mountain I
+called Mount Edgecumbe, and the point of land that shoots out from it
+Cape Edgecumbe." This name supplanted the one given by the Spaniard and
+the beautiful cone is yet known by the title he bestowed.
+
+The early Russians called the mountain St. Lazaria, assuming that it was
+the peak seen by Chirikof on his ill fated voyage of discovery and so
+named by him. The small island at the south is still known as San
+Lazaria Island.
+
+Captain Dixon, of H. M. S. "Queen Charlotte," came during the summer of
+1787, on a fur trading voyage. Dixon had just departed from the harbor
+when Captain Portlock, of the English ship "King George," which was
+lying in Portlock Harbor, to the northward in Chichagoff Island, sent
+his ship's boat through the passage behind Kruzof Island to about the
+present site of Sitka, and made the discovery for the civilized world
+that Mount Edgecumbe is on an island.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+SETTLEMENT
+
+
+The sea-otter, a marine animal about four feet in length when fully
+grown, with soft, long black pelage of silky texture, is one of the most
+valued of the fur-bearers. It was found abundantly all the way along the
+Northwest Coast, and especially in the passages about Sitka. It is now
+nearly extinct.
+
+The Russians had been gathering the skins of the sea-otter in the
+northern waters for years, ever since Chirikof made his voyage to Sitka,
+and they were truly an El Dorado, in fur, to the traders who plied their
+trade along the coasts. Captain Cook and his sailors, when on their
+voyage in these waters, bought skins for mere trifles, some for a
+handful of iron nails. These same skins sold for as much as sixty
+dollars each in China where they visited on their way home. The story of
+the furs went over the world and English, French and American traders
+thronged to these waters to sail their ships into the straits and barter
+for the rich pelts. To secure a profit of $50,000 on a voyage was not
+unusual. Ingraham, the lieutenant of Captain Gray whom we all know so
+well for his discovery of the great River of the West, sailed to near
+Sitka before his principal entered the river which he named for his
+ship, the Columbia. The French ship "Solide," in 1791, sailed from
+France to gather a portion of the harvest. Her captain, Étienne
+Marchand, anchored in Sitka Bay, and called it _Tchinkitinay_, as
+he declares it was known to the natives. To his ship flocked the painted
+and skin-clad natives with their peltries for barter. On their persons
+he saw articles of European manufacture, showing that other ships had
+visited there, and in the ears of one young savage were hanging pendant
+two copper coins of the colony of Massachusetts. His success in trade
+was not such as he might have wished, so he sailed way, remarking that,
+"The modern Hebrews would, perhaps, have little to teach to these people
+in the art of trade."
+
+March 31st, 1799, the Yankee skipper, Cleveland, of the merchant ship
+"Caroline," sailed into the bay, dropped anchor and fired a cannon shot
+as a signal. He was one of those shrewd, lean traders, skilled in
+navigation, who sailed from Boston round the Horn, with their bucko
+mates, who could drive a tack with the prow of a ship, so to speak, and
+in those days there were no corners of the earth where they might not be
+found seeking for profit. He was wise to the ways of the sharp trading
+canoemen of these waters, and their aggressive proclivities, so he
+prepared his ship with regard for all the possibilities of the business.
+Around it as a bulwark he stretched a barrier of dry bull hides brought
+from the California coast. At the stern was a place prepared for the
+trading. Forward on the deck were planted cannon, shotted with shrapnel,
+trained so as to rake the afterdeck, and beside each was a gunner's
+match.
+
+On the first day, for two hundred yards of broadcloth, he purchased a
+hundred prime sea-otter skins, worth $50 each in Canton. Barter was
+going merrily on, when a scream from amidships startled the crew. The
+Thlingits sprang to their boats. The squaws backed the canoes away from
+the ship's sides. Arrows were fitted to bowstrings, spears were poised
+and muskets primed. On the ships the sailors lighted the cannon matches
+and stood by ready to fire. A fight was hovering in the air when the
+cause of the disturbance was discovered. An inquisitive Thlingit pried
+between the bull hides opposite the cook's galley, and the cook had
+saluted him with a ladle of hot water. In his surprise he upset his
+canoe and his family were struggling in the sea. His baby was rescued by
+a seaman, amends were made to his injured feelings, and the barter
+proceeded as before.
+
+The waters were filled with ships. In a stay of a month the "Caroline"
+spoke the ship "Hancock," the ship "Despatch," the ship "Ulysses," and
+the ship "Eliza," all of Boston; and the English ship "Cheerful," all
+trading for furs among the Sitkan Islands.
+
+The Russians, in their colony on Kodiak Island, were jealous of the
+intruders on what they considered as their domain. Gregory Shelikof, a
+Siberian merchant, one of the wealthiest and most far seeing of the
+leaders among the Aleutian Islands, conceived the plan of combining the
+whole of the fur trade in one great monopoly. In pursuance of this
+policy he secured a charter from Emperor Paul in 1799, under the name of
+the Russian American Company, which gave the exclusive right to all
+profits to be derived from every form of resource in the Russian
+possessions in America for a period of twenty years. To the management
+of his business in the Colony he established on Kodiak Island he
+appointed Alexander Andreevich Baranof, a Siberian trader of great
+ability and experience. Baranof, the wise and far-seeing Russian ruler
+of the Russian American Company, at his factory in St. Paul's Harbor on
+Kodiak Island, had long planned the extension of his settlements to the
+southeast. The sea-otter catch of the Russians was made by brigades of
+Aleuts from the western islands, who went along the shores and to sea as
+far as 20 miles, in their wonderful skin boats called bidarkas, to hunt.
+When a sea-otter lifted its head from the water to breathe, within sight
+of a detachment of Aleut hunters, its fate was sealed, for it seldom
+escaped.
+
+The passages between the islands about Sitka were called the "Straits"
+by the Russians, and in them the sea-otter skins were taken by the
+thousands. It was not unusual for a Russian hunting party consisting of
+a hundred bidarkas to take on one expedition 2,000 skins of the
+_Morski bobrov_, as they called the sea-otter.
+
+The animals were becoming scarce in the seas about the western islands
+and Baranof was compelled to replenish his trade by the catch of the
+southeastern waters. In 1795 he sent one of his ships as far south as
+the Queen Charlotte Islands and it visited Sitka on the way. Two
+thousand skins were secured by the hunters while on this voyage. In the
+same year Baranof himself paid Sitka a visit, coming through the strait
+from the north in his little schooner "Olga," a 40-foot boat, and he
+named the passage for his craft as Olga Strait. On the shore near his
+anchorage he erected a cross; the bay he named Krestof Bay, and he then
+selected the locality of his future settlement.
+
+In the spring of 1799, Baranof sent orders to the toyons, or chiefs, of
+the tribes on the islands around Kodiak to assemble the hunters. Five
+hundred and fifty bidarkas, each manned by from two to three Aleut
+paddlers, came in answer to his call, and with two convoying ships he
+set sail for Sitka Sound. On July 7th he landed at a bay six miles north
+of the present town of Sitka, purchased a tract of land from
+Skayeutlelt, a local chief, and began the construction of a post which
+he named redoubt St. Michael. The building was done under great
+difficulties. Rain fell incessantly. There were but thirty Russian
+workmen as most of the Aleuts returned to Kodiak, hunting as they went.
+Of the men who remained ten had to stand guard constantly, for the
+Thlingits were not to be trusted. Barracks, storehouses, quarters for
+the commanding officer, were constructed; a bath house also, for the
+Russian must have his bath, and the whole was surrounded by a stockade
+and strengthened by blockhouses. Their troubles were not all with the
+elements, for during the winter the scarcity of provision and other
+causes brought scurvy to add to their discomfort. Their food was mostly
+yuhali (dried salmon), but during the winter the hunters took 40
+sea-lions, and in the spring many seals were killed in the bay by the
+Aleuts.
+
+The natives, called Thlingits at the present, were known as the Kolosh
+by the Russians. They were divided among themselves in their feelings
+toward the new settlers in their midst. Some looked with extreme
+disfavor upon the establishment, while others were friendly. The young
+and turbulent warriors were hostile. A messenger was sent to invite them
+to a prasdnik (holiday) at the fort. He was taken prisoner by them and
+detained until Baranof landed in their midst with an armed force and
+demanded his release, when they set him free and ridiculed the incident.
+At a dance at the fort many of the Kolosh came with long knives
+concealed under their cloaks. Their treachery was detected and their
+design frustrated. The courage and caution of Baranof held them in check
+until spring when he departed for Kodiak, leaving strict instructions as
+to the precautions to be observed during his absence. After his
+departure the discipline grew more lax and the Kolosh became more bold.
+The watchful savages at last saw an opportunity to rid themselves of
+their new neighbors.
+
+On a June day of 1802, the exact date is not recorded, a horde of
+painted savages burst from the forest, clad in all the paraphernalia of
+war masks and barbaric armour. A fleet of war canoes landed warriors on
+the beach in front of the redoubt. In the attack that followed the
+stockade and buildings were reduced to smoking ruins, the magazines were
+robbed of rich stores of furs, most of the defenders died on the spears
+of the Kolosh or were tortured till death relieved their sufferings, and
+the women and children were made slaves. Skayeutlelt, the false friend
+of Baranof, directed the battle from a nearby knoll and his nephew,
+Katlean, was one of the principal actors in the bloody tragedy. A few
+survivors who were hunting in their bidarkas or were in the forest,
+escaped to the ships of the English and American traders which were in
+the bay.
+
+Captain Ebbetts on an American ship and Captain Barber of the British
+ship "Myrtle" were in the harbor. Some of the survivors on reaching
+these ships asked them to rescue their countrymen. Captain Ebbetts
+ransomed several prisoners, but Captain Barber adopted a more effective
+course. Chief Katlean and Chief Skayeutlelt came on board his ship to
+trade. He at once put them in irons and threatened to hang them to the
+yardarm of the ship if the captives remaining in the hands of the
+natives, and also the plundered sea-otter skins, were not immediately
+surrendered to him. The threat was effective, the greater part of the
+sea-otter furs and several captives were brought on the ship and
+delivered to him. He then took the ransomed captives from the other ship
+and sailed for Kodiak, where he demanded a ransom of 50,000 rubles from
+Baranof for the captives. The ransom was later reduced to 10,000 rubles
+which was paid by Mr. Baranof.
+
+Two years passed before much is again known of Sitka. English and
+American captains sailed their ships into the harbor and gathered the
+furs which Baranof had endeavored to garner in the storehouses of the
+Russian American Company. In the summer of 1804 Baranof gathered a force
+at Kodiak with which to cross the Gulf of Alaska to re-establish his
+post. There were one hundred and fifty bearded _promyshileniks_, or
+fur hunters, and over 500 Aleuts in their skin bidarkas. With him were
+the ships "Alexander," "Ekaterina," "Yermak," and "Rostislaf." When they
+reached Sitka they found there Captain Lisianski of the Imperial Russian
+Navy, with the ship "Neva," one of the first Russians to circle the
+globe, and who came to help to recapture the post.
+
+The Indian village of Sitka was almost in the same place as the present
+town, grouped around the Baranof hill which was called by the Russians a
+_kekoor_. On the top of the kekoor was a redoubt, and a stronger
+fort was near the mouth of the Indian River, or _Kolosh Ryeku_.
+
+On the morning of September 28th the Russian ships moved to a point
+opposite the village, the "Neva" being towed by a hundred bidarkas. The
+Sitkans abandoned their village and the fort on the hill and withdrew to
+the stronger fortification near the river. Baranof landed a force and
+occupied the kekoor, planted cannon on the top, then opened negotiations
+for the surrender of the other fort, but his overtures were rejected by
+the Indians.
+
+The ships were brought near the river fort and the cannon were trained
+on it. The fort was built of thick logs in the shape of an irregular
+square, with portholes on the side next the sea, and inside the breast
+works were 14 barabaras, or native houses.
+
+The walls were of such thickness that the cannon shot from the "Neva"
+made but little impression on the structure. Baranof was impatient and
+urged an attack. Reinforcements were landed from the ships under command
+of Lieutenants Arbusof and Polavishin. The hunters, sailors, and Aleuts
+flung themselves against the fortifications, but meeting a murderous
+fire were driven back in disorder and only saved from disaster by the
+protection of the fire of the ships. Ten men were killed and 26 wounded,
+and among the wounded was Baranof.
+
+Captain Lisianski then took command and moved his ships nearer the
+shore. A canoe with reinforcements and a supply of powder for the
+Indians approached among the islands but a shot from the "Neva" struck
+it, the powder exploded, and the Indians who were saved from the wreck
+were taken on board the Russian ship. The bombardment was steadily
+continued until the 6th of October, when the Kolosh proposed to
+surrender, and a parley was held, but during the night they evacuated
+the fort and went over the mountains to the north. In the fort were left
+the bodies of 30 warriors and also the bodies of five children who had
+been killed to prevent their cries making the retreat known to the
+Russians. The only remaining survivors were two old women and a little
+boy. A few straggling warriors remained lurking about, seeking revenge,
+and a few days later they killed eight Aleuts who were fishing on
+Jamestown Bay.
+
+How the Kolosh went over the mountains was long a mystery to the
+Russians. They reached the shore of Peril Strait and crossing to the
+north shore placed a fort near the entrance to Sitkoh Bay which was
+stronger than their old fort at Indian River and where over 1,000 people
+gathered. A tradition among the old Indians says that the fugitives
+first went to Old Sitka, then over the mountains to the northeastern
+side of the island. On the way they suffered extremely from fatigue and
+hunger, and one Sitka Indian who lives on Peril Strait relates that his
+father was a child at the time of the exodus. His father carried him
+till exhausted, when he abandoned him, and his mother then took him up
+and carried him the remainder of the way.
+
+The property left in the fort by the Kolosh was taken out, the
+fortification was burned and the canoes on the beach were broken to
+pieces. There was enough remaining of the structure that some of the
+remains of the foundation may yet be seen in the forest which has sprung
+up around it in the Indian River Park, although more than a century has
+since elapsed.
+
+[Illustration: Sitka in 1805--From Lisianski's Voyage.]
+
+Then began the restoration of the post, on the present site of Sitka,
+and with energy and despatch the building of a new Russian settlement
+proceeded. Around the kekoor the native houses were removed, and along
+with them more than a hundred burial houses with the ashes of the bodies
+which had been burned. The great tribal houses, or barabaras, as they
+are called in the Russian accounts, were spacious, some measuring 50
+feet in width and 80 feet in length.[2] In their place rose the town of
+New Archangel (_Novo Arkangelsk_,) and on the kekoor was built a
+redoubt. This was the official name and generally recognized by the
+Russians, but the name Sitka was early used by them. Baranof frequently
+used the term Sitka in his letters, and in the letter of the Minister of
+Finance to the Minister of Marine, from St. Petersburg, April 9, 1820,
+Sitka is used in several places. The name Sitka, or Sheetkah, in the
+Thlingit language, means, in this place, that this is the place, or the
+best place, implying superiority over all other places.
+
+All winter there was cutting of logs in the forest and by the spring of
+1805 there were eight substantial buildings, the space for 15 kitchen
+gardens had been cleared, the livestock brought on the ships were
+thriving, and an air of prosperity pervaded the place.[3] Surveys of the
+harbor were made by Captain Lisianski who also made the first ascent of
+Mt. Edgecumbe, and who then sailed for Kronstadt, Russia, by the way of
+Canton, with a cargo of furs for the China trade valued at 450,000
+rubles.[4]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+PROGRESS OF THE COLONY
+
+
+The courtly Chamberlain of the Tsar, Nicholas P. Resanof, son-in-law of
+Shelikof who was the founder of the first Russian colony in America,
+came to Sitka in 1805, via Petropavlovsk, Siberia, on the "Nadeshda,"
+one of the first Russian ships to circumnavigate the world, and was a
+special representative of the Russian American Company, of which
+organization he was one of the founders.
+
+In his report to the Company he tells us: "The fort is on the high hill,
+or kekoor, on a peninsula in the gulf. On the left side of the kekoor
+close on the peninsula is built an immense barracks with two projecting
+blockhouses or towers. All the building is made from mast timber from
+the top to the foundation, under which is a cellar. Besides this
+building are two warehouses, a material magazine and two cellars, also
+two large sheds for storing food, and under the sheds are the quarters
+for the workmen. On the side opposite the fort is a shed for storing
+cargo, at the right side is the kitchen, bath, and quarters for the
+servants of the Company, clerks, etc., and on the shore are the
+blacksmith shops and other workshops. On the top of the kekoor is a
+building five sazhens[5] long and three sazhens wide, with two rooms. In
+one I live, and in the other there are two shipmasters. There are still
+some old Kolosh _yourts_, in which live the _kayours_ and the
+Kodiak Americans (Aleuts, they are generally called).[6]
+
+"Our guns are always loaded, everywhere are sentinels with loaded arms,
+and in the rooms of each of us arms constitute the greater part of the
+furniture. All the night the signals from post to post continue, war
+discipline prevails; in a word, we are ready at any minute to receive
+our dear guests, who generally profit by the darkness of night to make
+an attack."
+
+The additional number in the garrison owing to the arrival of the
+Chamberlain and his suite made it more difficult to procure provisions
+for the winter. The hostile Kolosh made hunting and fishing dangerous.
+In the autumn there was but flour enough for an allowance of a pound a
+week for one month for the 200 men in the fort. For other food supply
+they were dependent on the fish caught in the bay, the dried
+_yukali_ and sealion meat from Kodiak, and the dried seal meat from
+the Seal Islands.
+
+Baranof bought the ship "Juno," an American sailing ship of about 250
+tons, from Captain George D'Wolf, of Bristol, Conn., with its cargo of
+flour, sugar and other articles, for the sum of 68,000 piastres
+(Spanish), equivalent to about the same number of dollars. This relieved
+the immediate necessity, but before spring the supply became so low that
+the scurvy, that dread malady of the seas and of outlying localities,
+attacked the garrison. This scourge often fell heavily on the early
+Russian expeditions, and in 1821 the Russian ship "Borodino" lost 40 men
+through its ravages in a voyage from Sitka to Kronstadt.
+
+In March, Resanof sailed for San Francisco in the "Juno" to purchase
+breadstuffs and other supplies. He also wished to examine the coast with
+the view of making other settlements farther south, at Nootka, at the
+Columbia, or even farther south in California. He secured a cargo of the
+products of the south and returned to Sitka in June.
+
+On his southward journey Resanof reconnoitred the mouth of the Columbia
+River, seeking a site for a future settlement. He was unable to enter
+the river owing to contrary winds; and the condition of his crew,
+debilitated by lack of proper food and suffering from scurvy, caused him
+to hasten on. He heard that a party of U. S. soldiers were building a
+fort there. This rumor doubtless came from the presence of Lewis and
+Clarke near the present Astoria.
+
+While on this visit to San Francisco Resanof met the Spanish beauty,
+Dona Concepcion de Arguello, of whom one of the visitors said, "She was
+lively and animated, had sparkling, love-inspiring eyes, beautiful
+teeth, pleasing and expressive features, a fine form and a thousand
+other charms," and he lost his heart to her. The romance of the Russian
+courtier and the fair Californian furnished to Bret Harte the theme for
+some of his most beautiful verse. Resanof, hurrying home to Russia to
+gain the Imperial permission to his marriage, died at Krasnoyarsk,
+Siberia, and Dona Concepcion waited for years for the coming of her
+lover, not knowing that he lay dead under the Siberian snows. When the
+news of his sad fate came to her she donned the habit of a nun and
+devoted herself to charitable works.
+
+This visit to California was the beginning of a trade that continued for
+many years, through all the period of Russian occupation. During the
+days of the gold discoveries in California large shipments of goods were
+made from Sitka to San Francisco, and after the sale of the territory to
+the United States great quantities of merchandise were shipped from the
+warehouses of the Company to the California metropolis, amounting to
+over a quarter of a million dollars in one year.
+
+The breadstuffs for the colonies were procured from California, from San
+Francisco and from Ross Colony, or from Peru, until 1840, when a
+contract was made with the Hudson's Bay Company under which the supplies
+were brought from the farms of the Nisqually or from Vancouver, in
+Oregon Territory.
+
+Until the time of the arrival of the "Neva", 1804, all trading goods
+were brought across Siberia to Okhotsk, and thence by sailing vessel to
+the colony, or were purchased from the American or English trading ships
+which came to the coast for furs. To the natives the English who came to
+these waters became known as "King George Men," and the Americans were
+called "Boston Men," the latter being from the great number of ships
+that sailed from the great shipping port of New England. From these
+traders goods were purchased by Baranof at lower rates than those cost
+which were brought from Russia. John Jacob Astor was one of the first to
+engage in the trade. He sent the ship "Enterprise" to Sitka in 1810, and
+the "Beaver" in 1812. From Washington Irving we have the description,
+through the account of the Captain, of the "Hyperborean veteran
+ensconsed in a fort which crested the top of a high rock promontory,"
+which is well known to all readers of stories of western life, and in
+which the impression of the character of Baranof as given to the reader
+is very erroneous. The traders exchanged their goods with the Russians
+for furs, sometimes going to the Pribilof Islands to receive the
+seal-skins; sailed to China, where the furs were traded for silks,
+nankins, and teas; they then voyaged on around the world to their home
+port.
+
+The sloop-of-war "Diana," the first Russian warship to reach Sitka,
+arrived in 1810 under the command of Captain Vasili M. Golofnin, who was
+widely known for his adventures while a captive in the Kingdom of the
+Nipponese, where he was carried about in a bamboo cage and exhibited to
+the populace. His description of his visit to Sitka is entertaining, and
+of it he says:
+
+"In the fort we met nothing so unusual or costly as to be worthy of
+special remark; the fort consisted of solid log towers, and high strong
+palisades, with apertures or embrasures, in which were set guns and
+carronades of different calibres. The interior construction, barracks,
+storehouses, house of the commander and other buildings were made of
+thick logs and were very solid, these being very common in this place,
+around which grows, so to say, within reach of a windlass, a multitude
+of most beautiful trees suitable for structures of every description.
+
+"In the house of Mr. Baranof were ornaments and furniture in profusion,
+of masterly workmanship and costly price, brought from St. Petersburg
+and from England, which corresponded with his position as the head
+official of a great company. What astonished us most was an extensive
+library in nearly all European languages, and many pictures of
+remarkable merit. I must confess, that I badly judge in painting, and
+only could know, that in the uncultivated wild border of America, there
+would be none except Mr. Baranof to value and understand them, unless
+there might happen to be educated travelers, or masters of United States
+trading vessels visiting this place, there would be no one to appreciate
+the fine art. Mr. Baranof, noting my astonishment, explained the riddle,
+saying, that the pictures attracting our attention were gifts of the
+Company and of distinguished persons in St. Petersburg, for the
+establishing of a library, and the Directory sent them out. On these
+works he commented with the following remarkable view: 'Better that our
+directors had sent us a doctor, for in all the Company's colonies there
+is not one doctor, nor one doctor's assistant, nor one doctor's pupil.'"
+
+Golofnin soon left Sitka to return to St. Petersburg. His successful
+voyage, together with that of the "Neva" and the "Nadeshda," encouraged
+the shipment of goods by sea from Russia, and from that time onward
+ships came regularly, laden with supplies of every kind for the post,
+and returned with rich cargoes of peltry.
+
+By 1825 surgical and astronomical instruments of the best quality were
+sent to the colony, an apothecary shop of three rooms provided
+medicines, and four Creole boys, under the charge of a doctor, attended
+to the dispensing of the potions. A hospital was in connection and the
+sick received fresh food, tea, sugar, and medicines, free, upon the
+order of the doctor.
+
+An observatory, equipped with the most improved magnetic and
+meteorological instruments was later provided and there was kept a
+record of natural phenomena, while a museum of objects of interest from
+the surrounding country was open for the instruction of all.
+
+The library was brought from St. Petersburg in 1806 by Resanof. Mr.
+Khlebnikof tells us that it contained more than 1,200 volumes, valued at
+7,500 rubles, and they were in the Russian, French, German, English,
+Latin and other languages.
+
+When Mr. Resanof was preparing for his journey he addressed letters to
+many of the leading men of St. Petersburg, soliciting their contribution
+of books to promote the beginning of education in the far off possession
+of the Czar. Many sent a response in writing accompanied by one or more
+volumes, and the letters so sent were richly bound in a separate volume
+and placed with the library in the building at Sitka. Among the patrons
+were the Metropolite Ambrosia, Count Rumiantzof, Count Stroganof,
+Admiral Chichagof, Minister of Justice Dimitrief, Senator Zakarof and
+others. The sentiments were varied, but many agreed in voicing the
+desire to "sow the seed of science in the breasts of the peoples so far
+outlying from the enlightenment of Europe." Some of them reflected the
+personal character of the donors: The Metropolite Ambrosia sent books
+for church services; the Minister of Marine sent plans of ships; and
+Count Rumiantzof contributed works on husbandry.[7]
+
+Mr. Kyril Khlebnikof, the accountant of the Company, who was in charge
+of the counting house at Sitka from 1818 to 1832, to whom we are
+indebted for many valuable writings relating to the early history of the
+settlements, tells us that when Mr. Baranof left the colony the
+buildings had become badly decayed and much new construction had to be
+done. In 1827 there had been built, three sentry houses, a battery of
+thirty guns on the kekoor, and below them magazines, barracks and other
+buildings, a bakery, wharf, arsenal, etc. In the shops were blacksmiths,
+coppersmiths, locksmiths, coopers, turners, rope spinners, chandlers,
+painters, masons, etc.
+
+At the Ozerskoe Redoubt, on Deep Lake, were barracks and a fort, a
+flouring mill, a tannery, and other buildings. A zapor, or fish trap, in
+the stream took sixty thousand fish each year.
+
+[Illustration: The Bakery and Shops of the Russians--Later the Sitka
+Trading Co.'s Building.]
+
+The workmen got out timber from the forest for the building of ships,
+they cut fuel and burned charcoal in large quantities; kept the
+buildings in repair and did other duties required on the factory. The
+work of the gardening was chiefly done by the Aleuts, who were paid a
+ruble a day for their services.
+
+The Russian Captain Lutke came to Sitka about this time and he tells us
+that there were many pigs and chickens raised by the inhabitants, and
+that a pig might be had for 5 to 7 rubles, a hen for 4 to 5 rubles, and
+eggs at from 3-1/2 to 10 rubles per dozen. The chief drawback to the
+chicken industry was the presence of the great black ravens that carried
+away the young chicks and sometimes even the old hens. The ravens were
+such successful scavengers that they were called the New Archangel
+police, and he says they even bit the tails off the young pigs, so that
+all the hogs of the place were tailless.
+
+He mentions the abundance of deer on the islands and also says that
+mountain sheep were killed by the Aleuts and brought to the fort. He
+must have confused the sheep with the goats, for the sheep never
+approach the coast so closely, and he speaks of the wool being used for
+weaving the blankets for the ceremonial dances of the Kolosh. This would
+indicate that the animal in question was the mountain goat. A later
+writer says that 2,700 game animals were brought into Sitka for sale
+during the winter of 1861-62.
+
+A shipyard was established as soon as the necessary buildings to house
+the garrison were completed. It occupied a part of the present parade
+ground near the Russian Barracks and included a portion of the present
+street. Many vessels were built in the yard during the Russian
+occupation, the first, being the tender "Avoss," launched in 1806,
+followed by the brig "Sitka," built by an American shipbuilder named
+Lincoln, and for which he was paid 2,000 rubles as a royalty upon the
+completion of the ship. A frigate of 320 tons was the largest vessel
+built before 1819, and at that time construction was discontinued until
+1834, when work was resumed and continued until the close of the Russian
+regime.
+
+The "Politofsky" was one of the last vessels to be built at Sitka, and
+it was sold by Prince Maksoutoff to H. M. Hutchinson and Abraham Hirsch
+for $4,000 in 1867. The next year it was sold to Hutchinson, Kohl & Co.,
+and later was sold to a firm that ran it to Puget Sound, and from Alaska
+to San Francisco. It was built of Alaska cedar timber, the _dushnoi
+dereva_ or scented wood of the Russians, and was spiked with
+hand-made copper spikes. It was taken to Alaska in the gold rush of
+1898, and found its last resting place, very appropriately, in the land
+where it was built, in the harbor of St. Michael, the old Russian port
+on Bering Sea.
+
+The fear of shipwreck, and of death at sea hung over every soul of the
+community. The long voyages in uncharted and unlighted waters with
+sailing ships--more than six months at the shortest from
+Kronstadt--often three months or more against baffling winds from
+Okhotsk--the voyages to the redoubts and _odinoshkas_ (detached
+posts with one man only) of the Bering Sea and of the Gulf of Alaska, to
+collect the fur catch of the year and bring it to Sitka; the long
+journey via Canton on the return to Russia--all held many dangers for
+the sailing ships of those days. The "Phoenix," the first ship built on
+the Alaskan shores, foundered with all on board, including the Bishop
+and his retinue, in 1799, on the return voyage from Okhotsk; the "St.
+Nicholas" went ashore on the coast of Washington in 1808, and those who
+survived the waves were held in bondage for years by the savages of that
+coast.
+
+During the latter part of August, 1812, the ship "Neva" left
+Okhotsk--contrary winds delayed her in the Sea of Okhotsk--storms beat
+her back along the Aleutian Islands till it was November before land was
+sighted in Alaska. The storms damaged the rigging and ship until it was
+necessary to put into Voskresenski Harbor (Resurrection Bay) for
+repairs. She arrived off Sitka about December 1st. After four or five
+days Mt. Edgecumbe was sighted but a storm drove the ship to sea where
+she beat about for weeks before again nearing the port. Scurvy afflicted
+the passengers and crew and added to the general distress. On January
+8th, 1813, Mt. Edgecumbe again appeared. In trying to make the harbor
+the ship grounded on the rocks under the cape on the morning of the 9th
+and speedily broke to pieces under the terrific pounding of the seas.[8]
+Some of the people on board reached shore after incredible suffering and
+hardship.
+
+After several days two of the sailors wandering along the shore met a
+Kolosh boy and persuaded him to take them to Sitka, where they arrived,
+cold, exhausted, and almost starving. Boats were at once fitted out by
+Mr. Baranof, the survivors were rescued, brought to Sitka, and their
+sufferings relieved. From those on board the ship, 38 had perished,
+including Kalinin, the commander, Boronovolokof, the intended future
+chief manager of the Company, and five women passengers. In the cargo
+was food and clothing, the messages of the year for the exiles, and rich
+vestments and furnishings for the church that was soon to be built in
+Sitka, all scattered for miles along the wild coast of Kruzof Island.
+This was one of the worst disasters of the sea that visited the colony,
+although many others are part of the records of the time.
+
+It is said that Chief Katlean tore his hair with rage when he learned of
+the wreck, because he did not find it and destroy the survivors out of
+revenge for his defeat and expulsion from his home at Sitka.
+
+There are many traditions among the residents of Sitka concerning the
+wreck of the "Neva." Among them is that there was a vast treasure of
+gold for the use of the garrison and the traders. This is erroneous, for
+there was no gold used in the colonies, the trade being by barter or
+conducted with scrip, called _assignats_, issued by the Company for
+the purpose. The story of the gold has been so generally believed that
+serious plans have been made for attempting the salvage of the treasure.
+
+The term of office of Alexander Andreevich Baranof as the chief manager
+of the Russian American Company came to a close in 1818. He had been 28
+years in the colonies, leaving Russia in 1790 for the post of Three
+Saints on Kodiak Island, which at that time constituted almost the only
+Russian establishment in America, the other stations being little more
+than outlying trading posts. He left their dominion an empire in extent,
+reaching from the Seal Islands in Bering Sea, at the edge of the ice
+pack of the Arctic, to Fort Ross, among the sunny hills of Golden
+California. Captain Hagmeister came to relieve him, and in his 72nd year
+the old chief manager, bent with the weight of years and of long and
+arduous service, closed his accounts and set sail on the "Kutusof," one
+of the Company's vessels, for his far-off home in Russia.
+
+When the time arrived for Baranof to take his departure from the land he
+had made his home for so many years, sorrowfully he took his leave of
+the associates with whom he had so long shared the dangers and hardships
+of the uncivilized land. Upon being relieved of the duties of his office
+he first considered building a home at the Ozerskoe Redoubt and spending
+the remainder of his days in the place he had learned to love. Later he
+decided to return to his native land and sailed on the "Kutusof" for
+Kronstadt. A delay at Batavia in the tropics proved too severe for his
+advanced years. The day after leaving Batavia he died and was buried at
+sea in the waters of the Indian Ocean.
+
+Captain Leontius Andreanovich Hagemeister succeeded to the office of
+chief manager but remained only a short time at Sitka, then sailed for
+Russia, leaving Captain Simeon Ivanovich Yanovski in charge.
+
+Captain Yanovski became enamored with the beautiful daughter of Baranof,
+and if you search the old records of the Cathedral of St. Michaels at
+Sitka you will find the entry as made of the marriage of Simeon Ivanof
+Yanovski "with the late head governor of the Russian American
+possessions, Collegiate Adviser and Cavalier Baranof's daughter Irina,
+one of Creoles."
+
+In 1830, Baron Ferdinand Petrovich Wrangell, scientist and explorer,
+came to administer the office. He had sailed the frozen ocean along the
+northern shores of Siberia as an explorer, and Wrangell Island,
+Wrangell Strait, etc., on the maps of today perpetuate his name.
+
+Under Baron Wrangell, as assistant to the manager, served Adolph
+Carlovich Etolin, a native of Finland, who came to the colony as an
+officer on the war sloop "Kamchatka" in 1817, who sailed in the service
+of the Company to nearly every port from the Seal Islands of Bering Sea
+to Chile, who made several voyages around the world, and who was made
+chief manager in 1840. In 1846 he returned to Russia to accept the trust
+of Commercial Counsellor in the head office of the Company in St.
+Petersburg.
+
+About fourteen miles to the southwest, across the bay and facing
+Edgecumbe, with a beautiful view of the peak and islands, is the Hot
+Springs, well known for their medicinal properties by the natives before
+the advent of the Russians, and frequently resorted to by both as a
+panacea for many ills. In the Place of Islands _(Chasti Ostrova)_
+is reputed to be a spring with a sour taste, while almost within the
+limits of the town of Sitka, Dr. Scheffer, a German physician who made a
+sojourn in the place about 1815, claimed to have found a medical spring
+whose waters were equal to some of the famed watering places of Germany.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+NATIVES
+
+
+Most of the Sitkan Kolosh kept aloof from the Russian settlement after
+the establishment of the new fort on Chatham Strait, near the entrance
+of Peril Strait. All the kwans, the Khootznoos, the Hoonahs, the
+Chilkats, the Auks, Stikines, Kakes and others, joined with the Sitkas
+in the hatred of the Russians. Parties going out from the fort at Sitka
+for hunting expeditions, for cutting of wood, for traveling to the Hot
+Springs, had to be on their guard and with arms at hand prepared to
+fight at a moment's notice.[9] Small groups were often cut off and
+murdered. As it was impossible to decide which of the many kwans did the
+act, and as there were those in each kwan who were peaceable, with whom
+it was desired to keep the peace, revenge against any village was
+inadvisable. Even as late as the date of the lease to the Hudson's Bay Co.
+the Russian ships that sailed among the islands to trade with the Kolosh
+were compelled to act with the strictest caution. Only a few natives
+were admitted on board at a time, the trading was done in a space near
+the stern, and was conducted under the muzzles of loaded cannon
+concealed in the fore part of the ship.[10] The conditions were thus
+until 1821, when the Sitkas were invited to reoccupy the site of the old
+village and to live in what is now known as the "Ranche," under the guns
+of the redoubt.
+
+The Thlingit nation is a strange, warlike, shrewd people, physically
+strong and enduring, and possessed of many excellent qualities. Hunters
+and fishermen by nature and training, they are skillful boatmen, and in
+those days they built wonderfully beautiful canoes of the red cedar,
+some of them large enough to carry sixty men at the paddles. Each spring
+more than a thousand men gathered together in Sitka Bay, coming from the
+different villages, to fish for herring at the spawning time, when those
+fish run in countless myriads in those waters. Hemlock boughs were
+placed in the water, and on them the herring roe collected until they
+were encrusted with the eggs which were then stripped off and dried for
+future use.
+
+[Illustration: The "Ranche"--Looking north from the top of the Baranof
+Castle. The Steamer at the left is the "Coquitlam," noted for her
+participation in pelagic sealing and she was under seizure by the U. S.
+Government.]
+
+In 1807 there were over 2,000 hostile natives gathered in the harbor at
+the herring season and they threatened an attack on the settlement.
+Kuskof, the most trusted and able lieutenant of Baranof, was in charge,
+and it put his wisdom and watchfulness to the test to avert disaster.
+The strictest discipline was maintained. The tribesmen waited outside
+day after day, hoping for news of some relaxation of the precautions of
+the defenders to be brought to them by the women of the tribe who were
+married to the Russian promishleniki (hunters). Day and night the
+sentinels paced the beats on the stockade and along the waterfront,
+till, weary of waiting, the Kolosh finally dispersed to their homes.
+
+In the great tribal houses several families lived, sometimes as many as
+fifty or sixty persons. Over the door of the house was painted the
+family totem, for the Sitkas did not raise the house totem in a pole in
+front as did many of the kwans of the Thlingits, and as the Hydahs do.
+In these houses were held the potlatches, or gift parties, which were
+made by the wealthy chiefs.
+
+The potlatches were of different kinds, although all partook of the
+nature of a feasting or merrymaking and were distinguished by the giving
+of gifts. In the ordinary visiting potlatches, or in the berry
+potlatches, the visitors came in their canoes with which they formed a
+line off shore opposite the houses, put planks from one canoe to another
+and on these planks danced the tribal dance. Those on shore danced the
+welcome dance and invited the guests ashore. Then the visitors
+disembarked and each family became the guest of their kinsmen of their
+totem or they went to the guesthouse of the kwan. All the people of the
+same totem are supposed to be blood relations, so all those of the wolf
+totem go to the _Gooch-heat_, or the dwelling blazoned by the rude
+heraldry with the wolf rampant. In the great social potlatches a wealthy
+chief invites his friends from many villages and entertains them for a
+week or more with dancing and feasting and makes presents varied and
+valuable, from Hudson's Bay blankets to bolts of calico or of flannel,
+and in primitive days, copper tows,[11] Chilkat blankets, and even
+slaves were handed over with a lavish hospitality.
+
+On special occasions in the olden time, with great ceremony the visitors
+landed at a distance from the village, drew their canoes ashore and
+proceeded to the village dressed in festive garments adorned with
+sealion heads or other strange headdresses, in which they danced the
+rare and picturesque "Beach Dance," in acknowledgement to the Spirit of
+the Sea for the bountiful supply of salmon and herring of the past
+season--for the native American is a thankful being and omits not to
+show it when occasion offers to acknowledge it to the Giver of all good
+and perfect gifts.
+
+During the earlier years of the colony the Kolosh were implacable
+enemies. War parties of young men constantly haunted the islands of the
+bay, lying in wait for any unwary hunter or fisherman from the fort.
+Later, when they were settled under the walls of the fort they became
+more tractable, for their homes and families were commanded by the guns
+of the fortress, but on the least provocation the savagery in their
+blood would boil, from their great tribal houses they issued forth,
+faces blackened to the semblance of devils, war masks grinning, and the
+howling mob shouted defiance at their neighbor over the stockade. Many a
+bloody tragedy was enacted in the "Ranche" for their code was primitive,
+"an eye for an eye," and a life for a life.
+
+Feuds raged between the different totemic families. About 1853 a party
+of Wrangell Indians (Stikines) visited Sitka, and while being
+entertained in the guest-house were murdered and their bodies piled into
+a canoe which was then paddled to Japonski Island. On striking the shore
+it was so heavily laden with the bodies of the dead that tradition says
+the canoe split from end to end. It is said that the bones of the dead
+are still to be seen in the undergrowth along the shore. In retaliation,
+about 1855, the Wrangell Kolosh made an attack on the Hot Springs
+settlement, burned the buildings, stripped the inhabitants of property
+and clothing and left them to make their way over the mountains around
+the head of Silver Bay to Sitka, where they arrived more dead than alive
+from hunger and exhaustion. This feud was not settled until 1918, when a
+peace treaty was consummated between the kwans on Armistice Day, a
+coincidence which is much made of by the tribesmen.
+
+The Kolosh were as firm believers in witchcraft as any of the more
+civilized nations. They resorted to their shamans (_ekhts_) or
+medicine men in case of illness. If his weird incantations failed to
+relieve the sufferer, his resort was that the victim was bewitched and
+some poor unfortunate paid the penalty by enduring the most fiendish
+torture.
+
+One March day in 1855 a commotion arose in the Kolosh village. A sentry
+caught an Indian who was stealing and punished him, for which the tribe
+called for vengeance. Some rushed to the stockade and began to cut away
+the palisades. Other forced their way into the Koloshian Church through
+the outer door. From this vantage point they fired on the garrison and
+in return the batteries of the fort blazed back with solid shot and
+shrapnel. For two hours the fight continued, when the Kolosh gave up all
+hope of success, and ceased the battle. The Russian loss in killed and
+wounded was 20 men, while the Kolosh loss was estimated at 60. This was
+the last attempt of the natives to destroy the Russian stronghold.
+
+At times during the later days of the colony the Kolosh were employed as
+seamen and as workers in the ice trade by the Russians and thus they
+occupied a place in the industrial life. Etolin was the most successful
+in conciliating them of any of the chief managers, and he at one time
+held a fur fair at Sitka to which peltry was brought from far and near,
+modeled somewhat upon the idea of the great fur mart of Nizhni Novgorod.
+Most of them, however, hunted and fished, lived in their tribal houses,
+carved their canoes, wove their baskets, and practiced their witchcraft,
+while their civilized neighbors gathered the furs and built ships.
+
+Under the walls of the fort, in the old tribal houses of the Kolosh
+which had not been destroyed, lived the Aleuts. Properly speaking the
+name belongs to the natives of the Aleutian Islands, but the term was
+also applied to the natives of Kodiak Island and the surrounding islets.
+These speak a different language from the true Aleuts, but otherwise
+resemble them closely. During the hunting season they scoured the seas
+in their skin bidarkas, in the pursuit of fur animals. In winter many of
+them remained at Sitka instead of returning to their homes. Their time
+was spent in idleness, spending the summer's earnings in the pleasures
+and vices of the white man. One who saw them in their kazhims, as their
+dwellings were often called, describes them: "Morally, the Aleut is not
+bloodthirsty. He delights in simple rejoicings and will play you a game
+of chess with walrus ivory pieces--a duck for a pawn and a penguin for a
+king--with the greatest of good humor. Even when squabbles arrive the
+argument is carried on in poetry to the accompaniment of dancing, and
+one would be inclined to prefer the Aleut angry to the Aleut amiable,
+did he not know he also dances when festive and when religious.
+
+"Among them the social duty of visiting has its drawbacks. Several
+families live together in the kazhims, and during one's visit they all
+lie around in every conceivable posture, jolly and genial, naked and
+unashamed. The fumes of the blubber oil lamps and stoves, the stores of
+raw meat, the many naked bodies, well smeared with grease and scented
+with primitive unguents, combine to make an atmosphere difficult to
+tolerate and not easy to describe. Yet, if you will, you may enjoy the
+warmest hospitality, and have heaped upon you the most assiduous
+attentions."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+CHURCHES AND SCHOOLS
+
+
+It was not until 1816 that a priest arrived at Sitka, and in that year
+the first entry is made in the church records under the name of
+Alexander Sokolof. A church was built at the south of the street, which
+was then called the Governor's Walk, almost opposite the present
+cathedral. A monument marks the spot where the altar stood, and a cross
+marks the site of a grave, said to be that of a priest. Tradition also
+tells that there are two graves there, and assigns the other one to the
+daughter of Baron Wrangell, the chief manager of the Company at one
+time.[12]
+
+[Illustration: Cathedral of St. Michael]
+
+The present cathedral of St. Michael, which is the central point of
+historic interest, in the center of the town at Lincoln Street, was
+dedicated November 20, 1848. It fronts on a small court and with its
+green painted spire surmounted by the Greek Cross is so typically
+Russian that it might readily be believed to have been transplanted from
+old Russia. The chime of bells, a gift from the Church at Moscow, would
+be worthy of any shrine. The building is in the form of a cross, has
+three sanctuaries and three altars. The larger and central sanctuary is
+that of the _Archistrategos_ Michael. In the center is an elevated
+platform, the episcopal _Cathedra_, and it is separated from the
+main body of the church by a partition called the _Ikonastas_,
+which is ornamented with twelve _ikons_, or holy paintings, covered
+by plates of silver in _repousse_ work in the true Russian style of
+art, and through the Royal Gates the priest appears. The silver in the
+ikons is valued at over $6,000. The ikon of St. Michael is said to have
+been in the wreck of the "Neva," and was rescued after being cast up by
+the sea. Another is a gift of the monks of the monastery of Solovetsk;
+another was brought by Bishop Innocentius (Veniaminof) from
+Petropavlovsk. The ikon of the Resurrection is painted on a board from a
+tree in Hebron, was consecrated in Bethlehem, and bears the autograph
+signature of the Patriarch of Jerusalem.
+
+The chapel at the right is dedicated in the name of St. John the
+Precursor and Prince Alexander Nevsky.
+
+The chapel at the left is in honor of Our Lady of Kazan. In it is a
+painting of a Madonna and Child from which the beautiful Byzantine face
+looks down with a sweet radiance.
+
+The vestments and sacred vessels are rich and elegant. The white Easter
+vestment is of cloth of silver and the cloth of gold for high feast days
+was the personal gift of Alexander Andreevich Baranof, the great Russian
+who established the colony. The belfry clock is said to be the work of
+the hands of Veniaminof. The priest in richly brocaded vestments holds
+the services, and a choir of boys chant the chorus with a melody that
+would be the envy of many a far more pretentious edifice. The worshipers
+stand during the services, the clouds of incense rise toward the rounded
+dome, then one by one the worshipers pass and kiss the jeweled cross in
+the hand of the priest. Father Metropolski presided over the church for
+many years, and Father Sergius is one of the best known in recent years.
+
+[Illustration: The Madonna.]
+
+There were two other churches during Russian days, one, a Lutheran,
+built during Etolin's time, which stood near the site of the first
+church, and is said to have contained a small but very excellent pipe
+organ, brought from Germany. The other church stood near the blockhouse
+on the hill, was on the line of the stockade, and had two doors, one
+inside the fortification, the other outside and used as an entrance by
+the natives. It was known as the Koloshian Church, and its site is
+marked by a monument. Both these buildings long ago fell into ruin and
+were removed.
+
+The Russian religion was closely associated with the Government, so in
+the colonies the official charter of the Company compelled them to
+provide well for the church and the priests according to the standard of
+the times, and the work was carried on with zeal and fortitude by the
+missionaries who came from the monasteries of the old Russian cities.
+
+Of all the missionaries who came to Russian America, the greatest was
+Ivan Veniaminof. Father John he is often called in the old records, a
+wonderful man, broad of mind and of body, combining the qualities that
+inspire awe and reverence with a gentleness of word and deed that made
+him beloved wherever he was known. His zapiski, or letters, are among
+the best authorities extant which remain from those years on Alaskan
+matters, and they were written home to Russia during his stay in the
+Aleutian Islands and at Sitka. He came to Sitka after a ten-year stay at
+Unalaska, remained there for five years working for the church and
+teaching in the schools, then returned to Moscow and was consecrated as
+bishop of the new diocese. He again arrived in Sitka in 1842, and made a
+tour of all the churches in the colonies, traveling by sailing ship to
+every settlement, then went home to Russia where he became Metropolite
+of Moscow.
+
+The schools of Sitka, under the Russian regime, were well maintained,
+and many of the mechanics, clerks, pilots, and men of other trades were
+educated there. Kadin, who drew the charts for Tebenkof's Atlas of
+Alaska from the surveys made by the Russian Navigators; Tarantief, who
+engraved the maps on copper-plate at Sitka; and many of the shipmasters
+and accountants in the employ of the Company, were the product of the
+educational institutions of Sitka. In the time of the greatest prosperity
+there were five schools. The church school was advanced to the grade of
+a seminary in 1849 and there were taught navigation, mathematics,
+astronomy, bookkeeping, and other branches of learning. Some of the best
+pupils, both Russian and Creole, were sent to St. Petersburg for more
+advanced instruction. Chief Manager Etolin was the especial patron of
+education, and made many improvements in the system. Under the auspices
+of Madame Etolin, who was a native of Helsingfors and was educated in
+the schools of that city, a school was opened and maintained by the
+Company for the girls of the colony. After the transfer to the United
+States of the Territory the teachers returned to Russia and the schools
+were closed.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+SOCIAL LIFE
+
+
+At the top of the kekoor, or the Baranof Hill as it was called in recent
+years, there stood a building occupied during Russian days as a
+residence by the chief managers of the Russian American Company. The one
+known to the residents and visitors of the earlier days of the American
+occupation was known as the Baranof Castle, although Baranof himself
+never lived in it. There were three, if not four different buildings
+which occupied that position. The first to be placed there was built at
+once upon the founding of the post and is described by Resanof in his
+letters to the Company as being a very "Unpretentious building, and
+poorly constructed." Before the close of Baranof's administration,
+however, according to the account of Captain Golofnin, it was an
+establishment well built and furnished with some degree of luxury.
+
+[Illustration: The Baranof Castle. Built in 1837 for the official
+residence of the chief managers of the Russian American Company, and
+occupied from the time of Kuprianof until 1867. It was the headquarters
+building of the Commanding Officers of the U. S. troops 1867 to 1877, and
+was destroyed by fire in 1894. The U. S. Agricultural Department
+building occupies the site at the present time.]
+
+The structure known as the Baranof Castle, which stood on the hill at
+the time of the transfer to the United States, would seem to be the
+third building constructed on the site, was completed about 1837,[13]
+and was burned to the ground on the morning of March 17th, 1894.
+
+The historic building was the scene of many interesting events, and
+sheltered many distinguished persons.
+
+The first mistress who presided over the mansion on the kekoor was
+Madame Yanovski, a daughter of Baranof and the wife of Lieutenant
+Yanovski, the third chief manager of the Russian American Company.
+
+Lady Wrangell was the first to come from Russia to preside as the First
+Lady of Sitka, and she was succeeded by Madame Kupreanof, who is said to
+have crossed Siberia and the Pacific Ocean to accompany her husband to
+his post. Sir Edward Belcher gives a spirited account of a ball given in
+his honor, in the castle, which was then, in 1837, just completed. He
+says: "The evening passed most delightfully," although "few could
+converse with their partners," English being spoken by few at that time
+in the capital of Russian America.
+
+Princess Maksoutoff, the wife of the last chief manager of the colonies,
+came from St. Petersburg, but died soon after her arrival, and the stone
+which marks her grave may be seen on the hill between the two
+cemeteries, near the site of the upper Blockhouse. Her successor, the
+second Princess Maksoutoff, young and beautiful, presided with grace and
+tact over the mansion until the transfer of the territory to the United
+States. She was one of six Russian ladies present at the ceremonies and
+is said to have wept when the Russian flag was lowered.
+
+There is a legend of a beautiful princess whose ghost haunted the Castle
+for many years. The story has been told by many at different times and
+is one of the romantic tales that cluster around the old metropolis of
+the fur trading days. Her lover was sent away or killed through the
+influence of an _ober offitzer_ who sought her hand in marriage.
+Eliza Ruhamah Scidmore, who wrote so delightfully of Sitka in her
+journeys in Alaska in 1883, says that, "By tradition the Lady in Black
+was the daughter of one of the old governors. On her wedding night she
+disappeared from the ballroom in the midst of the festivities, and after
+a long search was found dead in one of the small drawing rooms."[14]
+
+[Illustration: The Grave of the Princess Maksoutoff.]
+
+The chief managers entertained lavishly, and the dinners in the Castle
+were events long to be remembered. They were well worthy the
+representatives of a rich and powerful company, a corporation with a
+domain that was greater than the realm of many a royal ruler. Into the
+sumptuously furnished and richly decorated dining-room came the bishop
+and priests, resplendent in the official robes, the naval officers
+glittering in their gold laced uniforms, the secretaries, accountants,
+storekeepers, all in the uniform of the Ministry of Finance, the masters
+and mates of the ships in the harbor; the guests in their best apparel;
+all gathered around the hospitable board of the chief manager. At times
+a hundred sat at the table and back of them dined the cadets of the
+naval school. After the dinner came dancing and until morning the gayety
+went merrily on, for Russian cheer is proverbial, and their hospitality
+is lavish.
+
+Usually the Captain of the port, the secretaries, three public and two
+private, two masters in the navy, the commercial agent, two doctors, and
+the Lutheran clergyman, dined with the chief manager by general
+invitation, Sir George Simpson tells us. The civilian masters of
+vessels, accountants, engineers, clerks, and bookkeepers, dined at a
+club which was organized by Mr. Etolin, and they lived at the old club
+house a little to the east of the church.
+
+A wedding was an elaborate affair, a bridal cake which figured in many
+mystic signs, tea, coffee, chocolate and champagne; the ladies attired
+in muslin dresses, white satin shoes, silk stockings, kid gloves, fans,
+and other necessary appurtances. After the ceremony of an hour and a
+half was consummated, the ball was opened by the bride and the highest
+officer present, and the dancing lasted until three in the morning.
+
+Easter was an event of much hilarity after the close of Lent, which was
+strictly observed by all. From morning to night everyone ran a gauntlet
+of kisses; when two persons met, one said, "Christ has risen," while the
+other replied, "He has risen, indeed," and then followed the
+salutations. These seemed not to have been distasteful to visitors,
+although one remarks that most of the dames had been more liberal with
+other liquids than of pure water. Throughout it all was a continuous
+peal of bells, for the Russian is fond of bell-ringing. All carried
+eggs, boiled into stones, and dyed, gilded or painted, which they
+presented to their friends.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+TRADE AND INDUSTRY
+
+
+Sitka, under the Muscovite, existed because of the fur trade, and every
+energy and interest centered on the gathering of peltries from every
+available quarter. Sailing ships moved in and out of the harbor, taken
+to their moorings or out to sea by the harbor tug; some from Michaelovsk
+with the beaver and martin from the Yukon, others _en route_ to
+California or to the Sandwich Islands; the supply ships from Kronstadt
+around Cape Horn or returning via Canton and the Cape of Good Hope laden
+with furs; still others bound for the Kuril Islands or Okhotsk. The
+steamer "Nikolai" plied along the passages of the Alexander Archipelago,
+exploring the inlets, surveying the bays and rivers, gathering furs,
+always furs, for that was the reason for their living on this distant
+shore.[15]
+
+[Illustration: Sitka in 1860, Near the Close of the Russian
+Administration.]
+
+Near the entrance to the Kolosh village was the market where the natives
+were permitted to trade. There they brought their game and fish, their
+furs and baskets, to trade for calico and beads, blankets and
+ammunition.[16] This market was closed by a portcullised door which
+permitted entrance through the stockaded wall, and was enclosed by a
+railed yard. Armed guards stood on duty, and at the least dispute in the
+market, down came the door and they proceeded to punish the delinquents.
+
+The warehouses were stored with thousands on thousands of the richest
+furs of the Northland; sea-otter, worth today from $800 to $1,000 per
+skin, and not to be had at any price, were numbered by thousands in the
+earlier years; sealskins by shiploads, some killed off the harbor, but
+mainly from the Seal Islands; of land otter, the Hudson's Bay Company
+paid them two thousand skins each year for the lease of the territory
+from Portland Canal to Cape Spencer. The martin, the American sable,
+with its fluffy pelage. Foxes, blue, white, black, silver gray, red and
+cross, were there by thousands, brought from the Arctic, from the
+Aleutian Islands, from the Valley of the Yukon; mink, ermine, muskrat,
+beaver, land otter, pile on pile. Tons of ivory from the walrus herds of
+Morzhovia and bearskins and wolfskins from Cook Inlet and the Copper
+River. The right to the fur trade belonged exclusively to the Company by
+Royal ukase, and any employe who was found attempting to infringe on
+their rights was arrested and sent to Russia for punishment.[17]
+
+From the top of the Castle, over 100 feet above the sea, a light burned
+as a beacon to mariners entering the harbor, and this was the first
+light-house to throw its beams over the waters of this northern ocean.
+In the cupola which rose from the roof were four little square cups into
+which seal oil was poured and wicks burned in grooves rising from them,
+while back of the flame was a reflector that threw the light far out to
+sea among the islands.
+
+The stock of goods in the magazines was large and varied. It covered
+almost every article carried in the general European trade as a
+necessity, and many of the luxuries--sugar and sealing wax, tobacco,
+both Virginia and Kirghis, silk and broadcloth, calico and Flemish
+linen, ravens duck and frieze, arshins of blankets and poods of yarn;
+vedras of rum, cognac and gin; butter from the Yakut, from California
+and from Kodiak; salt beef from Ross Colony, from England and from
+Kodiak; beaver hats and cotton socks.
+
+In the arsenal were kept about a thousand muskets, three hundred
+pistols, two hundred rifles, as well as sabres, cutlasses, etc., while
+four fire engines provided against loss by conflagration. Some rare
+weapons were also found there. A saber set with gems valued at 560
+rubles; a Persian carbine of a value of 450 rubles; two Persian
+yatighans, silver mounted; a Damascus saber, and two Persian pistols,
+silver mounted.
+
+The soldiers' guns were for a great part of French or English
+workmanship; rockets and false-fire for signalling ships were made each
+year.
+
+Tallow for candles was brought from California, moulded at the port and
+distributed so many candles to each employe according to their presumed
+needs each month.
+
+Liquors, generally rum, were served by the Company, a drink twice a
+week, extra allowance being made on difficult work and also for
+holidays. All kinds of devices were resorted to by individuals in order
+to get rum, and one author says that a pair of boots for which the
+makers would demand ten rubles might be secured in barter for a bottle
+of rum worth three rubles.
+
+The soldiers stationed at the fort when not on duty were employed by the
+Company and given a special compensation for their labor. Some of the
+soldiers and hunters by their industry and thrift accumulated
+considerable money which the Company held to their account and either
+paid to them on their discharge or sent home to Russia for them. Others
+spent their earnings, were continually in debt to the Company, and as
+their contract provided that they were not to be discharged while in
+arrears of debt, some of them served the remainder of their lives with
+no hope of return to Russia.
+
+Around the hill ran a parapet and sentries walked their beat night and
+day. On the stockade which enclosed the town from the beach at the edge
+of the "Ranche" to the shore beyond the sawmill, making with the shore
+line an irregular rectangle, also walked the sentinels on their vigil,
+for the Thlingit at the gates was at all times an enemy to be feared.
+Strict military discipline was maintained at all times. At the foot of
+the hill were clustered barracks, storehouses, bakeries, warehouses,
+etc., for the use of the garrison and workmen. The old structure which
+was used as a bakery, and for shops, was later known as the Sitka
+Trading Company's building, and has recently been removed. The barracks
+are at present the jail, and the Russian counting house is today the
+postoffice of the United States. The fur warehouse stood to the west of
+the hill and was torn down in 1897-8, while the landing warehouse on the
+wharf was burned in 1916. These were all built about the time of the
+incumbency of Etolin, and that time might be termed the Golden Age of
+the Colony. Ships were being built, the fur trade was still prosperous,
+new explorations were being made into the interior of the country, trade
+was being extended into the Yukon Valley and there was an active
+interest in all the industries of the settlement. There were men of many
+trades, engineers, cabinet makers, jewelers, tailors, builders, etc.,
+and an efficient machine shop constructed engines to equip the vessels
+constructed in the shipyard. Plowshares and spades for the Spanish
+farmers in California were forged and bells for the Franciscan missions
+were cast here. The first steam vessel to be built on the shore of the
+North Pacific Ocean was constructed at Sitka, for, before 1840 the whole
+of the machinery for a tug of seven horsepower, as well as of two
+pleasure boats had been constructed here. The steamer "Nikolai" of 70
+horsepower was built and equipped with the exception of the boilers
+which were brought from New York. The ship ways at Sitka was the
+repairing place for many a vessel in the days of the gold seekers in the
+valleys of California.
+
+Two sawmills, one near the site of the present mill, the other on
+Kirenski River, now called Sawmill Creek,[18] cut the lumber for the
+settlement and for export. Two flouring mills, one in Sitka, the other
+at the Ozerskoe Redoubt on Globokoe[19] (Deep) Lake, ground the
+breadstuffs. A tannery furnished the leather for shoes, made from
+California hides, and also prepared the _lavtaks_ for the bidarkas
+for the seal and sea-otter hunters. The burrs for the Sitka mill were of
+the finest French stone but those at the Redoubt were cut from the
+granite found on the lake shore.[20]
+
+A hospital of forty beds provided for the comfort of the sick, of which
+Governor Simpson said: "The institution in question would do no disgrace
+to England."
+
+Brickyards were maintained, ice was cut on the lakes and at times
+shipped to California. The ice-houses were near the outlet of Swan Lake
+and were of a capacity of 3,000 tons.
+
+One day in the spring of 1852 the American ship "Bacchus" came into
+Sitka to purchase a cargo of ice. All the ice for San Francisco had to
+this time been brought in the hold of sailing ships around Cape Horn
+from Boston and the idea of getting the supply from Sitka was conceived.
+From the Company's icehouses was laden on the ship 250 tons, and this
+was the beginning of a trade during the year of not less than 1800 tons
+at an average price of about $25.00 per ton. A Company was organized in
+San Francisco for carrying on the trade and it was known as "the Ice
+Company." The ice on the lake was not of sufficient thickness owing to
+the fact that four degrees below zero is the coldest record ever made in
+Sitka during a hundred years, consequently the Ice Company later
+transferred their chief place of operation to Wood Island, near Kodiak.
+
+Cows were kept for milk, and the hay for their provender was cut on the
+Katleanski Plains on Squashanski Bay.
+
+Sir George Simpson, Governor-in-Chief of the Honourable, the Hudson's
+Bay Company, visited Sitka in 1841 and in 1842. He describes the
+settlement, the natives, and the fur trade, and was entertained at the
+Castle by Chief Manager Etolin. During his stay he indulged in a Russian
+steam bath. His humorous description of the details ends with a promise
+never again to undergo such a castigation. The account of his stay at
+the Hot Springs is enlivened by a story of how a rosy cheeked Russian
+damsel, each time she passed his chair, made a profound obeisance, which
+he attributed to his personal attraction until he discovered her doing
+the same when the chair was empty, and then saw that a saintly ikon
+occupied a place on the wall directly over it, which dispelled the
+illusion. Thirteen ships were in the harbor, and he remarks that the
+bustle was sufficient to have done credit to a third rate port in the
+civilized world. Sir George sailed for Okhotsk on the Russian ship
+"Alexander," then crossed Siberia overland on his return to England from
+a journey round the earth.
+
+There were eighty cannon mounted in the batteries which commanded the
+bay or which looked down on the Kolosh village. These cannon were of
+different make, some being cast in Sitka, others purchased of English or
+Americans, which were purchased on the ships on which they were mounted,
+as on the "Juno" and the "Brutus;" and other ordnance was brought from
+Kronstadt, Russia, as in 1804 on the "Neva," and in 1820 on the
+"Borodino."
+
+Teahouses were situated on the little knoll in the center of the town
+where the public Gardens were located; the museum, and the library
+offered instruction to the workers who occupied this lonely post halfway
+round the world from the Russian Fatherland.
+
+There were fourteen chief managers who directed the affairs of the
+Company at Sitka between the date of the founding in 1804 and the
+surrender to the United States in 1867.[21]
+
+Many of the officers resided long in the colonies and their record would
+establish their right to be denominated as "Sourdoughs." Baranof was
+manager 28 years; Zarembo was rewarded in 1844 for 25 years' service;
+Krukof, the manager at Unalaska, was rewarded in 1821 for 40 years'
+service; Banner remained at Kodiak for at least ten years, and he and
+his wife both died there; while Kuskof came with Baranof in 1790 and
+returned to Russia in 1821.
+
+[Illustration: Sitka in 1869--During the Time of the Military Occupation.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+SITKA UNDER UNITED STATES RULE
+
+
+Then came the day when the Russian was to withdraw from his colonies,
+and the United States was to occupy them as Alaska. An area as broad as
+an empire, equal in extent to Norway, Sweden, Finland, and Denmark
+combined, was to be handed over from the Imperial Ruler of all the
+Russias to the Republic of the United States, and Sitka, the Capital of
+the Colonies, was to be the scene of the actual transfer. The
+statesmanship of Secretary Seward, aided by the eloquence of Sumner, had
+secured for our country a domain one sixth as large as the whole United
+States.
+
+October 18th, 1867, Alexei Pestchouroff, the Commissioner of the Tsar,
+appeared in front of the Baranof castle, and beside him stood Lovell H.
+Rousseau, the Commissioner for the United States, who was to receive the
+Territory.
+
+The Russian soldiery were drawn up along the terrace which ran around
+the Baranof Hill, and next to them were the men of the United States
+Infantry.[22] The ensign of Russia was lowered, the flag of the United
+States raised to the accompaniment of the salutes from the batteries and
+of the guns of the ships in the harbor.[23] The few words of the
+ceremony of transfer were spoken, and Alaska became a possession of the
+United States.
+
+Most of the Russian residents went back to their native land as soon as
+they were able to do so, but some remained to cast their lot in the land
+that had so long been their home.[24] Among those who remained are the
+Kashavaroffs, the Kostromitinoffs, the Bolshanins, the Shutzoffs, and
+others, whose descendants now live in Alaska.
+
+The commanding officer of the American troops, Gen. Jefferson C. Davis,
+made his headquarters in the building on the hill that had been so long
+the residence of the Russian officers. The American soldiers were
+quartered in the barracks of the Siberian Battalion, and the sentries of
+the United States walked the beats of the Russian guards. Sitka gradually
+adjusted itself to the new conditions, to the crowds of adventurers who
+thronged its streets seeking a profit in speculations in lands and furs.
+They were doomed to disappointment, for the titles to lands were
+withheld and the fur trade was overdone, so most of the newly arrived
+drifted away as they came. Distinguished visitors came and were
+entertained in the old castle where the Commandant dispensed
+hospitality. Lady Franklin, the widow of the famous Arctic explorer, was
+once a guest at the mansion on the kekoor, and Secretary Seward was
+entertained there in 1869 when he visited the land he added to the
+possessions of the United States.
+
+While the military garrison were content with their conditions and were
+not troubled with the affairs of the world at large, the civil
+population wished for the law and authority of other communities, and
+set themselves to remedy the omission of the Government in far-off
+Washington so far as was possible to do, for there was no provision for
+an organization of civil government in the community. They organized a
+municipal association, drafted ordinances, elected councilmen, collected
+revenue for improving the Governor's Walk, changed the name to Lincoln
+Street, and in December opened a school. After five years the civil
+population declined until the revenue was insufficient to maintain the
+expense, the organization was abandoned, with it passed the school, and
+the first attempt at self-government closed.
+
+Then followed dark days for Sitka.[25] Military rules for the garrison
+and no law or protection for the people. Soldiers from the fort are said
+to have robbed the church of its ornaments, tearing the covers from the
+richly bound Bible of the Cathedral. The offenders were apprehended, but
+there being no civil law all the punishment meted out was to be drummed
+out of the service and sent to the States on an army transport. The
+stolen property was hidden under the old hospital building and was
+discovered by some boys and nearly all was restored to the church.
+
+On New Year's Day, 1869, Colcheka, a noted chief of the Chilkats who was
+visiting Sitka, was entertained by General Davis at the castle on the
+hill. The liquid refreshments served to him by the General raised his
+spirits and his pride of race. After it was over he descended the long
+flight of steps leading from the Commandant's quarters and strode across
+the parade ground with the dignity becoming to the hereditary chief of
+the Chilkats, the proudest kwan of the Thlingits. For some reason he
+crossed the part reserved for officers, was challenged by the sentry,
+and, not heeding, when he reached the stockade gate was kicked by the
+sentry stationed there. He was furious.
+
+"Me, Colcheka, Chief of the Chilkats, kicked!"
+
+He turned in a rage, seized the musket of the sentry, wrenched it from
+his hands, then carried it to his house in the Ranche.
+
+The guard was turned out for his arrest and a skirmish ensued in which
+the guard was worsted and retreated to the barracks. The Sitkas were
+neutral. The Chilkats were too few in number to fight the troops, so
+next day Colcheka surrendered, was kept in the guardhouse for a few days
+and then released.
+
+Meantime orders that no Indians be permitted to leave the Ranche were
+issued which were revoked upon Colcheka's surrender. Through some
+mistake in revoking the orders the sentries were not notified. A canoe
+load of Indians left the Ranche to get wood. The sentries fired on the
+canoe and killed two of the occupants, a Chilkat and a Kake. It was an
+unfortunate mistake. Those shots rang from Lynn Canal to Kuiu Island and
+the echoes vibrated for more than twenty years. By listening intently
+one might yet hear the vibrations. Two white men died and three Indian
+villages burned directly as a result, but it happened in places distant
+from Sitka, and, as they say, it is another story.
+
+On a June day of 1877 the troops of the United States army embarked on a
+ship for the States and sailed away from Sitka. The buildings and
+property were left in charge of the Collector of Customs, who, with the
+Postmaster, constituted the only officials in the Territory. The
+presence of the military had guaranteed safety from attack by the
+Indians to the people of the town, and the officers had been a pleasant
+addition to the social life; with their departure both were lost.
+
+The animosity of the Thlingits had been kindled by many wrongs, some
+real and others fancied. They saw in the new order of things an
+opportunity to recompense themselves for past grievances. All the old
+stories of the killing of their countrymen by the troops, the burning of
+old Kake and other villages, the loss of five Keeksitties, in the
+Schooner "San Diego" in Bering Sea and other tales were rehearsed and
+were used to stir the lust for vengeance. The Keeksittis, under the
+leadership of Katlean, openly advocated sacking the town, killing the
+men and making slaves of the women.
+
+"The government does not care for the country. They have abandoned it.
+It belongs to us, anyway; why not take the town and do as we wish with
+it?" said Katlean.
+
+The Kokwantons, under Annahootz, their chief, opposed the outrage. For
+months there was danger of an outbreak. Insult after insult was placed
+upon the citizens. The stockade was cut down and carried away by the
+Indians. Every male inhabitant was armed and expecting a call to battle
+at any time. A man was killed at the Hot Springs by a Keeksitty. The
+murderer was arrested through the assistance of the Kokwantons under
+Annahootz.[26] The Keeksitties assembled to rescue the criminal, but the
+citizens of the town rallied for defense, the Kokwantons joined them and
+the murderer was safely placed on board the Steamer "California" and
+taken to Portland for trial where he was afterward hanged.
+
+On the same boat went an appeal for assistance, directed to the United
+States Government, but it fell on deaf ears. Another petition was sent
+to Victoria, B. C., and was heeded. Captain A. Holmes A'Court, of
+H. M. S. "Osprey," at once set out for Sitka, arrived on March 1st, 1879,
+anchored opposite the Ranche and trained his guns for immediate use. The
+danger was averted. Captain A'Court remained until the arrival of the U.
+S. S. "Alaska," on April 3rd, then departed for Esquimault with the
+blessings of the grateful people of Sitka.
+
+On June 14th into the harbor came the U. S. S. "Jamestown." Her
+Commander, Captain L. A. Beardslee, assumed control of affairs in the
+community and administered them in a manner which brought credit on his
+name. He found everything at the lowest ebb; every woman and child who
+could leave, had gone to escape the danger of Indian massacre;
+witchcraft prevailed among the natives and anarchy among the whites. He
+took a census[27] upon his arrival, and the result was 325 people,
+exclusive of the Creole population. He appointed an Indian police;
+established more sanitary conditions in the "Ranche," numbered the
+houses, and compelled the attendance of the Indian children at the
+Mission School.
+
+A school was opened in the old Russian barracks building on April 17,
+1878, by Rev. John G. Brady and Miss Fannie E. Kellogg, of the
+Presbyterian Mission, which was later followed by the present Sheldon
+Jackson Mission School. George Kostromitinoff, afterward known as Father
+Sergius, was the interpreter. The opening of the school was a great
+event for Sitka and nearly everyone in the town attended. Annahootz, the
+friendly Kokwantan war chief, made a speech. Mr. Cohen, the brewer,
+hunted up another interpreter to assist. Hymns were sung and the events
+were auspicious. The Indians stole in one at a time, some with their
+faces blackened, all in blankets, but they squatted by the wall and
+listened attentively. The school was continued until December, when it
+was given up, but in the spring of 1880 Miss Olinda Austin, from New
+York City, reopened it on April 5th, in one of the rooms of the
+guardhouse, with an attendance of 103 children. The school thus
+established was the beginning of the present Sheldon Jackson Training
+School. The support of the naval officers at the station was such that
+the missionary teacher was moved to say: "It is not often that the
+Government sends out a missionary, but they have sent one in this young
+commander and his lieutenant, Mr. F. M. Symonds," in referring to
+Captain Glass, who succeeded Captain Beardslee.
+
+Some form of local government giving the residents a right to regulate
+their civil affairs was favored by the Commander, who had not even a
+code under which to act. A meeting was called, ordinances were drafted,
+a magistrate and councilmen elected for a town government. But all were
+not agreed upon these acts and opposition arose against it from the very
+inception of the movement. One of the traders of the town, Caplin, said:
+"De Captain may go to ---- wid his tam government; I'll bay no daxes."
+And from Silver Bay where he was mining, Geo. E. Pilz sent in a protest
+against the proceeding. The dealers who traded molasses to the Indians,
+from which the villainous liquor called "hoochinoo" or "Hooch," was
+distilled, objected to the ordinances restricting the trade. Finally an
+English miner named Roy was shot by his partner, "Scotty," and the
+inability of the self-made government to try the offender brought a
+crisis. The next day a notice appeared stating the organization had been
+dissolved, and the second attempt at self-government by the people in
+Alaska passed into oblivion.
+
+Scotty was sent to Oregon for trial and was discharged because of lack
+of a law to punish a man for assault with a dangerous weapon in Alaska.
+
+But the dawn of a better day was at hand, Alaska's darkest hours were
+past, and morning was breaking. The rule of the Navy Department
+continued until 1884, then, although the warships still remained in
+Alaskan waters, by Act of Congress of May 17th, a form of civil
+government was granted, and the official Capital was placed at Sitka.
+The terror of the Indian outbreaks was past; schools were in reach, for
+the same act provided for the establishment of a system of public
+education, and the Code of Oregon was adopted as the law of the
+land.[28]
+
+Then some of the life of the former years returned to the beautiful
+village by the sea; there were pleasant parties among the residents, the
+Governor held receptions, the officers of the warships added to the
+social life, many a gay ball was celebrated on the top floor of the
+court house, and for more than twenty years it was the Capital of
+Alaska.[29]
+
+With the influx of the Americans prospecting began, for in the vast wild
+mountains of Baranof and Chicagof Islands there is a wealth of mineral
+stored in the ledges.
+
+The Russians had attempted to find the mineral of the mountains, and in
+1848 a Mr. Doroshin, a mining engineer, had been sent out from St.
+Petersburg to search for mineral wealth in the colonies. He was not
+successful enough to make it of profit to them, although he found coal
+on Cook Inlet, gold on the Kenai Peninsula, earth promising to bear
+diamonds near Kootznahoo, and copper was known to be on the Myednooskie,
+or Copper, River.
+
+Discharged soldiers of the garrison were the first to take to the hills
+with pick and shovel. Nicholas Haley, an old-time prospector of Arizona,
+who came with the troops to Sitka, was one of the most energetic and
+daring of these. Year after year, with pick and shovel, with rifle and
+blankets, Nicholas attacked the rugged mountains. Rich specimens were
+brought in and yielded enough when brayed in a mortar to keep him in a
+grubstake, but it takes capital to develop a hard rock mine and capital
+was wary. So Nicholas toiled on year after year, keeping up his
+assessments and living on hopes until at last he passed over the Great
+Divide to a Better Diggings.
+
+Others tried it. In 1878 a mining company was organized at Sitka, but
+there was not yet a law under which a claim could be legally taken.
+Ledges were found, small mills were placed on the ground at the Stewart
+Mine, the Lucky Chance and elsewhere, and later great fakes were
+promoted at the Pande Basin and elsewhere. But it was years after that
+when two Indian boys, hunting on Chicagof Island, lay down to drink at a
+stream, and, behold, in the shimmering water was white rock with yellow,
+glittering particles dancing in the clear stream. With the fear it was
+but fools gold they took specimens and marked the place where they were
+found. When they reached Sitka they submitted these samples to Judge
+DeGroff, and to Professor Kelly of the Sheldon Jackson School. It was
+pronounced to be gold, pure shining, yellow gold, and richer than the
+most sanguine had hoped for. After much labor and many disappointments
+the ledge was located from which the float came, and today that mine,
+the Chicagof it is called, is known as the richest and best paying mine
+in the United States in proportion to the money invested, and more than
+one fortune has been taken out of the tunnels in the mountain.
+
+Off the shores of the continent, reaching far off to the westward almost
+to the shores of Asia are vast fishing grounds, perhaps the greatest in
+the world. A great submarine plateau stretches along shore, past the
+Aleutian Islands and into Bering Sea. There are estimated to be forty
+thousand square miles of cod and halibut banks that are known to the
+surveys. The fisheries of Gloucester and Cape Cod fade into
+insignificance and the famous Newfoundland Banks are but small in
+comparison.
+
+Sitka goes back the farthest in historic memory of any city of the
+Northwest. When Lewis and Clarke came to the mouth of the Columbia River
+she was looking out over the Pacific from her stockaded walls and
+Resanof was sailing to search for locations for new colonies. When
+Astoria was founded she was placing her outpost on the Russian River in
+California. Before San Francisco was a city she sent her bidarkas to
+take the sea-otter from under the very noses of the Padres in their
+missions. Here the civilization of the East met the progress of the
+West, the Orient and the Occident met here and met without bloodshed.
+Sitka, with her wealth of fisheries in the waters at her doors, with her
+wealth of mineral in the ledges at her back, with the wealth of forest
+on the mountain slopes around her, is in the same latitude as Edinburgh,
+Scotland. The time is coming when she will have population, and wealth;
+beauty she already has. What more is wanted for the happiness of her
+people? Only energy, perseverance, and thrift, and those will be
+forthcoming.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+WHAT TO SEE
+
+
+Approaching Sitka by the usual steamer route from the north at a
+distance of six miles the site of Old Sitka is passed. It lies to the
+left of the steamer track, in a small bay, and is marked by a native
+house which is visible from the ship. From near this place, looking to
+the westward, the first sight of Mount Edgecumbe is to be had between
+the islands. On approaching the town the ship goes through a narrow
+channel between Japonski Island at the right and the townsite at the
+left. Near the middle of the channel a rock is marked by a buoy and
+along the shore is the native village, or "Ranche," with a sloping beach
+upon which in former days the canoes were drawn up. The paths by which
+they were brought from the water may be seen, marked by the rocks being
+thrown to each side from the track.
+
+[Illustration: Sitka--East on Lincoln Street--the Governor's Walk of the
+Russians.]
+
+On Japonski Island is the U. S. Naval Coaling Station and the U. S.
+wireless telegraph. The magnetic observatory of the Russians was
+situated there. The name means Japan Island and is given because Resanof
+designated it as the place to keep captive Japanese whom he expected to
+capture through his expedition against the lower Kuril Islands in 1806.
+
+The dock at which the ship lands is in the same location as the one used
+by the Russians, but it has been extended to deeper water. The timbers
+of the old hulk once used by the Russians as a landing stage may still
+be seen in the water at low tide. On the dock was the landing warehouse
+of the Russians, a log structure with a passage through the center. It
+was burned in 1916. Leaving the wharf and going eastward along Lincoln
+Street, at the side are the booths or tents of the native merchants,
+kept by the women from the village, a veritable arcade of little
+markets, and each of the vendors is as interested as though she occupied
+a seat on the famous Rialto Bridge to sell the wares of ancient Venice.
+The picturesque, dark-skinned Thlingit women sit at the doors of their
+little tents hour after hour, offering the strangely carved totems, the
+beautiful baskets of spruce roots woven in mystic designs, the beaded
+moccasins, etc., products of their industry during the long winter when
+the tourist boats do not call at the Sitka wharves. Passing up the
+street to the east from the landing--at the right is the U. S. cable
+office, occupying the site of the old Russian fur warehouse. Next is the
+three-story building used for courthouse and jail, formerly the Russian
+Barracks where the Siberian Battalion was quartered. This is one of the
+most prominent of the old buildings which remain. In front of this is
+the stairway leading to the top of the hill on which is situated the
+building of the Agricultural Department, on the site of the former
+residence of the chief manager of the Russian American Company. Around
+this hill were the batteries of the Russians, commanding the Kolosh
+village and the harbor. The former building was often called the
+Governor's Mansion, or the Baranof Castle, was built about 1837 and was
+destroyed by fire in 1894. The hill commands a fine view of the harbor
+and the surrounding islands. The present structure is the headquarters
+of the Alaska division of the Agricultural Department. Opposite the
+stairway to the hill is the way leading to the "Ranche;" the open square
+was the former parade ground of the Army, and later of the U. S. Marines
+from the Man-of-War which was stationed here. East of the old barracks
+building is the former counting house of the Company, now occupied as
+the U. S. Postoffice, and during the time when Sitka was the Capital of
+the Territory it was used by the United States for a Customs office, and
+by the Governor as an office. Going east on Lincoln Street, the next
+large building at the right was the old bakery and shops of the Company,
+later commonly known as the Sitka Trading Company Building, having been
+occupied by that company for many years. Beyond this on the same side of
+the street at a short distance is a small building, standing back from
+the walk, surmounted by a Greek cross, which marks the site of the first
+church built in Sitka, in 1817. Next to this lot is the one formerly
+occupied by the Lutheran Church, built in the time of Etolin, and in
+which the first church service was held by Chaplain Rainier of the U. S.
+Army, after the American occupation.
+
+[Illustration: Interior of Cathedral of St. Michael]
+
+Across the street is the Cathedral of St. Michael, the headquarters of
+the Greek Orthodox Church in Alaska. In the Territory are claimed to be
+ten thousand communicants of that faith and from Sitka the management of
+affairs is conducted. The church is in the form of a cross and is
+surmounted by the Greek cross. The interior is richly decorated after
+the usual custom of the Russian churches. Candlesticks of massive design
+stand at either side of the doors of the inner sanctuary. The building,
+with its dome, is distinctive, and is a good example of Russian church
+architecture.[30]
+
+Continuing east along Lincoln Street a short distance beyond the
+Cathedral a vacant space on the right marks the spot formerly occupied
+by the clubhouse, built by Etolin for a home for the clerks, navigators,
+and other employes of the Company--opposite it was situated the foundry
+and machine shops, while a little farther to the east stood the
+sawmills, at the mouth of the outlet to Swan Lake. Along this stream was
+the eastern boundary of the stockade of the Russian fort, with a
+blockhouse near the point of the lower end of the lake. East of this
+stockade were the kitchen gardens, but all traces of them have long
+since vanished. Continuing along the street following the shore, the
+Bishop's house is passed on the left, where the Russian school is
+taught, and a short distance beyond is the house of the Episcopal Bishop
+of the diocese, Rev. Bishop P. T. Rowe. Still farther to the east is the
+Sheldon Jackson School, the Presbyterian Mission School, consisting of a
+group of buildings, the first of which was completed in 1880, under the
+superintendence of Rev. Alonzo Austin, and others have been added from
+time to time until the present fine establishment has resulted. An
+octagonal structure shelters the Sheldon Jackson Museum, a fine
+collection of native work of many kinds, gathered from all parts of
+Alaska by the first superintendent of native schools for the Territory.
+A small paper is published by the mission, the _Verstovian_, and is
+printed by the native students of the institution.
+
+Opposite the mission, at the edge of the curving beach, a large,
+flat-topped rock lies at the side of the way, called the Blarney Stone.
+On this it is said that Baranof often sat, during the last year of his
+residence here, and looked out through the vistas between the islands to
+the broad Pacific. What were the thoughts of the brave, strong, strange,
+old man as he sat here will never be known, but it is sure that there
+was much of sadness for him in those days.
+
+Beyond the Mission is the famous Indian River Road, a continuation of
+the Governor's Walk of the Russians, and often called the Lover's Lane.
+It winds along the shore of the sea, through the Park, with here and
+there an opening in the forest where there are splendid examples of
+Hydah carvings in the tall totems placed in well chosen spots. These
+totem poles were taken to the St. Louis Fair in 1904, as a part of the
+Alaska Exhibit, and afterward returned to this park. One of the most
+interesting is the house totem of Chief Son-i-hat, of Kasaan,
+accompanied by the four supporting columns of the ancient tribal house.
+
+From the rustic bridge on the Indian River there are enticing paths
+leading along the stream and toward Mt. Verstovia, which towers above
+the bay to the height of 3,216 feet. Along the river, known as the
+_Kolosh Ryeka_, by the Russians, the winding paths are bordered
+with huge Sitka spruces and giant cedars, with the space thickly filled
+with a dense growth of shrubbery, among which is prominent the Devil's
+Club (_panax horridus_), with its beautifully palmated leaves and
+its cruel spines concealed underneath. This shrub was formerly used by
+the natives as an instrument of torture in their witchcraft. In the
+depths of the forest the earth is covered with a carpet of ferns and
+mosses, and the trunks of fallen trees of former years may be seen with
+other trees of from two to three feet in diameter growing on their
+prostrate bodies.
+
+Returning toward the town, at the Mission the Davis Road turns toward
+the north. It was built by the Army during their occupation, in the
+process of their securing wood from the forest, and named for General
+Jeff C. Davis, the Commander of the post. Following it the Military
+Cemetery is reached at the distance of about three-eighths of a mile.
+Here are some interesting monuments, among them being that of Gouverneur
+Morris, a descendent of the famous financier of the Revolution. A stone
+marks the resting place of a lieutenant of the U. S. Army, around whose
+memory lingers stories of a duel with a brother officer in a solitary
+spot along Indian River, over a Russian beauty of Sitka.
+
+Turning aside from Lincoln Street at the Mission, or at the street next
+westward, a walk of a quarter of a mile leads to the experiment farm of
+the Agricultural Department of the United States. There may be seen many
+products, including apples and strawberries of an excellent quality. Of
+the latter is a variety originated by Prof. Georgeson through
+hybridizing the cultivated berries with the wild native berry which
+grows luxuriantly at many places in Alaska.
+
+On reaching the Cathedral a street turns northward along which one
+finds, at the right, on the little knoll in the town, among the
+scattered spruce trees, the spot where formerly stood the tea houses of
+the Russians. They were in the center of the public gardens which
+covered the knoll and were approached by beautifully bordered walks.
+Farther along, on the left of the walk, is the remaining Russian
+blockhouse, the last of three which formerly stood on the line of the
+stockade that protected the town from the Kolosh. A little back of the
+blockhouse is the grave of the Princess Maksoutoff, marked with a marble
+slab lying on the raised mound above her resting place. At the end of
+the walk is the modern Russian cemetery, with its forest of Greek
+crosses, and in the center, at the highest point, is a platform from
+which is had an excellent view of the harbor, islands, Mt. Edgecumbe,
+and of the lake and town.
+
+Returning as far as the site of the tea gardens, then going westward
+toward the water, at the right is an enclosure in which there is a small
+building marking the site of the Koloshian Church, or the Church of the
+Resurrection, as it is called in the church records. This was the
+building occupied by the natives in 1855 when they made an attack upon
+the town. It was on the line of the stockade which formerly ran from the
+water front at the end of the "Ranche," east to the lake, then back to
+the water at the sawmill. On the line of the stockade were three
+blockhouses, the church being between the first and second of these.
+Surrounding the site of the church are a number of graves, and among
+them are some interesting monuments dating back to the Russian days, for
+this is the older of the two cemeteries.
+
+[Illustration: Russian Blockhouse.]
+
+Going down to the entrance to the native town, or "Ranche," there is a
+choice of two streets, one in front of the houses along the water front,
+the other at the rear. The one at the front is preferable. The houses
+are built of lumber and in general are constructed by the native
+workmen, who have been instructed at the mission school, at which there
+is an excellent manual training department. The great tribal houses of
+former days have long since disappeared. The older houses were named by
+the natives much as were the inns of old England; the _Gooch-haet_,
+or wolf house; the _Tahn-haet_, or sea-lion house; the
+_Kahse-haet_, or cow house, and others, named for different
+animals. The _Kahse-haet_ was named from the head of a cow being
+brought there from a wreck off the coast in which the animal was
+drowned. Formerly there were many canoes along the water front--as many
+as 150 at a time being often seen, but now their place is occupied by
+gas boats--generally built by the owners and the engines installed by
+them. The loss in the picturesque is partly compensated by the gain in
+utility, but the native canoe was a wonder of marine architecture, cut
+from a single log and shaped with fire and adzed into elegant lines. An
+occasional specimen is sometimes yet to be seen on the beach or
+carefully covered from the weather in some sheltered and secluded cove.
+
+There were no great house totem poles in front of the houses as there
+are at Wrangell, Kasaan and elsewhere. There were some mortuary columns
+near the grave houses which formerly stood on the ridge back of the
+village, but these have long been covered by the dense undergrowth which
+sprang up in recent years.
+
+In this village have lived some interesting and strong characters.
+Annahootz and Katlean both figured boldly in the history of the town,
+and Sitka Jack was noted for his great potlatch held in 1877, when he
+gave a housewarming at which he presented to his visitors over 500
+blankets, not to mention the hoochinoo and whiskey which flowed
+liberally for all. He beggared himself by the feast, but his reputation
+was established above reproach for the rest of life. Princess Tom was
+another celebrity, whose fame was founded on her wealth which was
+estimated at ten thousand dollars, and which was acquired by skill in
+basket making and shrewdness in dealing in native manufactures on which
+she was a connoisseur--going out to the villages in her long canoe to
+gather the stock of baskets, bracelets, carved dishes, masks, dance
+hats, etc., which she disposed of to advantage upon her return to Sitka.
+Chief Tlan Tech was one of the prominent citizens and frequently might
+have been seen on the street in his frock coat, tall hat, with cane and
+kid gloves, cutting quite a dash. His English vocabulary was very
+limited and he was accustomed for many years to fly the Russian flag
+over his canoe when he went out to a neighboring village for a potlatch.
+
+Some of the silversmiths were skilled workmen. Sitka Jack, and Kooska,
+and Hydah Jake, all fashioned bracelets, spoons, and other articles,
+carved with totemic designs of delicate beauty and line of proportion,
+made from silver coins which they melted down.
+
+Some of the shamans of the olden time acquired great influence and made
+life miserable for their fellow-citizens by the practice of witchcraft.
+One of the most obnoxious of these, called Skondoo, was captured and his
+shock of matted hair, which, like that of Samson, was supposed to be the
+seat of his power, was shorn by the commander of the U. S. S. "Pinta," and
+in addition he was thoroughly scrubbed with soap and brush, perhaps for
+the first time in his existence.
+
+Even to this day there are instances of the weird belief in the villages
+at Hootznahoo or at Klukwan. Not many years ago an Indian girl was
+rescued by the whites from a damp hole under a house where she had been
+confined to die of cold and starvation by the order of the shaman, or
+_Ekht_, as the Thlingit calls him.
+
+Among the island and the inlet dented shores surrounding the town are
+many interesting places forming an opportunity for delightful
+excursions. The most desirable of these are:
+
+Mount Edgecumbe, 3467 ft.--Taking a launch from Sitka the trip may be
+made to Crab Bay, or to the landing behind the island of St. Lazaria on
+which is a populous bird rookery, and the ascent of the mountain is
+possible to be made in a day. Perhaps better that two days be taken to
+the trip, however. The first to go to the top was Lisianski in 1804.
+From the summit of the mountain an unusually beautiful panorama is to be
+had of island-studded bay, and mountain ridges capped with glaciers on
+one side, while on the other spreads the expanse of the broad Pacific.
+
+Old Sitka, and Katleanski Bay.--By launch the site of the Russian
+settlement of 1799-1802 may be reached and from that point a
+continuation of the excursion may be made to the head of Nesquashanski
+Bay, where the meadows are situated from which the Russians procured
+their provender for the cattle kept at the post. In the streams entering
+the bay may be seen, during the season of the salmon run, the strange
+spectacle of the brown bears in the role of fishermen, scooping salmon
+from the waters with their paws, if good fortune attend. This journey
+may be made in a day.
+
+Silver Bay.--A veritable Norwegian fjord transplanted to Alaska--with
+picturesque waterfalls plunging into its waters, deep glacial valleys
+entering at right angles with Yosemite-like cliffs bordering them, the
+Scottish bluebells clinging to the dripping rocks which beetle overhead,
+Kalampy's Slide around which hangs a tale, the Stewart mine, etc.--about
+ten miles to the head of the bay, where a fine waterfall plunges from
+the mountainside.
+
+The Redoubt and the Globokoe Lake.--Southwest from Sitka about ten miles
+was the location of the fishery of the Russians from which for more than
+sixty years they drew their stores of _krasnia ruiba_ (the red
+salmon), which provided so important a part of their subsistence. Here
+in the rocky wall which divided Globokoe, or Deep Lake, from the sea,
+and over which the outlet flowed, channels were blasted, forming
+reservoirs, and in these channels were placed _zapors_, or fences,
+which made traps into which the salmon swam and lay in the clear cold
+pools until they were removed for use. Here also was one of the Russian
+flouring mills, where they ground the wheat brought from California, or
+from the farms of the Hudson's Bay Company at Nisqually or on the
+Columbia.
+
+The Sitka Hot Springs.--About four miles farther to the southwest than
+the Redoubt, is situated the Sitka Hot Springs, possessing valuable
+medicinal qualities, and used for more than a century as a health
+resort. Here Dr. Goddard has established a sanitarium in the midst of a
+veritable nature lover's paradise, the forest behind, and the
+island-studded sea in front, with game in the deep woods and fish in the
+sea, all to be had for the taking.
+
+Many other interesting and beautiful places may be visited. Lisianski
+Bay, Deep Bay, Herring Bay with the gorge of Sawmill Creek and the chain
+of lakes, Blue Lake, and others lying adjacent, are among the important
+ones.
+
+Mt. Verstovia.--The ascent of this mountain comprises one of the most
+interesting excursions about the town. The trail leaves the shore of
+Jamestown Bay at the point where the trough of the watering place of the
+"Jamestown," came to the beach. This place may be reached by boat or on
+foot through the Park by the mouth of Indian River. The ascent should be
+under the guidance of one familiar with the route, for it is not plainly
+marked and none but an experienced woodsman can find the way alone. It
+leads through a forest, the first 800 or 1,000 feet through dense
+undergrowth under the trees, the mosses and ferns forming a veritable
+carpet; above that the woods are more open--at about 2,500 feet the
+forest ceases. It is called Koster's Trail. The first eminence or
+shoulder of the mountain is near the timber line and is often spoken of
+as the Mountain of the Cross, while above it towers the Arrowhead, or
+the summit of Verstovia, otherwise called at times Popoff Mountain, or
+the Ponce, to a height of 3,216 feet, nearly a Russian verst, and from
+this it derives its name. From the top an expanse of island-studded
+waters stretch toward the sea. Eastward crest after crest of
+glacier-capped peaks rise for a hundred miles, northward the lofty
+summits of Mt. Crillon and Mt. Fairweather may be seen at an elevation
+of over 15,000 feet, equal in height to the highest Alp of Switzerland.
+Around the base of the Arrowhead, in July and August, are found a myriad
+of wild flowers, carpeting the earth--violets, daises, cyclamen, and a
+multitude of others.
+
+These are the nearer points which may be visited, but more extended
+journeys full of new and varied interest, to Sergius Narrows and Peril
+Straits or to the Place of Islands and the Chicagof Mine to the
+northward, and to Redfish Bay to the southward, may be made.
+
+
+
+
+Footnotes
+
+[Footnote 1: January 20th, 1820, a letter written by the Directory at
+St. Petersburg to Chief Manager Muravief at Sitka enclosing instructions
+previously given to Hagemeister, instructing him to find the descendants
+of Chirikof's lost men, urging that it must be done, and expressing
+surprise that it had been neglected thus long. (Russian American
+Archives, Correspondence, Vol. II, No. 108.)]
+
+[Footnote 2: In Wrangell, and at a few other places in Alaska may yet be
+seen some of these old tribal houses, built as in primitive days in most
+ways. The beams and planks were fashioned with an adze, and the evenness
+of the workmanship in hewing them is marvelous.]
+
+[Footnote 3: The livestock taken to Sitka in 1804 consisted of "Four
+cows, two calves, three bulls, three goats, a ewe and a ram, with many
+swine and fowls." (Lisianski, Voyage Round the World, p. 218.)]
+
+[Footnote 4: Lisianski made the surveys and named the islands of the
+archipelago which had not been charted by Vancouver, of which he says:
+"By our survey it appears that amongst the group of islands, which in my
+chart I have denominated the Sitka Islands, from the inhabitants, who
+call themselves Sitka-hans, or Sitka people, are four principal ones,
+viz.: Jacobi, Crooze, Baranof, and Chichagof." (A Voyage Round the
+World, Lisianski, p. 235.)]
+
+[Footnote 5: The Russian sazhen is 7 feet.]
+
+[Footnote 6: Pronounced Al-e-ut.]
+
+[Footnote 7: These books and letters were brought by Resanof in the
+"Nedeshda," and upon reaching Kodiak Resanof established the library at
+that place. It was afterward removed to Sitka, probably by Baranof when
+he changed the chief factory to that place in 1807. After the United
+States took possession the library disappeared, whether taken to Russia
+or left in Sitka does not appear, but the books were likely left in
+Sitka and gradually disappeared through theft in the years when there
+was no custodian of such property.]
+
+[Footnote 8: The "Neva" was long identified with the affairs of the
+colony. Bought in England for the first Russian expedition round the
+world, Captain Lisianski reached Sitka in time for her to participate in
+the driving of the Indians from their fortifications. She returned to
+Russia later to be sailed to the colony in 1810, and was on her third
+voyage at the time of her loss.]
+
+[Footnote 9: Golofnin, Voyage of the Sloop "Kamchatka," in Mat. Pt. 4,
+p. 103.]
+
+[Footnote 10: Lutke: Voyages. Mat. Pt. 4, p. 147.]
+
+[Footnote 11: The tows were large pieces of native copper from the
+Copper River hammered out flat by the natives. These were carried in
+front of the chiefs by slaves who beat them like gongs.]
+
+[Footnote 12: In the church records appears the entry: "Died, August 27,
+1832, Naval Captain of the 1st Rank and Cavalier Baron Ferdinand
+Wrangell's daughter--Mary." There is also to be found: "Died, December
+29th, 1839, Priest Vasili Michaeloff Ocheredin, 23 years old."]
+
+[Footnote 13: Narrative of a Voyage Round the World, 1836-1842, by
+Captain Sir Edward Belcher, Vol. 1, pages 95 et seq.]
+
+[Footnote 14: Frederick Schwatka, the explorer, seems to have been one
+of the first to put the story in print, which he did in the early
+eighties. It appeared in the Alaska News, a newspaper of Juneau, on
+December 24th, 1896, and the time is fixed as being in the
+administration of Baron Wrangell. In 1891 Hon. Henry E. Hayden published
+it in verse in a small volume printed at Sitka. John W. Arctander, in
+his Lady in Blue, elaborates it to a small volume and ascribes it to
+Etolin's time.
+
+There is a strange fact which gives some color to the story. In the
+Russian American Company's Archives now on file in the State Department,
+Washington, D. C., under date of September 23rd, 1833, a letter from St.
+Petersburg refers to a report of Baron Wrangell of November 30, 1831,
+which reported the death of under officer Paul Buikof, and implicating
+one Col. Borusof. Unfortunately the records of 1831 are missing and so
+the report cannot be had. Baron Wrangell's daughter, Mary, died during
+his stay in Sitka.]
+
+[Footnote 15: Between 1821 and 1862 there were shipped by the Russian
+American Company, from Alaska, 51,315 sea-otter, 831,396 fur-seal,
+319,514 beaver, 291,655 fox. Fur-Seal Arbitration, Vol. 2, p. 127
+(Washington, Government Printing Office).]
+
+[Footnote 16: "For the largest deer, which weighs about four poods, five
+sazhens of calico are paid; for a duck, a quid of tobacco; for a goose,
+two quids; fish priced according to size all according to price list
+established by the commander of the post of New Archangel." Russkie na
+Vostochnom Okean (Russians on the Eastern Ocean), by A. Markof, St.
+Petersburg, 1856.]
+
+[Footnote 17: Hunters who disposed of their furs to an English
+shipmaster were arrested and sent to Siberia. Russian American Archives.
+Corr. Vol. I, p. 275. In January of 1820 Muravief was ordered to watch
+certain officers of a ship who were suspected of trading for furs on
+their own account. Id. Vol. 2, p. 38.]
+
+[Footnote 18: The mill on Sawmill Creek was located in the gorge below
+where the dam is situated which provides the power for the present light
+plant of the town. The timbers of the old mill were removed in 1916 to
+make way for the building of the present improvement.]
+
+[Footnote 19: Golobokoe Lake was sounded to a depth of 190 fathoms by
+the Russians. Materialui, Pt. 3, p. 48.]
+
+[Footnote 20: Obzor Russkikh Colonii iv Syevernoe-Amerika, Survey of the
+Russian Colonies in North America, by Captain-Lieutenant P. N. Golovin,
+pp. 72-73.]
+
+[Footnote 21: Their names and dates of holding office are as follows:
+ Alexander Andreevich Baranof, 1790 to January 11, 1818.
+ Leonti Andreanvich Hagemeister, Jan. 11, 1818, to Oct. 24, 1818.
+ Semen Ivanovich Yanovski, Oct. 24, 1818, to Sept. 15, 1820.
+ Matvei Ivanovich Muravief, Sept. 15, 1820, to Oct. 14, 1825.
+ Peter Egorovich Chistiakof, Oct. 14, 1825, to June 1st, 1830.
+ Baron Ferdinand Von Wrangell, June 1st, 1830, to Oct. 29, 1835.
+ Ivan Antonovich Kupreanof, Oct. 29, 1835, to May 25, 1840.
+ Adolf Karlovich Etolin, May 25, 1840, to July 9, 1845.
+ Michael Dmitrevich Tebenkof, July 9, 1845, to Oct. 14, 1850.
+ Nikolai Yakovlevich Rosenberg, Oct. 14, 1850, to March 31, 1853.
+ Alexander Ilich Rudakof, March 31, 1853, to April 22, 1854.
+ Stephen Vasili Voevodski, April 22, 1854, to June 22, 1859.
+ Ivan Vasilivich Furuhelm, June 22, 1859, to Dec. 2, 1863.
+ Prince Dmitri Maksoutof, Dec. 2, 1863, to Oct. 18, 1867.]
+
+[Footnote 22: The Russian soldiery were dressed in a dark uniform,
+trimmed with red, with glazed caps. The United States troops appeared in
+the usual full dress.
+
+Of American ladies, six were present: the wives of General Davis,
+Colonel Weeks, Capt. Wood, and Rev. Mr. Rainier, of the "John L.
+Stevens," the wife of Mr. Dodge, Collector of the Port, and the wife of
+Captain MacDougall, of the "Jamestown." Six Russian ladies were also
+present: the Princess Maksoutoff, the wife and daughter of Vice-Governor
+Gardsishoff, and three whose names I do not know. H. Ex. Doc. No. 177,
+40th Cong. 2nd Sess., p. 72.]
+
+[Footnote 23: On the lowering of the Russian ensign it caught in the
+halyards and a sailor was sent aloft to release it. He tore it loose and
+flung it down on the bayonets of the Russian soldiery.]
+
+[Footnote 24: On December 14, 1807, the Russian ship "Czaritza," sailed
+for Russia, via London, with 168 passengers. January 1, 1868, the
+Russian ship "Cyane" cleared for Novgorod, Asia, with 69 soldiers of the
+garrison on board. November 30, 1868, the Russian ship "Winged Arrow,"
+went to Kronstadt, but there is no record of the passengers. April 24th,
+1868, the American steamer "Alexander" took special clearance for
+Nikolofski, Asia, to touch at all the posts along the Alaskan coasts to
+close up the business of the Russian American Company. Customs Records
+of Alaska, Record of Clearances.
+
+The ship "Winged Arrow" sailed on December 8th, 1868, for St.
+Petersburg, taking over 300 persons. Seattle Intelligencer, January 11,
+1869. This is the same voyage as the one above under the clearance of
+November 30th.]
+
+[Footnote 25: If we may believe the current reports of the time, the
+military occupation of Sitka was anything but a happy time for the civil
+inhabitants, especially the Russians who remained. See Colyer's Report,
+Ex. Doc. H. R. 41st Cong. 2nd Ses., p. 1030; Seattle Intelligencer,
+December 14th. 1868; The Victoria Colonist, et al.]
+
+[Footnote 26: Annahootz, the friend of the whites, married his 13th
+wife. Afterward becoming blind and decrepit he starved himself to death.
+See Sitka Alaskan, February 6, 1890.
+
+Katlean still lives at Sitka and may often be seen on the streets of the
+town.]
+
+[Footnote 27: The population of Sitka in 1818 was: Russian, 190;
+Creoles, 72; Aleuts, 173 of males, and female 185; of Russian and
+Creole, total, 620. Materialui, pt. 3, p. 20.
+
+January 1, 1825, there were: Russians, 309; Creoles, 58; Aleuts, 33.
+Total, 400. Ib. p. 52.
+
+In April, 1880, citizens by birth, 92; citizens by naturalization, 123;
+citizens by treaty, 229. Total, 444. Beardslee's Report, 47th Cong. Sen.
+Ex. Doc. No. 71, p. 34. In this census are many names well known in
+Alaska by the "Old Timers," as: A. T. Whitford, John G. Brady, N. A.
+Fuller, M. Travis, Edward DeGroff, S. Sessions, R. Willoughby, M. P.
+Berry, A. Cohen, Miss P. Cohen, Miss H. Cohen, Ed. Bean, D. Ackerman, A.
+Milletich, P. T. Corcoran, L. Caplin, Pierre Erussard, Ed. Doyle, George
+E. Pilz, Nicholas Haley, John McKenna, Reub Albertson, John Olds and
+others.]
+
+[Footnote 28: Governors of Alaska who made their residence at Sitka:
+
+John H. Kinkead, of Nevada, appointed July 4, 1884. Alfred P.
+Swineford, of Michigan, appointed May 8, 1885. Lyman E. Knapp, of
+Vermont, appointed April 32, 1889. James Sheakley, of Alaska, appointed
+June 28, 1893. John G. Brady, of Alaska, appointed June 23, 1897. ]
+
+[Footnote 29: "The United States District Court, established by the Act
+of May 17th, 1884, was formerly organized on the 4th day of November of
+that year in a room set apart for the use of the court in the old
+barracks building at Sitka, the following officers being present: Ward
+McAllister, Jr., Judge; Andrew T. Lewis, Clerk of the Court; Munson C.
+Hillyer, U. S. Marshal; Edward W. Haskett, District Attorney.
+
+"On the same day John F. McLean, an officer connected with the signal
+service, and Major M. P. Berry, a veteran of the Civil and Mexican wars,
+were admitted to the bar, as well as District Attorney Haskett. These
+three gentlemen comprised the Alaska Bar of Attorneys until June 20th,
+1885, when Mr. John G. Held was added to the roll and in the month of
+October, 1885, Willoughby Clark, John F. Maloney, R. D. Crittenden, and
+John G. Brady were admitted." Alaska Bar Association and Sketch of the
+Judiciary, by Arthur K. Delaney.]
+
+[Footnote 30: The first church in Alaska was built at Kodiak (Paulovski)
+in 1795, the next at Unalaska soon after, and the third at Sitka in
+1817.]
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: MAP OF SITKA--OCTOBER, 1867]
+
+ A. Battery No. 1.
+ B. Battery No. 2, Vralaskian Battery.
+ C. Blockhouse No. 1.
+ D. Blockhouse No. 2.
+ E. Blockhouse No. 3.
+ 1. Warehouse.
+ 2. Shop and Store.
+ 3. Subsistence Storehouse.
+ 4. Tannery for Furs.
+ 6. Barracks, three stories.
+ 7. Office Building, two stories.
+ 8. Governor's House.
+ 9. Wash and Bath House.
+ 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 22, and 23. Dock Yard and Buildings.
+ 16. School Building.
+ 18. Market for Indians.
+ 19. Lime Kiln.
+ 20. Unfinished Barracks.
+ 25. Bakery, Joinery, etc.
+ 61. Officers' Lodgings, two stories.
+ 66. Laundry.
+ 74. Sawmill.
+ 75. Tannery.
+ 76. Unfinished Bath House.
+ 77. Water Flour Mill.
+ 96. Aleutian Dwellings.
+ 102. Bishop's House, two stories.
+ 103. Hospital, two stories.
+ 116, 117. Arbors on Public Gardens.
+ 118. Powder Magazine.
+ 121. School Building for Indians.
+ 122. Observatory on Japonski Island.
+ 123. House for Observer, Wharf, Garden, Hotbeds, etc.
+ Cathedral of St. Michael.
+ Church of the Resurrection (Koloshian Church).
+ 129. Hulk and Movable Bridge.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Story of Sitka, by C. L. Andrews
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+ <meta name="generator" content="ISO-8859-1" />
+ <title>
+ The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Story of Sitka by C. L. Andrews
+ </title>
+ <style type="text/css" xml:space="preserve">
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+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Story of Sitka, by C. L. Andrews
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Story of Sitka
+ The Historic Outpost of the Northwest Coast
+
+Author: C. L. Andrews
+
+Release Date: April 2, 2010 [EBook #31862]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE STORY OF SITKA ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Roger Frank and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at http://www.fadedpage.com
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+ <!-- this h1 for epub generation intentionally does not display in HTML -->
+ <h1>
+ The Story of Sitka
+ </h1>
+ <div class="titlepage">
+ <p class="fs18">
+ THE STORY OF
+ </p>
+ <p class="fs22 mb50">
+ SITKA
+ </p>
+ <p class="fs14 mb40">
+ THE HISTORIC OUTPOST OF THE<br />NORTHWEST COAST
+ </p>
+ <p class="fs14 mb60">
+ THE CHIEF FACTORY OF THE RUSSIAN<br />AMERICAN COMPANY
+ </p>
+ <p class="i">
+ By
+ </p>
+ <p class="fs12">
+ C. L. ANDREWS
+ </p>
+ <p class="i">
+ Seattle, Washington
+ </p>
+ <div class="tpi">
+ <img alt="emblem" src="images/illus-emb.png" />
+ </div>
+ <p class="fs08">
+ PRESS OF<br /> Lowman &amp; Hanford Co.<br /> SEATTLE
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <hr class="pb" />
+ <table summary="TOC">
+ <tr>
+ <td colspan="3" class="center fs12">
+ CONTENTS
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tcol1">
+ &#160;
+ </td>
+ <td class="tcol2">
+ Foreword
+ </td>
+ <td class="tcol3">
+ <a href="#link_1">1</a>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tcol1">
+ I
+ </td>
+ <td class="tcol2">
+ Discovery
+ </td>
+ <td class="tcol3">
+ <a href="#link_2">7</a>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tcol1">
+ II
+ </td>
+ <td class="tcol2">
+ Settlement
+ </td>
+ <td class="tcol3">
+ <a href="#link_3">13</a>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tcol1">
+ III
+ </td>
+ <td class="tcol2">
+ Progress of the Colony
+ </td>
+ <td class="tcol3">
+ <a href="#link_4">27</a>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tcol1">
+ IV
+ </td>
+ <td class="tcol2">
+ Natives
+ </td>
+ <td class="tcol3">
+ <a href="#link_5">45</a>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tcol1">
+ V
+ </td>
+ <td class="tcol2">
+ Churches and Schools
+ </td>
+ <td class="tcol3">
+ <a href="#link_6">54</a>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tcol1">
+ VI
+ </td>
+ <td class="tcol2">
+ Social Life
+ </td>
+ <td class="tcol3">
+ <a href="#link_7">60</a>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tcol1">
+ VII
+ </td>
+ <td class="tcol2">
+ Trade and Industry
+ </td>
+ <td class="tcol3">
+ <a href="#link_8">66</a>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tcol1">
+ VIII
+ </td>
+ <td class="tcol2">
+ Sitka under United States Rule
+ </td>
+ <td class="tcol3">
+ <a href="#link_9">77</a>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tcol1">
+ IX
+ </td>
+ <td class="tcol2">
+ What to See
+ </td>
+ <td class="tcol3">
+ <a href="#link_10">92</a>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+ <table summary="LOI" class="mt40">
+ <tr>
+ <td colspan="2" class="center fs12">
+ ILLUSTRATIONS
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td colspan="2" class="tcol3">
+ Facing Page
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tcol2">
+ Lovers&#8217; Lane
+ </td>
+ <td class="tcol3">
+ <a href="#link_i1">1</a>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tcol2">
+ Mount Edgecumbe
+ </td>
+ <td class="tcol3">
+ <a href="#link_i2">11</a>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tcol2">
+ Sitka in 1805
+ </td>
+ <td class="tcol3">
+ <a href="#link_i3">25</a>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tcol2">
+ Bakery and Shops of the Russians
+ </td>
+ <td class="tcol3">
+ <a href="#link_i4">36</a>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tcol2">
+ The Ranche
+ </td>
+ <td class="tcol3">
+ <a href="#link_i5">46</a>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tcol2">
+ Cathedral of St. Michael
+ </td>
+ <td class="tcol3">
+ <a href="#link_i6">54</a>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tcol2">
+ The Madonna
+ </td>
+ <td class="tcol3">
+ <a href="#link_i7">56</a>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tcol2">
+ The Baranof Castle
+ </td>
+ <td class="tcol3">
+ <a href="#link_i8">60</a>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tcol2">
+ The Grave of Princess Maksoutoff
+ </td>
+ <td class="tcol3">
+ <a href="#link_i9">62</a>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tcol2">
+ Sitka in 1860
+ </td>
+ <td class="tcol3">
+ <a href="#link_i10">66</a>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tcol2">
+ Sitka in 1869
+ </td>
+ <td class="tcol3">
+ <a href="#link_i11">77</a>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tcol2">
+ Sitka&#8211;East on Lincoln Street
+ </td>
+ <td class="tcol3">
+ <a href="#link_i12">93</a>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tcol2">
+ Interior of Cathedral
+ </td>
+ <td class="tcol3">
+ <a href="#link_i13">95</a>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tcol2">
+ Russian Blockhouse
+ </td>
+ <td class="tcol3">
+ <a href="#link_i14">100</a>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tcol2">
+ Map of Sitka
+ </td>
+ <td class="tcol3">
+ <a href="#link_i15">108</a>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+ <hr class="pb" />
+ <p class="c">
+ TO MY MOTHER<br /> THIS VOLUME IS AFFECTIONATELY<br /> DEDICATED
+ </p>
+ <hr class="hr10" />
+ <p class="c mb30">
+ THE AUTHOR
+ </p>
+ <p class="c">
+ Copyright 1922<br /> By C. L. ANDREWS<br /> Seattle, Wash.
+ </p>
+ <hr class="pb" />
+ <div class="figcenter">
+ <a id="link_i1"></a><img src="images/illus-004.jpg" alt="" />
+ <p class="center caption">
+ Lovers&#8217; Lane, Sitka.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <hr class="pb" />
+ <h2>
+ <span class="pagenum pncolor"><a id="page_1"></a>1</span><a id="link_1"></a>SITKA<br /><span
+ class="h2fs"><i>Foreword</i></span>
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The panorama of sea, island, and mountain, which holds Sitka, Alaska, as a
+ jewel in its setting, is one of the most beautiful of those which surround
+ the cities of the world. Toward the sea from the peninsula on which Sitka
+ is situated stretches an expanse of waters, studded with forest-clad
+ islands which break the swell of the Pacific that foams and tumbles on the
+ outer barriers. To the westward Mount Edgecumbe lifts its perfect cone,
+ its summit truncated by the old crater whose fires have been dead for
+ centuries; to the northward Harbor peak lifts its signal to mariners; the
+ Sisters, with a gleam of snow and ice among their pinnacles, lie in the
+ distance of Indian River; to the east is the arrowhead of Mount Verstovia;
+ the glaciers glisten beyond; and the sweep of mist-clad mountains, in
+ their softness, beyond the bay to the southeast completes the circle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Radiating like the spokes of a wheel, waterways with historic memories
+ reach out <span class="pagenum pncolor"><a id="page_2"></a>2</span> from
+ the town. Krestof Bay, where the early navigators cast anchor; Neva
+ Strait, commemorating the first Russian ship that visited Sitka from
+ around the world; Katleanski Bay, on which was situated Old Sitka; Silver
+ Bay, a Norwegian fjord transplanted to Alaska; Lisianski Bay, named for
+ the Russian navigator of a century ago; the inlet at Ozerskoe Redoubt and
+ Globokoe (Deep) Lake; the island-studded way to the Hot Springs; each with
+ its individual charm; the ocean, with the deep, rich, marine tints of
+ northern waters; the forest of blue, that folds like a robe over the
+ mountains; the mountain summits beside the glaciers, clad in the
+ exquisitely wonderful green of the Northland, all are delightful. But when
+ the sun sinks low in the west, with the long, lingering twilight of the
+ North, and the soft, delicate rays touch and blend with the water and
+ islands, the mountains and sky&#8211;then, in the mystery of the evening,
+ is the supreme beauty of the land. To those who have really known and
+ loved Sitka, there is no place on earth to compare.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There are pleasant recollections of those who have lived there. Jovial
+ Edward Degroff and his stories at the Roastology Club; the Mills, whose
+ hospitable home is known to every resident of the town; Wm. Gouverneur
+ Morris, whose name recalls a leader of <span class="pagenum pncolor"><a
+ id="page_3"></a>3</span> Revolutionary days; genial George Barron, who
+ upheld every good tradition of the Navy; the gallant old soldier, Matthew
+ P. Berry; dignified Judge Delaney, Alaska&#8217;s staunchest advocate
+ through all vicissitudes; Governor Brady, with his neverfailing faith in
+ Alaska&#8217;s greatness; Captain Francis, without whom the early naval
+ commanders thought the warships could not thread the intricate passages;
+ Nicholas Haley, with his optimistic dreams of El Doradoes; Pauline
+ Archangelsky, for whom the &#8220;Old Timers&#8221; have pleasant
+ recollections; Alonzo Austin and his mission; Captain Kilgore of the
+ &#8220;Rush&#8221;; Merrill, who caught on the photograph plate the
+ elusive spirit of the varying surroundings as only a true artist could;
+ Katherine Delaney Abrams, whose touch in watercolor delineated the glory
+ of the sunsets as none else could; Professor Richardson, who for a quarter
+ of a century returned year after year thousands of miles to perpetuate in
+ paintings the exquisite tintings of glaciers and mountain; George
+ Kostromitinoff (Father Sergius); Father Metropolski, and many others who
+ have made a part of the quaint old town.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is a saying that whosoever comes to love the waters of the Indian
+ River will ever after yearn for them, and it seems true, <span
+ class="pagenum pncolor"><a id="page_4"></a>4</span> for always is that
+ harking back to its banks with an unsatisfied longing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From prehistoric time this has been the home of the Sitka Kwan of the
+ Thlingit people. For sixty-three years it was the scene of the chief
+ activities of the Russian American Company, who represented the rule of
+ the Muscovites, who, when Chicago was but a blockhouse in a sedgy swamp on
+ the banks of a sluggish, reedy river, and when San Francisco was but a
+ mission and a Presidio of sun-burned bricks, maintained in Sitka a
+ community of busy people who were casting cannon and bells, and who were
+ building ships for commerce.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the establishment of this outpost the foundation was laid for the title
+ of the United States to the southeastern part of Alaska, a land rich in
+ fur and forest, in gold and copper, in marble and fish, the potential
+ possibilities of which are not even approximately forecasted today. Enough
+ to say of it, that in its limits are two mines, one of which has yielded
+ over sixty-five millions of dollars in gold, and the other ranks among the
+ richest of the mineral producing veins of the world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some may have an interest in the story of the quaint, quiet, beautiful
+ village on the shore of Baranof Island. I hope this may add something to
+ history, keeping the events of the <span class="pagenum pncolor"><a
+ id="page_5"></a>5</span> past bright in the memory of those who love the
+ Northland and its story, and add a little of interest and information of
+ the present to those who come as transient visitors to while away a few
+ days among the myriad islands of the Sitkan Archipelago. It is a link to
+ connect the Sitka of the past, the <i>Novo Arkangelsk</i> of the great
+ Russian American Company in the romantic days of the fur trade when it was
+ the center of the vast domain of Russian America and gathered to its
+ magazines the pelts of sea-otter and fox, with the Sitka of today with its
+ fisheries and mines. The old landmarks are fast disappearing, scarce a
+ year passes without some monument passing away, and even their location
+ will soon be forgotten unless some record is made for those who do not
+ know where they stood.
+ </p>
+ <hr class="pb" />
+ <p class="c fs20">
+ SITKA
+ </p>
+ <hr class="hr15" />
+ <p class="c fs12">
+ THE HISTORIC OUTPOST OF THE<br />NORTHWEST
+ </p>
+ <hr class="hr15" />
+ <h2>
+ <span class="pagenum pncolor"><a id="page_7"></a>7</span><a id="link_2"></a>CHAPTER
+ I<br /><span class="h2fs">DISCOVERY</span>
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Sitka of the Russians, a century ago, was the center of trade and
+ civilization on the Northwest Coast of America, the chief factory of the
+ Russian American Company in the vast and little known land of the Russian
+ Possessions in America. The sails of ships from far off Kronstadt on the
+ Baltic brought Russian cargoes. The famous clipper ships of New England
+ made it a stopping place on their way to the China seas. English traders
+ and explorers visited it on their voyages, and in it was centered the
+ trade of a wide region. It was the chief factory of the greatest rival in
+ the fur trade of the world, with which the Honourable, <span
+ class="pagenum pncolor"><a id="page_8"></a>8</span> the Hudson&#8217;s Bay
+ Company, which then was the controlling power in the English fur market,
+ had to contend.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The story of Sitka goes back past the middle of the Eighteenth Century.
+ There are Russians, Spanish, English, French and Americans who have woven
+ each their own part of the web of the tale, and the scenes have been as
+ varied and strange as the people.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ July 16, 1741, a Russian ship stood into a broad harbor on the Northwest
+ Coast of America. The commander, Captain Alexei Chirikof, had sailed three
+ thousand miles across the unknown Pacific from the shores of the Okhotsk
+ Sea. Civilized eyes had never before rested on these shores and he was
+ keen with the excitement of adventure and discovery as he dropped anchor.
+ He sent a party ashore in the ship&#8217;s longboat to explore, and
+ awaited the result. Days passed and no word or signal came, so the
+ remaining boat was sent to recall the party and it was swallowed up in the
+ labyrinth among the green islands. Signals indicated that it safely landed
+ but none returned to the ship although the orders were imperative that
+ both boats return at once. The last boat was gone. Three weeks passed.
+ Captain Chirikof could not reach the shore and could no longer lie at
+ anchor, so reluctantly and sadly he set his course for the <span
+ class="pagenum pncolor"><a id="page_9"></a>9</span> far off Kamchatkan
+ shores and sailed away from the port of missing men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nearly two centuries have passed since the Russian seamen landed and no
+ word has come from them. For more than seventy years the Russian
+ Government sought for some sign of their fate.<a id="FNanchor_1"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_1" class="fnanchor"><sup>[1]</sup></a> Tales were told of
+ a colony of Russians existing on the coast but each upon investigation
+ proved but a rumor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is a dim tradition among the Sitkas of men being lured ashore in the
+ long ago. They say that Chief Annahootz, the predecessor of the chief of
+ that name who was the firm friend of the whites at Sitka in 1878, was the
+ leading actor in the tragedy. Annahootz dressed himself in the skin of a
+ bear and played along the beach. So skillfully did he simulate the sinuous
+ motions of the animal that the Russians in the excitement of the chase
+ plunged into the woods in pursuit and there the savage warriors killed
+ them to a man, leaving none to tell the story. The disappearance of
+ Chirikof&#8217;s men has remained one of the many unsolved mysteries of
+ the Northland, and their fate will never be known to a certainty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <span class="pagenum pncolor"><a id="page_10"></a>10</span>The faulty
+ record of the navigation of a time that counted by dead reckoning, and
+ without a knowledge of the currents of those seas, does not tell us the
+ exact location of the anchorage, but beyond a reasonable doubt it was in
+ Sitka Sound, and the Russian seamen died at the hands of the Sitka Kwan of
+ the Thlingits. In this manner Sitka first became known to the White Man&#8217;s
+ World.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the 16th day of August, 1775, came the Royal Standard of Spain, flung
+ to the breeze from the little schooner &#8220;Sonora,&#8221; only 36 feet
+ in length, under command of Don Francisco de la Bodega y Quadra. Quadra
+ was one of the greatest and best of the Spanish navigators in the North.
+ His voyages are among the most successful of those of the mariners of his
+ nation in the waters of the north Pacific ocean, and his name was once
+ linked with that of the English Commander on the island now bearing the
+ name of Vancouver. Quadra came from the Mexican port of San Blas, and
+ after many thrilling adventures and grievous hardships he sailed into a
+ broad bay and dropped anchor. There was a mountain, of which he says:
+ &#8220;Of the most regular and beautiful form I had ever seen. It was also
+ quite detached from the great ridge of mountains. Its top was covered with
+ snow, under which appeared some gullies, which continue till about the
+ middle of the mountain, and from thence to the bottom are trees of the
+ same kind as those at Trinity.&#8221;
+ </p>
+ <div class="figcenter">
+ <a id="link_i2"></a><img src="images/illus-015.jpg" alt="" />
+ <p class="center caption">
+ Mount Edgecumbe.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ <span class="pagenum pncolor"><a id="page_11"></a>11</span>He named the
+ mountain <i>San Jacinthus</i>, and the point of the island that extends
+ out toward the sea, Cape <i>del Engano</i>. No one who has looked upon the
+ slopes of the mountain which stands to the seaward from Sitka can mistake
+ the description. He anchored in what is now known as Krestof Bay, about
+ six miles northwest from Sitka, and he called it Port <i>Guadalupe</i>.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Captain Cook, on his Third Voyage of Exploration, in 1778, with the ships
+ &#8220;Resolution&#8221; and &#8220;Discovery,&#8221; passed along the
+ coast and noted the bay, of which he says: &#8220;An arm of this bay, in
+ the northern part of it, seemed to extend in toward the north, behind a
+ round elevated mountain I called Mount Edgecumbe, and the point of land
+ that shoots out from it Cape Edgecumbe.&#8221; This name supplanted the
+ one given by the Spaniard and the beautiful cone is yet known by the title
+ he bestowed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The early Russians called the mountain St. Lazaria, assuming that it was
+ the peak seen by Chirikof on his ill fated voyage of discovery and so
+ named by him. The small island at the south is still known as San Lazaria
+ Island.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <span class="pagenum pncolor"><a id="page_12"></a>12</span>Captain Dixon,
+ of H.&nbsp;M.&nbsp;S.&nbsp;&#8220;Queen Charlotte,&#8221; came during the
+ summer of 1787, on a fur trading voyage. Dixon had just departed from the
+ harbor when Captain Portlock, of the English ship &#8220;King George,&#8221;
+ which was lying in Portlock Harbor, to the northward in Chichagoff Island,
+ sent his ship&#8217;s boat through the passage behind Kruzof Island to
+ about the present site of Sitka, and made the discovery for the civilized
+ world that Mount Edgecumbe is on an island.
+ </p>
+ <hr class="pb" />
+ <h2>
+ <span class="pagenum pncolor"><a id="page_13"></a>13</span><a id="link_3"></a>CHAPTER
+ II<br /><span class="h2fs">SETTLEMENT</span>
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The sea-otter, a marine animal about four feet in length when fully grown,
+ with soft, long black pelage of silky texture, is one of the most valued
+ of the fur-bearers. It was found abundantly all the way along the
+ Northwest Coast, and especially in the passages about Sitka. It is now
+ nearly extinct.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Russians had been gathering the skins of the sea-otter in the northern
+ waters for years, ever since Chirikof made his voyage to Sitka, and they
+ were truly an El Dorado, in fur, to the traders who plied their trade
+ along the coasts. Captain Cook and his sailors, when on their voyage in
+ these waters, bought skins for mere trifles, some for a handful of iron
+ nails. These same skins sold for as much as sixty dollars each in China
+ where they visited on their way home. The story of the furs went over the
+ world and English, French and American traders thronged to these waters to
+ sail their ships into the straits and barter for the rich pelts. <span
+ class="pagenum pncolor"><a id="page_14"></a>14</span> To secure a profit
+ of $50,000 on a voyage was not unusual. Ingraham, the lieutenant of
+ Captain Gray whom we all know so well for his discovery of the great River
+ of the West, sailed to near Sitka before his principal entered the river
+ which he named for his ship, the Columbia. The French ship &#8220;Solide,&#8221;
+ in 1791, sailed from France to gather a portion of the harvest. Her
+ captain, Étienne Marchand, anchored in Sitka Bay, and called it <i>Tchinkitinay</i>,
+ as he declares it was known to the natives. To his ship flocked the
+ painted and skin-clad natives with their peltries for barter. On their
+ persons he saw articles of European manufacture, showing that other ships
+ had visited there, and in the ears of one young savage were hanging
+ pendant two copper coins of the colony of Massachusetts. His success in
+ trade was not such as he might have wished, so he sailed way, remarking
+ that, &#8220;The modern Hebrews would, perhaps, have little to teach to
+ these people in the art of trade.&#8221;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ March 31st, 1799, the Yankee skipper, Cleveland, of the merchant ship
+ &#8220;Caroline,&#8221; sailed into the bay, dropped anchor and fired a
+ cannon shot as a signal. He was one of those shrewd, lean traders, skilled
+ in navigation, who sailed from Boston round the Horn, with their bucko
+ mates, who could drive a <span class="pagenum pncolor"><a id="page_15"></a>15</span>
+ tack with the prow of a ship, so to speak, and in those days there were no
+ corners of the earth where they might not be found seeking for profit. He
+ was wise to the ways of the sharp trading canoemen of these waters, and
+ their aggressive proclivities, so he prepared his ship with regard for all
+ the possibilities of the business. Around it as a bulwark he stretched a
+ barrier of dry bull hides brought from the California coast. At the stern
+ was a place prepared for the trading. Forward on the deck were planted
+ cannon, shotted with shrapnel, trained so as to rake the afterdeck, and
+ beside each was a gunner&#8217;s match.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the first day, for two hundred yards of broadcloth, he purchased a
+ hundred prime sea-otter skins, worth $50 each in Canton. Barter was going
+ merrily on, when a scream from amidships startled the crew. The Thlingits
+ sprang to their boats. The squaws backed the canoes away from the ship&#8217;s
+ sides. Arrows were fitted to bowstrings, spears were poised and muskets
+ primed. On the ships the sailors lighted the cannon matches and stood by
+ ready to fire. A fight was hovering in the air when the cause of the
+ disturbance was discovered. An inquisitive Thlingit pried between the bull
+ hides opposite the cook&#8217;s galley, and the cook had saluted him with
+ a ladle of hot <span class="pagenum pncolor"><a id="page_16"></a>16</span>
+ water. In his surprise he upset his canoe and his family were struggling
+ in the sea. His baby was rescued by a seaman, amends were made to his
+ injured feelings, and the barter proceeded as before.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The waters were filled with ships. In a stay of a month the &#8220;Caroline&#8221;
+ spoke the ship &#8220;Hancock,&#8221; the ship &#8220;Despatch,&#8221; the
+ ship &#8220;Ulysses,&#8221; and the ship &#8220;Eliza,&#8221; all of
+ Boston; and the English ship &#8220;Cheerful,&#8221; all trading for furs
+ among the Sitkan Islands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Russians, in their colony on Kodiak Island, were jealous of the
+ intruders on what they considered as their domain. Gregory Shelikof, a
+ Siberian merchant, one of the wealthiest and most far seeing of the
+ leaders among the Aleutian Islands, conceived the plan of combining the
+ whole of the fur trade in one great monopoly. In pursuance of this policy
+ he secured a charter from Emperor Paul in 1799, under the name of the
+ Russian American Company, which gave the exclusive right to all profits to
+ be derived from every form of resource in the Russian possessions in
+ America for a period of twenty years. To the management of his business in
+ the Colony he established on Kodiak Island he appointed Alexander
+ Andreevich Baranof, a Siberian trader of great ability and experience.
+ Baranof, the wise and far-seeing Russian ruler of the <span
+ class="pagenum pncolor"><a id="page_17"></a>17</span> Russian American
+ Company, at his factory in St. Paul&#8217;s Harbor on Kodiak Island, had
+ long planned the extension of his settlements to the southeast. The
+ sea-otter catch of the Russians was made by brigades of Aleuts from the
+ western islands, who went along the shores and to sea as far as 20 miles,
+ in their wonderful skin boats called bidarkas, to hunt. When a sea-otter
+ lifted its head from the water to breathe, within sight of a detachment of
+ Aleut hunters, its fate was sealed, for it seldom escaped.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The passages between the islands about Sitka were called the &#8220;Straits&#8221;
+ by the Russians, and in them the sea-otter skins were taken by the
+ thousands. It was not unusual for a Russian hunting party consisting of a
+ hundred bidarkas to take on one expedition 2,000 skins of the <i>Morski
+ bobrov</i>, as they called the sea-otter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The animals were becoming scarce in the seas about the western islands and
+ Baranof was compelled to replenish his trade by the catch of the
+ southeastern waters. In 1795 he sent one of his ships as far south as the
+ Queen Charlotte Islands and it visited Sitka on the way. Two thousand
+ skins were secured by the hunters while on this voyage. In the same year
+ Baranof himself paid Sitka <span class="pagenum pncolor"><a id="page_18"></a>18</span>
+ a visit, coming through the strait from the north in his little schooner
+ &#8220;Olga,&#8221; a 40-foot boat, and he named the passage for his craft
+ as Olga Strait. On the shore near his anchorage he erected a cross; the
+ bay he named Krestof Bay, and he then selected the locality of his future
+ settlement.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the spring of 1799, Baranof sent orders to the toyons, or chiefs, of
+ the tribes on the islands around Kodiak to assemble the hunters. Five
+ hundred and fifty bidarkas, each manned by from two to three Aleut
+ paddlers, came in answer to his call, and with two convoying ships he set
+ sail for Sitka Sound. On July 7th he landed at a bay six miles north of
+ the present town of Sitka, purchased a tract of land from Skayeutlelt, a
+ local chief, and began the construction of a post which he named redoubt
+ St. Michael. The building was done under great difficulties. Rain fell
+ incessantly. There were but thirty Russian workmen as most of the Aleuts
+ returned to Kodiak, hunting as they went. Of the men who remained ten had
+ to stand guard constantly, for the Thlingits were not to be trusted.
+ Barracks, storehouses, quarters for the commanding officer, were
+ constructed; a bath house also, for the Russian must have his bath, and
+ the whole was <span class="pagenum pncolor"><a id="page_19"></a>19</span>
+ surrounded by a stockade and strengthened by blockhouses. Their troubles
+ were not all with the elements, for during the winter the scarcity of
+ provision and other causes brought scurvy to add to their discomfort.
+ Their food was mostly yuhali (dried salmon), but during the winter the
+ hunters took 40 sea-lions, and in the spring many seals were killed in the
+ bay by the Aleuts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The natives, called Thlingits at the present, were known as the Kolosh by
+ the Russians. They were divided among themselves in their feelings toward
+ the new settlers in their midst. Some looked with extreme disfavor upon
+ the establishment, while others were friendly. The young and turbulent
+ warriors were hostile. A messenger was sent to invite them to a prasdnik
+ (holiday) at the fort. He was taken prisoner by them and detained until
+ Baranof landed in their midst with an armed force and demanded his
+ release, when they set him free and ridiculed the incident. At a dance at
+ the fort many of the Kolosh came with long knives concealed under their
+ cloaks. Their treachery was detected and their design frustrated. The
+ courage and caution of Baranof held them in check until spring when he
+ departed for Kodiak, leaving strict instructions as to the precautions to
+ be observed during his <span class="pagenum pncolor"><a id="page_20"></a>20</span>
+ absence. After his departure the discipline grew more lax and the Kolosh
+ became more bold. The watchful savages at last saw an opportunity to rid
+ themselves of their new neighbors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On a June day of 1802, the exact date is not recorded, a horde of painted
+ savages burst from the forest, clad in all the paraphernalia of war masks
+ and barbaric armour. A fleet of war canoes landed warriors on the beach in
+ front of the redoubt. In the attack that followed the stockade and
+ buildings were reduced to smoking ruins, the magazines were robbed of rich
+ stores of furs, most of the defenders died on the spears of the Kolosh or
+ were tortured till death relieved their sufferings, and the women and
+ children were made slaves. Skayeutlelt, the false friend of Baranof,
+ directed the battle from a nearby knoll and his nephew, Katlean, was one
+ of the principal actors in the bloody tragedy. A few survivors who were
+ hunting in their bidarkas or were in the forest, escaped to the ships of
+ the English and American traders which were in the bay.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Captain Ebbetts on an American ship and Captain Barber of the British ship
+ &#8220;Myrtle&#8221; were in the harbor. Some of the survivors on reaching
+ these ships asked them to rescue their countrymen. Captain Ebbetts <span
+ class="pagenum pncolor"><a id="page_21"></a>21</span> ransomed several
+ prisoners, but Captain Barber adopted a more effective course. Chief
+ Katlean and Chief Skayeutlelt came on board his ship to trade. He at once
+ put them in irons and threatened to hang them to the yardarm of the ship
+ if the captives remaining in the hands of the natives, and also the
+ plundered sea-otter skins, were not immediately surrendered to him. The
+ threat was effective, the greater part of the sea-otter furs and several
+ captives were brought on the ship and delivered to him. He then took the
+ ransomed captives from the other ship and sailed for Kodiak, where he
+ demanded a ransom of 50,000 rubles from Baranof for the captives. The
+ ransom was later reduced to 10,000 rubles which was paid by Mr. Baranof.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two years passed before much is again known of Sitka. English and American
+ captains sailed their ships into the harbor and gathered the furs which
+ Baranof had endeavored to garner in the storehouses of the Russian
+ American Company. In the summer of 1804 Baranof gathered a force at Kodiak
+ with which to cross the Gulf of Alaska to re-establish his post. There
+ were one hundred and fifty bearded <i>promyshileniks</i>, or fur hunters,
+ and over 500 Aleuts in their skin bidarkas. With him were the ships
+ &#8220;Alexander,&#8221; &#8220;Ekaterina,&#8221; &#8220;Yermak,&#8221;
+ and <span class="pagenum pncolor"><a id="page_22"></a>22</span> &#8220;Rostislaf.&#8221;
+ When they reached Sitka they found there Captain Lisianski of the Imperial
+ Russian Navy, with the ship &#8220;Neva,&#8221; one of the first Russians
+ to circle the globe, and who came to help to recapture the post.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Indian village of Sitka was almost in the same place as the present
+ town, grouped around the Baranof hill which was called by the Russians a
+ <i>kekoor</i>. On the top of the kekoor was a redoubt, and a stronger fort
+ was near the mouth of the Indian River, or <i>Kolosh Ryeku</i>.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the morning of September 28th the Russian ships moved to a point
+ opposite the village, the &#8220;Neva&#8221; being towed by a hundred
+ bidarkas. The Sitkans abandoned their village and the fort on the hill and
+ withdrew to the stronger fortification near the river. Baranof landed a
+ force and occupied the kekoor, planted cannon on the top, then opened
+ negotiations for the surrender of the other fort, but his overtures were
+ rejected by the Indians.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ships were brought near the river fort and the cannon were trained on
+ it. The fort was built of thick logs in the shape of an irregular square,
+ with portholes on the side next the sea, and inside the breast works were
+ 14 barabaras, or native houses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The walls were of such thickness that the <span class="pagenum pncolor"><a
+ id="page_23"></a>23</span> cannon shot from the &#8220;Neva&#8221; made
+ but little impression on the structure. Baranof was impatient and urged an
+ attack. Reinforcements were landed from the ships under command of
+ Lieutenants Arbusof and Polavishin. The hunters, sailors, and Aleuts flung
+ themselves against the fortifications, but meeting a murderous fire were
+ driven back in disorder and only saved from disaster by the protection of
+ the fire of the ships. Ten men were killed and 26 wounded, and among the
+ wounded was Baranof.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Captain Lisianski then took command and moved his ships nearer the shore.
+ A canoe with reinforcements and a supply of powder for the Indians
+ approached among the islands but a shot from the &#8220;Neva&#8221; struck
+ it, the powder exploded, and the Indians who were saved from the wreck
+ were taken on board the Russian ship. The bombardment was steadily
+ continued until the 6th of October, when the Kolosh proposed to surrender,
+ and a parley was held, but during the night they evacuated the fort and
+ went over the mountains to the north. In the fort were left the bodies of
+ 30 warriors and also the bodies of five children who had been killed to
+ prevent their cries making the retreat known to the Russians. The only
+ remaining survivors were two old women and a little <span
+ class="pagenum pncolor"><a id="page_24"></a>24</span> boy. A few
+ straggling warriors remained lurking about, seeking revenge, and a few
+ days later they killed eight Aleuts who were fishing on Jamestown Bay.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How the Kolosh went over the mountains was long a mystery to the Russians.
+ They reached the shore of Peril Strait and crossing to the north shore
+ placed a fort near the entrance to Sitkoh Bay which was stronger than
+ their old fort at Indian River and where over 1,000 people gathered. A
+ tradition among the old Indians says that the fugitives first went to Old
+ Sitka, then over the mountains to the northeastern side of the island. On
+ the way they suffered extremely from fatigue and hunger, and one Sitka
+ Indian who lives on Peril Strait relates that his father was a child at
+ the time of the exodus. His father carried him till exhausted, when he
+ abandoned him, and his mother then took him up and carried him the
+ remainder of the way.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The property left in the fort by the Kolosh was taken out, the
+ fortification was burned and the canoes on the beach were broken to
+ pieces. There was enough remaining of the structure that some of the
+ remains of the foundation may yet be seen in the forest which has sprung
+ up around it in the Indian River Park, although more than a century has
+ since elapsed.
+ </p>
+ <div class="figcenter">
+ <a id="link_i3"></a><img src="images/illus-030.jpg" alt="" />
+ <p class="center caption">
+ Sitka in 1805&#8211;From Lisianski&#8217;s Voyage.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ <span class="pagenum pncolor"><a id="page_25"></a>25</span>Then began the
+ restoration of the post, on the present site of Sitka, and with energy and
+ despatch the building of a new Russian settlement proceeded. Around the
+ kekoor the native houses were removed, and along with them more than a
+ hundred burial houses with the ashes of the bodies which had been burned.
+ The great tribal houses, or barabaras, as they are called in the Russian
+ accounts, were spacious, some measuring 50 feet in width and 80 feet in
+ length.<a id="FNanchor_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_2" class="fnanchor"><sup>[2]</sup></a>
+ In their place rose the town of New Archangel (<i>Novo Arkangelsk</i>,)
+ and on the kekoor was built a redoubt. This was the official name and
+ generally recognized by the Russians, but the name Sitka was early used by
+ them. Baranof frequently used the term Sitka in his letters, and in the
+ letter of the Minister of Finance to the Minister of Marine, from St.
+ Petersburg, April 9, 1820, Sitka is used in several places. The name
+ Sitka, or Sheetkah, in the Thlingit language, means, in this place, that
+ this is the place, or the best place, implying superiority over all other
+ places.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <span class="pagenum pncolor"><a id="page_26"></a>26</span>All winter
+ there was cutting of logs in the forest and by the spring of 1805 there
+ were eight substantial buildings, the space for 15 kitchen gardens had
+ been cleared, the livestock brought on the ships were thriving, and an air
+ of prosperity pervaded the place.<a id="FNanchor_3"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_3" class="fnanchor"><sup>[3]</sup></a> Surveys of the
+ harbor were made by Captain Lisianski who also made the first ascent of
+ Mt. Edgecumbe, and who then sailed for Kronstadt, Russia, by the way of
+ Canton, with a cargo of furs for the China trade valued at 450,000 rubles.<a
+ id="FNanchor_4"></a><a href="#Footnote_4" class="fnanchor"><sup>[4]</sup></a>
+ </p>
+ <hr class="pb" />
+ <h2>
+ <span class="pagenum pncolor"><a id="page_27"></a>27</span><a id="link_4"></a>CHAPTER
+ III<br /><span class="h2fs">PROGRESS OF THE COLONY</span>
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The courtly Chamberlain of the Tsar, Nicholas P. Resanof, son-in-law of
+ Shelikof who was the founder of the first Russian colony in America, came
+ to Sitka in 1805, via Petropavlovsk, Siberia, on the &#8220;Nadeshda,&#8221;
+ one of the first Russian ships to circumnavigate the world, and was a
+ special representative of the Russian American Company, of which
+ organization he was one of the founders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In his report to the Company he tells us: &#8220;The fort is on the high
+ hill, or kekoor, on a peninsula in the gulf. On the left side of the
+ kekoor close on the peninsula is built an immense barracks with two
+ projecting blockhouses or towers. All the building is made from mast
+ timber from the top to the foundation, under which is a cellar. Besides
+ this building are two warehouses, a material magazine and two cellars,
+ also two large sheds for storing food, and under the sheds are the
+ quarters for the workmen. On the side <span class="pagenum pncolor"><a
+ id="page_28"></a>28</span> opposite the fort is a shed for storing cargo,
+ at the right side is the kitchen, bath, and quarters for the servants of
+ the Company, clerks, etc., and on the shore are the blacksmith shops and
+ other workshops. On the top of the kekoor is a building five sazhens<a
+ id="FNanchor_5"></a><a href="#Footnote_5" class="fnanchor"><sup>[5]</sup></a>
+ long and three sazhens wide, with two rooms. In one I live, and in the
+ other there are two shipmasters. There are still some old Kolosh <i>yourts</i>,
+ in which live the <i>kayours</i> and the Kodiak Americans (Aleuts, they
+ are generally called).<a id="FNanchor_6"></a><a href="#Footnote_6"
+ class="fnanchor"><sup>[6]</sup></a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &#8220;Our guns are always loaded, everywhere are sentinels with loaded
+ arms, and in the rooms of each of us arms constitute the greater part of
+ the furniture. All the night the signals from post to post continue, war
+ discipline prevails; in a word, we are ready at any minute to receive our
+ dear guests, who generally profit by the darkness of night to make an
+ attack.&#8221;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The additional number in the garrison owing to the arrival of the
+ Chamberlain and his suite made it more difficult to procure provisions for
+ the winter. The hostile Kolosh made hunting and fishing dangerous. In the
+ autumn there was but flour enough for an allowance of a pound a week for
+ one month <span class="pagenum pncolor"><a id="page_29"></a>29</span> for
+ the 200 men in the fort. For other food supply they were dependent on the
+ fish caught in the bay, the dried <i>yukali</i> and sealion meat from
+ Kodiak, and the dried seal meat from the Seal Islands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Baranof bought the ship &#8220;Juno,&#8221; an American sailing ship of
+ about 250 tons, from Captain George D&#8217;Wolf, of Bristol, Conn., with
+ its cargo of flour, sugar and other articles, for the sum of 68,000
+ piastres (Spanish), equivalent to about the same number of dollars. This
+ relieved the immediate necessity, but before spring the supply became so
+ low that the scurvy, that dread malady of the seas and of outlying
+ localities, attacked the garrison. This scourge often fell heavily on the
+ early Russian expeditions, and in 1821 the Russian ship &#8220;Borodino&#8221;
+ lost 40 men through its ravages in a voyage from Sitka to Kronstadt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In March, Resanof sailed for San Francisco in the &#8220;Juno&#8221; to
+ purchase breadstuffs and other supplies. He also wished to examine the
+ coast with the view of making other settlements farther south, at Nootka,
+ at the Columbia, or even farther south in California. He secured a cargo
+ of the products of the south and returned to Sitka in June.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On his southward journey Resanof reconnoitred the mouth of the Columbia
+ River, <span class="pagenum pncolor"><a id="page_30"></a>30</span> seeking
+ a site for a future settlement. He was unable to enter the river owing to
+ contrary winds; and the condition of his crew, debilitated by lack of
+ proper food and suffering from scurvy, caused him to hasten on. He heard
+ that a party of U.&nbsp;S. soldiers were building a fort there. This rumor
+ doubtless came from the presence of Lewis and Clarke near the present
+ Astoria.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While on this visit to San Francisco Resanof met the Spanish beauty, Dona
+ Concepcion de Arguello, of whom one of the visitors said, &#8220;She was
+ lively and animated, had sparkling, love-inspiring eyes, beautiful teeth,
+ pleasing and expressive features, a fine form and a thousand other charms,&#8221;
+ and he lost his heart to her. The romance of the Russian courtier and the
+ fair Californian furnished to Bret Harte the theme for some of his most
+ beautiful verse. Resanof, hurrying home to Russia to gain the Imperial
+ permission to his marriage, died at Krasnoyarsk, Siberia, and Dona
+ Concepcion waited for years for the coming of her lover, not knowing that
+ he lay dead under the Siberian snows. When the news of his sad fate came
+ to her she donned the habit of a nun and devoted herself to charitable
+ works.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This visit to California was the beginning of a trade that continued for
+ many years, <span class="pagenum pncolor"><a id="page_31"></a>31</span>
+ through all the period of Russian occupation. During the days of the gold
+ discoveries in California large shipments of goods were made from Sitka to
+ San Francisco, and after the sale of the territory to the United States
+ great quantities of merchandise were shipped from the warehouses of the
+ Company to the California metropolis, amounting to over a quarter of a
+ million dollars in one year.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The breadstuffs for the colonies were procured from California, from San
+ Francisco and from Ross Colony, or from Peru, until 1840, when a contract
+ was made with the Hudson&#8217;s Bay Company under which the supplies were
+ brought from the farms of the Nisqually or from Vancouver, in Oregon
+ Territory.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Until the time of the arrival of the &#8220;Neva&#8221;, 1804, all trading
+ goods were brought across Siberia to Okhotsk, and thence by sailing vessel
+ to the colony, or were purchased from the American or English trading
+ ships which came to the coast for furs. To the natives the English who
+ came to these waters became known as &#8220;King George Men,&#8221; and
+ the Americans were called &#8220;Boston Men,&#8221; the latter being from
+ the great number of ships that sailed from the great shipping port of New
+ England. From these traders goods were purchased by Baranof at lower rates
+ than those cost which were brought <span class="pagenum pncolor"><a
+ id="page_32"></a>32</span> from Russia. John Jacob Astor was one of the
+ first to engage in the trade. He sent the ship &#8220;Enterprise&#8221; to
+ Sitka in 1810, and the &#8220;Beaver&#8221; in 1812. From Washington
+ Irving we have the description, through the account of the Captain, of the
+ &#8220;Hyperborean veteran ensconsed in a fort which crested the top of a
+ high rock promontory,&#8221; which is well known to all readers of stories
+ of western life, and in which the impression of the character of Baranof
+ as given to the reader is very erroneous. The traders exchanged their
+ goods with the Russians for furs, sometimes going to the Pribilof Islands
+ to receive the seal-skins; sailed to China, where the furs were traded for
+ silks, nankins, and teas; they then voyaged on around the world to their
+ home port.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sloop-of-war &#8220;Diana,&#8221; the first Russian warship to reach
+ Sitka, arrived in 1810 under the command of Captain Vasili M. Golofnin,
+ who was widely known for his adventures while a captive in the Kingdom of
+ the Nipponese, where he was carried about in a bamboo cage and exhibited
+ to the populace. His description of his visit to Sitka is entertaining,
+ and of it he says:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &#8220;In the fort we met nothing so unusual or costly as to be worthy of
+ special remark; the fort consisted of solid log towers, and <span
+ class="pagenum pncolor"><a id="page_33"></a>33</span> high strong
+ palisades, with apertures or embrasures, in which were set guns and
+ carronades of different calibres. The interior construction, barracks,
+ storehouses, house of the commander and other buildings were made of thick
+ logs and were very solid, these being very common in this place, around
+ which grows, so to say, within reach of a windlass, a multitude of most
+ beautiful trees suitable for structures of every description.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &#8220;In the house of Mr. Baranof were ornaments and furniture in
+ profusion, of masterly workmanship and costly price, brought from St.
+ Petersburg and from England, which corresponded with his position as the
+ head official of a great company. What astonished us most was an extensive
+ library in nearly all European languages, and many pictures of remarkable
+ merit. I must confess, that I badly judge in painting, and only could
+ know, that in the uncultivated wild border of America, there would be none
+ except Mr. Baranof to value and understand them, unless there might happen
+ to be educated travelers, or masters of United States trading vessels
+ visiting this place, there would be no one to appreciate the fine art. Mr.
+ Baranof, noting my astonishment, explained the riddle, saying, that the
+ pictures attracting our attention were gifts of the <span
+ class="pagenum pncolor"><a id="page_34"></a>34</span> Company and of
+ distinguished persons in St. Petersburg, for the establishing of a
+ library, and the Directory sent them out. On these works he commented with
+ the following remarkable view: &#8216;Better that our directors had sent
+ us a doctor, for in all the Company&#8217;s colonies there is not one
+ doctor, nor one doctor&#8217;s assistant, nor one doctor&#8217;s pupil.&#8217;&#8221;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Golofnin soon left Sitka to return to St. Petersburg. His successful
+ voyage, together with that of the &#8220;Neva&#8221; and the &#8220;Nadeshda,&#8221;
+ encouraged the shipment of goods by sea from Russia, and from that time
+ onward ships came regularly, laden with supplies of every kind for the
+ post, and returned with rich cargoes of peltry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By 1825 surgical and astronomical instruments of the best quality were
+ sent to the colony, an apothecary shop of three rooms provided medicines,
+ and four Creole boys, under the charge of a doctor, attended to the
+ dispensing of the potions. A hospital was in connection and the sick
+ received fresh food, tea, sugar, and medicines, free, upon the order of
+ the doctor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An observatory, equipped with the most improved magnetic and
+ meteorological instruments was later provided and there was kept a record
+ of natural phenomena, while <span class="pagenum pncolor"><a id="page_35"></a>35</span>
+ a museum of objects of interest from the surrounding country was open for
+ the instruction of all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The library was brought from St. Petersburg in 1806 by Resanof. Mr.
+ Khlebnikof tells us that it contained more than 1,200 volumes, valued at
+ 7,500 rubles, and they were in the Russian, French, German, English, Latin
+ and other languages.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Mr. Resanof was preparing for his journey he addressed letters to
+ many of the leading men of St. Petersburg, soliciting their contribution
+ of books to promote the beginning of education in the far off possession
+ of the Czar. Many sent a response in writing accompanied by one or more
+ volumes, and the letters so sent were richly bound in a separate volume
+ and placed with the library in the building at Sitka. Among the patrons
+ were the Metropolite Ambrosia, Count Rumiantzof, Count Stroganof, Admiral
+ Chichagof, Minister of Justice Dimitrief, Senator Zakarof and others. The
+ sentiments were varied, but many agreed in voicing the desire to &#8220;sow
+ the seed of science in the breasts of the peoples so far outlying from the
+ enlightenment of Europe.&#8221; Some of them reflected the personal
+ character of the donors: The Metropolite Ambrosia sent books for church
+ services; the Minister of Marine sent plans of <span
+ class="pagenum pncolor"><a id="page_36"></a>36</span> ships; and Count
+ Rumiantzof contributed works on husbandry.<a id="FNanchor_7"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_7" class="fnanchor"><sup>[7]</sup></a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Kyril Khlebnikof, the accountant of the Company, who was in charge of
+ the counting house at Sitka from 1818 to 1832, to whom we are indebted for
+ many valuable writings relating to the early history of the settlements,
+ tells us that when Mr. Baranof left the colony the buildings had become
+ badly decayed and much new construction had to be done. In 1827 there had
+ been built, three sentry houses, a battery of thirty guns on the kekoor,
+ and below them magazines, barracks and other buildings, a bakery, wharf,
+ arsenal, etc. In the shops were blacksmiths, coppersmiths, locksmiths,
+ coopers, turners, rope spinners, chandlers, painters, masons, etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the Ozerskoe Redoubt, on Deep Lake, were barracks and a fort, a
+ flouring mill, a tannery, and other buildings. A zapor, or fish trap, in
+ the stream took sixty thousand fish each year.
+ </p>
+ <div class="figcenter">
+ <a id="link_i4"></a><img src="images/illus-043.jpg" alt="" />
+ <p class="center caption">
+ The Bakery and Shops of the Russians&#8211;Later the Sitka Trading Co.&#8217;s
+ Building.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ <span class="pagenum pncolor"><a id="page_37"></a>37</span>The workmen got
+ out timber from the forest for the building of ships, they cut fuel and
+ burned charcoal in large quantities; kept the buildings in repair and did
+ other duties required on the factory. The work of the gardening was
+ chiefly done by the Aleuts, who were paid a ruble a day for their
+ services.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Russian Captain Lutke came to Sitka about this time and he tells us
+ that there were many pigs and chickens raised by the inhabitants, and that
+ a pig might be had for 5 to 7 rubles, a hen for 4 to 5 rubles, and eggs at
+ from 3-1/2 to 10 rubles per dozen. The chief drawback to the chicken
+ industry was the presence of the great black ravens that carried away the
+ young chicks and sometimes even the old hens. The ravens were such
+ successful scavengers that they were called the New Archangel police, and
+ he says they even bit the tails off the young pigs, so that all the hogs
+ of the place were tailless.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He mentions the abundance of deer on the islands and also says that
+ mountain sheep were killed by the Aleuts and brought to the fort. He must
+ have confused the sheep with the goats, for the sheep never approach the
+ coast so closely, and he speaks of the wool being used for weaving the
+ blankets for the ceremonial dances of the Kolosh. This would indicate that
+ the animal in question was the mountain goat. A later writer says that
+ 2,700 game animals were brought into Sitka for sale during the winter of
+ 1861-62.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <span class="pagenum pncolor"><a id="page_38"></a>38</span>A shipyard was
+ established as soon as the necessary buildings to house the garrison were
+ completed. It occupied a part of the present parade ground near the
+ Russian Barracks and included a portion of the present street. Many
+ vessels were built in the yard during the Russian occupation, the first,
+ being the tender &#8220;Avoss,&#8221; launched in 1806, followed by the
+ brig &#8220;Sitka,&#8221; built by an American shipbuilder named Lincoln,
+ and for which he was paid 2,000 rubles as a royalty upon the completion of
+ the ship. A frigate of 320 tons was the largest vessel built before 1819,
+ and at that time construction was discontinued until 1834, when work was
+ resumed and continued until the close of the Russian regime.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The &#8220;Politofsky&#8221; was one of the last vessels to be built at
+ Sitka, and it was sold by Prince Maksoutoff to H. M. Hutchinson and
+ Abraham Hirsch for $4,000 in 1867. The next year it was sold to
+ Hutchinson, Kohl &amp; Co., and later was sold to a firm that ran it to
+ Puget Sound, and from Alaska to San Francisco. It was built of Alaska
+ cedar timber, the <i>dushnoi dereva</i> or scented wood of the Russians,
+ and was spiked with hand-made copper spikes. It was taken to Alaska in the
+ gold rush of 1898, and found its last resting place, very appropriately,
+ in the land where <span class="pagenum pncolor"><a id="page_39"></a>39</span>
+ it was built, in the harbor of St. Michael, the old Russian port on Bering
+ Sea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fear of shipwreck, and of death at sea hung over every soul of the
+ community. The long voyages in uncharted and unlighted waters with sailing
+ ships&#8211;more than six months at the shortest from Kronstadt&#8211;often
+ three months or more against baffling winds from Okhotsk&#8211;the voyages
+ to the redoubts and <i>odinoshkas</i> (detached posts with one man only)
+ of the Bering Sea and of the Gulf of Alaska, to collect the fur catch of
+ the year and bring it to Sitka; the long journey via Canton on the return
+ to Russia&#8211;all held many dangers for the sailing ships of those days.
+ The &#8220;Phoenix,&#8221; the first ship built on the Alaskan shores,
+ foundered with all on board, including the Bishop and his retinue, in
+ 1799, on the return voyage from Okhotsk; the &#8220;St. Nicholas&#8221;
+ went ashore on the coast of Washington in 1808, and those who survived the
+ waves were held in bondage for years by the savages of that coast.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During the latter part of August, 1812, the ship &#8220;Neva&#8221; left
+ Okhotsk&#8211;contrary winds delayed her in the Sea of Okhotsk&#8211;storms
+ beat her back along the Aleutian Islands till it was November before land
+ was sighted in Alaska. The storms damaged the rigging and ship until it
+ was necessary to put <span class="pagenum pncolor"><a id="page_40"></a>40</span>
+ into Voskresenski Harbor (Resurrection Bay) for repairs. She arrived off
+ Sitka about December 1st. After four or five days Mt. Edgecumbe was
+ sighted but a storm drove the ship to sea where she beat about for weeks
+ before again nearing the port. Scurvy afflicted the passengers and crew
+ and added to the general distress. On January 8th, 1813, Mt. Edgecumbe
+ again appeared. In trying to make the harbor the ship grounded on the
+ rocks under the cape on the morning of the 9th and speedily broke to
+ pieces under the terrific pounding of the seas.<a id="FNanchor_8"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_8" class="fnanchor"><sup>[8]</sup></a> Some of the people
+ on board reached shore after incredible suffering and hardship.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After several days two of the sailors wandering along the shore met a
+ Kolosh boy and persuaded him to take them to Sitka, where they arrived,
+ cold, exhausted, and almost starving. Boats were at once fitted out by Mr.
+ Baranof, the survivors were rescued, brought to Sitka, and their
+ sufferings relieved. From those on board the ship, 38 had perished,
+ including Kalinin, the commander, Boronovolokof, the intended future chief
+ manager of the Company, and five <span class="pagenum pncolor"><a
+ id="page_41"></a>41</span> women passengers. In the cargo was food and
+ clothing, the messages of the year for the exiles, and rich vestments and
+ furnishings for the church that was soon to be built in Sitka, all
+ scattered for miles along the wild coast of Kruzof Island. This was one of
+ the worst disasters of the sea that visited the colony, although many
+ others are part of the records of the time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is said that Chief Katlean tore his hair with rage when he learned of
+ the wreck, because he did not find it and destroy the survivors out of
+ revenge for his defeat and expulsion from his home at Sitka.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There are many traditions among the residents of Sitka concerning the
+ wreck of the &#8220;Neva.&#8221; Among them is that there was a vast
+ treasure of gold for the use of the garrison and the traders. This is
+ erroneous, for there was no gold used in the colonies, the trade being by
+ barter or conducted with scrip, called <i>assignats</i>, issued by the
+ Company for the purpose. The story of the gold has been so generally
+ believed that serious plans have been made for attempting the salvage of
+ the treasure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The term of office of Alexander Andreevich Baranof as the chief manager of
+ the Russian American Company came to a close in 1818. He had been 28 years
+ in the colonies, <span class="pagenum pncolor"><a id="page_42"></a>42</span>
+ leaving Russia in 1790 for the post of Three Saints on Kodiak Island,
+ which at that time constituted almost the only Russian establishment in
+ America, the other stations being little more than outlying trading posts.
+ He left their dominion an empire in extent, reaching from the Seal Islands
+ in Bering Sea, at the edge of the ice pack of the Arctic, to Fort Ross,
+ among the sunny hills of Golden California. Captain Hagmeister came to
+ relieve him, and in his 72nd year the old chief manager, bent with the
+ weight of years and of long and arduous service, closed his accounts and
+ set sail on the &#8220;Kutusof,&#8221; one of the Company&#8217;s vessels,
+ for his far-off home in Russia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the time arrived for Baranof to take his departure from the land he
+ had made his home for so many years, sorrowfully he took his leave of the
+ associates with whom he had so long shared the dangers and hardships of
+ the uncivilized land. Upon being relieved of the duties of his office he
+ first considered building a home at the Ozerskoe Redoubt and spending the
+ remainder of his days in the place he had learned to love. Later he
+ decided to return to his native land and sailed on the &#8220;Kutusof&#8221;
+ for Kronstadt. A delay at Batavia in the tropics proved too severe for his
+ advanced years. The day after leaving Batavia he <span
+ class="pagenum pncolor"><a id="page_43"></a>43</span> died and was buried
+ at sea in the waters of the Indian Ocean.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Captain Leontius Andreanovich Hagemeister succeeded to the office of chief
+ manager but remained only a short time at Sitka, then sailed for Russia,
+ leaving Captain Simeon Ivanovich Yanovski in charge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Captain Yanovski became enamored with the beautiful daughter of Baranof,
+ and if you search the old records of the Cathedral of St. Michaels at
+ Sitka you will find the entry as made of the marriage of Simeon Ivanof
+ Yanovski &#8220;with the late head governor of the Russian American
+ possessions, Collegiate Adviser and Cavalier Baranof&#8217;s daughter
+ Irina, one of Creoles.&#8221;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In 1830, Baron Ferdinand Petrovich Wrangell, scientist and explorer, came
+ to administer the office. He had sailed the frozen ocean along the
+ northern shores of Siberia as an explorer, and Wrangell Island, Wrangell
+ Strait, etc., on the maps of today perpetuate his name.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Under Baron Wrangell, as assistant to the manager, served Adolph Carlovich
+ Etolin, a native of Finland, who came to the colony as an officer on the
+ war sloop &#8220;Kamchatka&#8221; in 1817, who sailed in the service of
+ the Company to nearly every port from the Seal Islands of Bering Sea to
+ Chile, who made <span class="pagenum pncolor"><a id="page_44"></a>44</span>
+ several voyages around the world, and who was made chief manager in 1840.
+ In 1846 he returned to Russia to accept the trust of Commercial Counsellor
+ in the head office of the Company in St. Petersburg.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ About fourteen miles to the southwest, across the bay and facing
+ Edgecumbe, with a beautiful view of the peak and islands, is the Hot
+ Springs, well known for their medicinal properties by the natives before
+ the advent of the Russians, and frequently resorted to by both as a
+ panacea for many ills. In the Place of Islands <i>(Chasti Ostrova)</i> is
+ reputed to be a spring with a sour taste, while almost within the limits
+ of the town of Sitka, Dr. Scheffer, a German physician who made a sojourn
+ in the place about 1815, claimed to have found a medical spring whose
+ waters were equal to some of the famed watering places of Germany.
+ </p>
+ <hr class="pb" />
+ <h2>
+ <span class="pagenum pncolor"><a id="page_45"></a>45</span><a id="link_5"></a>CHAPTER
+ IV<br /><span class="h2fs">NATIVES</span>
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Most of the Sitkan Kolosh kept aloof from the Russian settlement after the
+ establishment of the new fort on Chatham Strait, near the entrance of
+ Peril Strait. All the kwans, the Khootznoos, the Hoonahs, the Chilkats,
+ the Auks, Stikines, Kakes and others, joined with the Sitkas in the hatred
+ of the Russians. Parties going out from the fort at Sitka for hunting
+ expeditions, for cutting of wood, for traveling to the Hot Springs, had to
+ be on their guard and with arms at hand prepared to fight at a moment&#8217;s
+ notice.<a id="FNanchor_9"></a><a href="#Footnote_9" class="fnanchor"><sup>[9]</sup></a>
+ Small groups were often cut off and murdered. As it was impossible to
+ decide which of the many kwans did the act, and as there were those in
+ each kwan who were peaceable, with whom it was desired to keep the peace,
+ revenge against any village was inadvisable. Even as late as the date of
+ the lease to the Hudson's Bay Co. the Russian ships that sailed among the
+ islands to trade with the Kolosh <span class="pagenum pncolor"><a
+ id="page_46"></a>46</span> were compelled to act with the strictest
+ caution. Only a few natives were admitted on board at a time, the trading
+ was done in a space near the stern, and was conducted under the muzzles of
+ loaded cannon concealed in the fore part of the ship.<a id="FNanchor_10"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_10" class="fnanchor"><sup>[10]</sup></a> The conditions
+ were thus until 1821, when the Sitkas were invited to reoccupy the site of
+ the old village and to live in what is now known as the &#8220;Ranche,&#8221;
+ under the guns of the redoubt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Thlingit nation is a strange, warlike, shrewd people, physically
+ strong and enduring, and possessed of many excellent qualities. Hunters
+ and fishermen by nature and training, they are skillful boatmen, and in
+ those days they built wonderfully beautiful canoes of the red cedar, some
+ of them large enough to carry sixty men at the paddles. Each spring more
+ than a thousand men gathered together in Sitka Bay, coming from the
+ different villages, to fish for herring at the spawning time, when those
+ fish run in countless myriads in those waters. Hemlock boughs were placed
+ in the water, and on them the herring roe collected until they were
+ encrusted with the eggs which were then stripped off and dried for future
+ use.
+ </p>
+ <div class="figcenter">
+ <a id="link_i5"></a><img src="images/illus-054.jpg" alt="" />
+ <p class="center caption">
+ The &#8220;Ranche&#8221;&#8211;Looking north from the top of the Baranof
+ Castle.<br />The Steamer at the left is the &#8220;Coquitlam,&#8221;
+ noted for her participation in pelagic sealing<br />and she was under
+ seizure by the U.&nbsp;S. Government.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ <span class="pagenum pncolor"><a id="page_47"></a>47</span>In 1807 there
+ were over 2,000 hostile natives gathered in the harbor at the herring
+ season and they threatened an attack on the settlement. Kuskof, the most
+ trusted and able lieutenant of Baranof, was in charge, and it put his
+ wisdom and watchfulness to the test to avert disaster. The strictest
+ discipline was maintained. The tribesmen waited outside day after day,
+ hoping for news of some relaxation of the precautions of the defenders to
+ be brought to them by the women of the tribe who were married to the
+ Russian promishleniki (hunters). Day and night the sentinels paced the
+ beats on the stockade and along the waterfront, till, weary of waiting,
+ the Kolosh finally dispersed to their homes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the great tribal houses several families lived, sometimes as many as
+ fifty or sixty persons. Over the door of the house was painted the family
+ totem, for the Sitkas did not raise the house totem in a pole in front as
+ did many of the kwans of the Thlingits, and as the Hydahs do. In these
+ houses were held the potlatches, or gift parties, which were made by the
+ wealthy chiefs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The potlatches were of different kinds, although all partook of the nature
+ of a feasting or merrymaking and were distinguished by the giving of
+ gifts. In the ordinary visiting potlatches, or in the berry potlatches,
+ the visitors came in their canoes with which <span class="pagenum pncolor"><a
+ id="page_48"></a>48</span> they formed a line off shore opposite the
+ houses, put planks from one canoe to another and on these planks danced
+ the tribal dance. Those on shore danced the welcome dance and invited the
+ guests ashore. Then the visitors disembarked and each family became the
+ guest of their kinsmen of their totem or they went to the guesthouse of
+ the kwan. All the people of the same totem are supposed to be blood
+ relations, so all those of the wolf totem go to the <i>Gooch-heat</i>, or
+ the dwelling blazoned by the rude heraldry with the wolf rampant. In the
+ great social potlatches a wealthy chief invites his friends from many
+ villages and entertains them for a week or more with dancing and feasting
+ and makes presents varied and valuable, from Hudson&#8217;s Bay blankets
+ to bolts of calico or of flannel, and in primitive days, copper tows,<a
+ id="FNanchor_11"></a><a href="#Footnote_11" class="fnanchor"><sup>[11]</sup></a>
+ Chilkat blankets, and even slaves were handed over with a lavish
+ hospitality.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On special occasions in the olden time, with great ceremony the visitors
+ landed at a distance from the village, drew their canoes ashore and
+ proceeded to the village dressed in festive garments adorned with sealion
+ heads or other strange headdresses, in which <span class="pagenum pncolor"><a
+ id="page_49"></a>49</span> they danced the rare and picturesque &#8220;Beach
+ Dance,&#8221; in acknowledgement to the Spirit of the Sea for the
+ bountiful supply of salmon and herring of the past season&#8211;for the
+ native American is a thankful being and omits not to show it when occasion
+ offers to acknowledge it to the Giver of all good and perfect gifts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During the earlier years of the colony the Kolosh were implacable enemies.
+ War parties of young men constantly haunted the islands of the bay, lying
+ in wait for any unwary hunter or fisherman from the fort. Later, when they
+ were settled under the walls of the fort they became more tractable, for
+ their homes and families were commanded by the guns of the fortress, but
+ on the least provocation the savagery in their blood would boil, from
+ their great tribal houses they issued forth, faces blackened to the
+ semblance of devils, war masks grinning, and the howling mob shouted
+ defiance at their neighbor over the stockade. Many a bloody tragedy was
+ enacted in the &#8220;Ranche&#8221; for their code was primitive, &#8220;an
+ eye for an eye,&#8221; and a life for a life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Feuds raged between the different totemic families. About 1853 a party of
+ Wrangell Indians (Stikines) visited Sitka, and while <span
+ class="pagenum pncolor"><a id="page_50"></a>50</span> being entertained in
+ the guest-house were murdered and their bodies piled into a canoe which
+ was then paddled to Japonski Island. On striking the shore it was so
+ heavily laden with the bodies of the dead that tradition says the canoe
+ split from end to end. It is said that the bones of the dead are still to
+ be seen in the undergrowth along the shore. In retaliation, about 1855,
+ the Wrangell Kolosh made an attack on the Hot Springs settlement, burned
+ the buildings, stripped the inhabitants of property and clothing and left
+ them to make their way over the mountains around the head of Silver Bay to
+ Sitka, where they arrived more dead than alive from hunger and exhaustion.
+ This feud was not settled until 1918, when a peace treaty was consummated
+ between the kwans on Armistice Day, a coincidence which is much made of by
+ the tribesmen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Kolosh were as firm believers in witchcraft as any of the more
+ civilized nations. They resorted to their shamans (<i>ekhts</i>) or
+ medicine men in case of illness. If his weird incantations failed to
+ relieve the sufferer, his resort was that the victim was bewitched and
+ some poor unfortunate paid the penalty by enduring the most fiendish
+ torture.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One March day in 1855 a commotion arose in the Kolosh village. A sentry
+ caught <span class="pagenum pncolor"><a id="page_51"></a>51</span> an
+ Indian who was stealing and punished him, for which the tribe called for
+ vengeance. Some rushed to the stockade and began to cut away the
+ palisades. Other forced their way into the Koloshian Church through the
+ outer door. From this vantage point they fired on the garrison and in
+ return the batteries of the fort blazed back with solid shot and shrapnel.
+ For two hours the fight continued, when the Kolosh gave up all hope of
+ success, and ceased the battle. The Russian loss in killed and wounded was
+ 20 men, while the Kolosh loss was estimated at 60. This was the last
+ attempt of the natives to destroy the Russian stronghold.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At times during the later days of the colony the Kolosh were employed as
+ seamen and as workers in the ice trade by the Russians and thus they
+ occupied a place in the industrial life. Etolin was the most successful in
+ conciliating them of any of the chief managers, and he at one time held a
+ fur fair at Sitka to which peltry was brought from far and near, modeled
+ somewhat upon the idea of the great fur mart of Nizhni Novgorod. Most of
+ them, however, hunted and fished, lived in their tribal houses, carved
+ their canoes, wove their baskets, and practiced their witchcraft, while
+ their civilized <span class="pagenum pncolor"><a id="page_52"></a>52</span>
+ neighbors gathered the furs and built ships.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Under the walls of the fort, in the old tribal houses of the Kolosh which
+ had not been destroyed, lived the Aleuts. Properly speaking the name
+ belongs to the natives of the Aleutian Islands, but the term was also
+ applied to the natives of Kodiak Island and the surrounding islets. These
+ speak a different language from the true Aleuts, but otherwise resemble
+ them closely. During the hunting season they scoured the seas in their
+ skin bidarkas, in the pursuit of fur animals. In winter many of them
+ remained at Sitka instead of returning to their homes. Their time was
+ spent in idleness, spending the summer&#8217;s earnings in the pleasures
+ and vices of the white man. One who saw them in their kazhims, as their
+ dwellings were often called, describes them: &#8220;Morally, the Aleut is
+ not bloodthirsty. He delights in simple rejoicings and will play you a
+ game of chess with walrus ivory pieces&#8211;a duck for a pawn and a
+ penguin for a king&#8211;with the greatest of good humor. Even when
+ squabbles arrive the argument is carried on in poetry to the accompaniment
+ of dancing, and one would be inclined to prefer the Aleut angry to the
+ Aleut amiable, did he not know he also dances when festive and when
+ religious.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <span class="pagenum pncolor"><a id="page_53"></a>53</span>&#8220;Among
+ them the social duty of visiting has its drawbacks. Several families live
+ together in the kazhims, and during one&#8217;s visit they all lie around
+ in every conceivable posture, jolly and genial, naked and unashamed. The
+ fumes of the blubber oil lamps and stoves, the stores of raw meat, the
+ many naked bodies, well smeared with grease and scented with primitive
+ unguents, combine to make an atmosphere difficult to tolerate and not easy
+ to describe. Yet, if you will, you may enjoy the warmest hospitality, and
+ have heaped upon you the most assiduous attentions.&#8221;
+ </p>
+ <hr class="pb" />
+ <h2>
+ <span class="pagenum pncolor"><a id="page_54"></a>54</span><a id="link_6"></a>CHAPTER
+ V<br /><span class="h2fs">CHURCHES AND SCHOOLS</span>
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ It was not until 1816 that a priest arrived at Sitka, and in that year the
+ first entry is made in the church records under the name of Alexander
+ Sokolof. A church was built at the south of the street, which was then
+ called the Governor&#8217;s Walk, almost opposite the present cathedral. A
+ monument marks the spot where the altar stood, and a cross marks the site
+ of a grave, said to be that of a priest. Tradition also tells that there
+ are two graves there, and assigns the other one to the daughter of Baron
+ Wrangell, the chief manager of the Company at one time.<a id="FNanchor_12"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_12" class="fnanchor"><sup>[12]</sup></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="figcenter">
+ <a id="link_i6"></a><img src="images/illus-063.jpg" alt="" />
+ <p class="center caption">
+ Cathedral of St. Michael
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ <span class="pagenum pncolor"><a id="page_55"></a>55</span>The present
+ cathedral of St. Michael, which is the central point of historic interest,
+ in the center of the town at Lincoln Street, was dedicated November 20,
+ 1848. It fronts on a small court and with its green painted spire
+ surmounted by the Greek Cross is so typically Russian that it might
+ readily be believed to have been transplanted from old Russia. The chime
+ of bells, a gift from the Church at Moscow, would be worthy of any shrine.
+ The building is in the form of a cross, has three sanctuaries and three
+ altars. The larger and central sanctuary is that of the <i>Archistrategos</i>
+ Michael. In the center is an elevated platform, the episcopal <i>Cathedra</i>,
+ and it is separated from the main body of the church by a partition called
+ the <i>Ikonastas</i>, which is ornamented with twelve <i>ikons</i>, or
+ holy paintings, covered by plates of silver in <i>repousse</i> work in the
+ true Russian style of art, and through the Royal Gates the priest appears.
+ The silver in the ikons is valued at over $6,000. The ikon of St. Michael
+ is said to have been in the wreck of the &#8220;Neva,&#8221; and was
+ rescued after being cast up by the sea. Another is a gift of the monks of
+ the monastery of Solovetsk; another was brought by Bishop Innocentius
+ (Veniaminof) from Petropavlovsk. The ikon of the Resurrection is painted
+ on a board from a tree in Hebron, was consecrated in Bethlehem, and bears
+ the autograph signature of the Patriarch of Jerusalem.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The chapel at the right is dedicated in the name of St. John the Precursor
+ and Prince Alexander Nevsky.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <span class="pagenum pncolor"><a id="page_56"></a>56</span>The chapel at
+ the left is in honor of Our Lady of Kazan. In it is a painting of a
+ Madonna and Child from which the beautiful Byzantine face looks down with
+ a sweet radiance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The vestments and sacred vessels are rich and elegant. The white Easter
+ vestment is of cloth of silver and the cloth of gold for high feast days
+ was the personal gift of Alexander Andreevich Baranof, the great Russian
+ who established the colony. The belfry clock is said to be the work of the
+ hands of Veniaminof. The priest in richly brocaded vestments holds the
+ services, and a choir of boys chant the chorus with a melody that would be
+ the envy of many a far more pretentious edifice. The worshipers stand
+ during the services, the clouds of incense rise toward the rounded dome,
+ then one by one the worshipers pass and kiss the jeweled cross in the hand
+ of the priest. Father Metropolski presided over the church for many years,
+ and Father Sergius is one of the best known in recent years.
+ </p>
+ <div class="figcenter">
+ <a id="link_i7"></a><img src="images/illus-066.jpg" alt="" />
+ <p class="center caption">
+ The Madonna.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ <span class="pagenum pncolor"><a id="page_57"></a>57</span>There were two
+ other churches during Russian days, one, a Lutheran, built during Etolin&#8217;s
+ time, which stood near the site of the first church, and is said to have
+ contained a small but very excellent pipe organ, brought from Germany. The
+ other church stood near the blockhouse on the hill, was on the line of the
+ stockade, and had two doors, one inside the fortification, the other
+ outside and used as an entrance by the natives. It was known as the
+ Koloshian Church, and its site is marked by a monument. Both these
+ buildings long ago fell into ruin and were removed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Russian religion was closely associated with the Government, so in the
+ colonies the official charter of the Company compelled them to provide
+ well for the church and the priests according to the standard of the
+ times, and the work was carried on with zeal and fortitude by the
+ missionaries who came from the monasteries of the old Russian cities.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of all the missionaries who came to Russian America, the greatest was Ivan
+ Veniaminof. Father John he is often called in the old records, a wonderful
+ man, broad of mind and of body, combining the qualities that inspire awe
+ and reverence with a gentleness of word and deed that made him beloved
+ wherever he was known. His zapiski, or letters, are among the best
+ authorities extant which remain from those years on Alaskan matters, and
+ they were written home to Russia during his stay in the Aleutian Islands
+ and at Sitka. He came to Sitka after a ten-year stay at Unalaska, remained
+ there for five years working for the church and teaching <span
+ class="pagenum pncolor"><a id="page_58"></a>58</span> in the schools, then
+ returned to Moscow and was consecrated as bishop of the new diocese. He
+ again arrived in Sitka in 1842, and made a tour of all the churches in the
+ colonies, traveling by sailing ship to every settlement, then went home to
+ Russia where he became Metropolite of Moscow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The schools of Sitka, under the Russian regime, were well maintained, and
+ many of the mechanics, clerks, pilots, and men of other trades were
+ educated there. Kadin, who drew the charts for Tebenkof&#8217;s Atlas of
+ Alaska from the surveys made by the Russian Navigators; Tarantief, who
+ engraved the maps on copper-plate at Sitka; and many of the shipmasters
+ and accountants in the employ of the Company, were the product of the
+ educational institutions of Sitka. In the time of the greatest prosperity
+ there were five schools. The church school was advanced to the grade of a
+ seminary in 1849 and there were taught navigation, mathematics, astronomy,
+ bookkeeping, and other branches of learning. Some of the best pupils, both
+ Russian and Creole, were sent to St. Petersburg for more advanced
+ instruction. Chief Manager Etolin was the especial patron of education,
+ and made many improvements in the system. Under the auspices of Madame
+ Etolin, who was a native of Helsingfors and <span class="pagenum pncolor"><a
+ id="page_59"></a>59</span> was educated in the schools of that city, a
+ school was opened and maintained by the Company for the girls of the
+ colony. After the transfer to the United States of the Territory the
+ teachers returned to Russia and the schools were closed.
+ </p>
+ <hr class="pb" />
+ <h2>
+ <span class="pagenum pncolor"><a id="page_60"></a>60</span><a id="link_7"></a>CHAPTER
+ VI<br /><span class="h2fs">SOCIAL LIFE</span>
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ At the top of the kekoor, or the Baranof Hill as it was called in recent
+ years, there stood a building occupied during Russian days as a residence
+ by the chief managers of the Russian American Company. The one known to
+ the residents and visitors of the earlier days of the American occupation
+ was known as the Baranof Castle, although Baranof himself never lived in
+ it. There were three, if not four different buildings which occupied that
+ position. The first to be placed there was built at once upon the founding
+ of the post and is described by Resanof in his letters to the Company as
+ being a very &#8220;Unpretentious building, and poorly constructed.&#8221;
+ Before the close of Baranof&#8217;s administration, however, according to
+ the account of Captain Golofnin, it was an establishment well built and
+ furnished with some degree of luxury.
+ </p>
+ <div class="figcenter">
+ <a id="link_i8"></a><img src="images/illus-071.jpg" alt="" />
+ <p class="center caption">
+ The Baranof Castle.<br /><br />Built in 1837 for the official residence of
+ the chief managers of the<br />Russian American Company, and occupied
+ from the time of Kuprianof<br />until 1867. It was the headquarters
+ building of the Commanding Officers<br />of the U.&nbsp;S. troops 1867 to
+ 1877, and was destroyed by fire in 1894.<br /><br />The U.&nbsp;S.
+ Agricultural Department building occupies the site at the present time.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ <span class="pagenum pncolor"><a id="page_61"></a>61</span>The structure
+ known as the Baranof Castle, which stood on the hill at the time of the
+ transfer to the United States, would seem to be the third building
+ constructed on the site, was completed about 1837,<a id="FNanchor_13"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_13" class="fnanchor"><sup>[13]</sup></a> and was burned to
+ the ground on the morning of March 17th, 1894.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The historic building was the scene of many interesting events, and
+ sheltered many distinguished persons.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first mistress who presided over the mansion on the kekoor was Madame
+ Yanovski, a daughter of Baranof and the wife of Lieutenant Yanovski, the
+ third chief manager of the Russian American Company.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lady Wrangell was the first to come from Russia to preside as the First
+ Lady of Sitka, and she was succeeded by Madame Kupreanof, who is said to
+ have crossed Siberia and the Pacific Ocean to accompany her husband to his
+ post. Sir Edward Belcher gives a spirited account of a ball given in his
+ honor, in the castle, which was then, in 1837, just completed. He says:
+ &#8220;The evening passed most delightfully,&#8221; although &#8220;few
+ could converse with their partners,&#8221; English being spoken by few at
+ that time in the capital of Russian America.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Princess Maksoutoff, the wife of the last chief manager of the colonies,
+ came from <span class="pagenum pncolor"><a id="page_62"></a>62</span> St.
+ Petersburg, but died soon after her arrival, and the stone which marks her
+ grave may be seen on the hill between the two cemeteries, near the site of
+ the upper Blockhouse. Her successor, the second Princess Maksoutoff, young
+ and beautiful, presided with grace and tact over the mansion until the
+ transfer of the territory to the United States. She was one of six Russian
+ ladies present at the ceremonies and is said to have wept when the Russian
+ flag was lowered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is a legend of a beautiful princess whose ghost haunted the Castle
+ for many years. The story has been told by many at different times and is
+ one of the romantic tales that cluster around the old metropolis of the
+ fur trading days. Her lover was sent away or killed through the influence
+ of an <i>ober offitzer</i> who sought her hand in marriage. Eliza Ruhamah
+ Scidmore, who wrote so delightfully of Sitka in her journeys in Alaska in
+ 1883, says that, &#8220;By tradition the Lady in Black was the daughter of
+ one of the old governors. On her wedding night she disappeared from the
+ ballroom in the midst of the festivities, and after a long search was
+ found dead in one of the small drawing rooms.&#8221;<a id="FNanchor_14"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_14" class="fnanchor"><sup>[14]</sup></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="figcenter">
+ <a id="link_i9"></a><img src="images/illus-073.jpg" alt="" />
+ <p class="center caption">
+ The Grave of the Princess Maksoutoff.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ <span class="pagenum pncolor"><a id="page_63"></a>63</span>The chief
+ managers entertained lavishly, and the dinners in the Castle were events
+ long to be remembered. They were well worthy the representatives of a rich
+ and powerful company, a corporation with a domain that was greater than
+ the realm of many a royal ruler. Into the sumptuously furnished and richly
+ decorated dining-room came the bishop and priests, resplendent in the
+ official robes, the naval officers glittering in their gold laced
+ uniforms, the secretaries, accountants, storekeepers, all in the uniform
+ of the Ministry of Finance, the masters and mates of the ships in the
+ harbor; the guests in their best apparel; all gathered around the
+ hospitable board of the chief manager. At times a hundred sat at the table
+ and back of them dined the cadets of the naval school. After the dinner
+ came dancing and until morning the gayety went merrily on, for Russian
+ cheer is proverbial, and their hospitality is lavish.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <span class="pagenum pncolor"><a id="page_64"></a>64</span>Usually the
+ Captain of the port, the secretaries, three public and two private, two
+ masters in the navy, the commercial agent, two doctors, and the Lutheran
+ clergyman, dined with the chief manager by general invitation, Sir George
+ Simpson tells us. The civilian masters of vessels, accountants, engineers,
+ clerks, and bookkeepers, dined at a club which was organized by Mr.
+ Etolin, and they lived at the old club house a little to the east of the
+ church.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A wedding was an elaborate affair, a bridal cake which figured in many
+ mystic signs, tea, coffee, chocolate and champagne; the ladies attired in
+ muslin dresses, white satin shoes, silk stockings, kid gloves, fans, and
+ other necessary appurtances. After the ceremony of an hour and a half was
+ consummated, the ball was opened by the bride and the highest officer
+ present, and the dancing lasted until three in the morning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Easter was an event of much hilarity after the close of Lent, which was
+ strictly observed by all. From morning to night everyone ran a gauntlet of
+ kisses; when two persons met, one said, &#8220;Christ has risen,&#8221;
+ while the other replied, &#8220;He has risen, indeed,&#8221; and then
+ followed the salutations. These seemed not to have been distasteful to
+ visitors, although one remarks that most of <span class="pagenum pncolor"><a
+ id="page_65"></a>65</span> the dames had been more liberal with other
+ liquids than of pure water. Throughout it all was a continuous peal of
+ bells, for the Russian is fond of bell-ringing. All carried eggs, boiled
+ into stones, and dyed, gilded or painted, which they presented to their
+ friends.
+ </p>
+ <hr class="pb" />
+ <h2>
+ <span class="pagenum pncolor"><a id="page_66"></a>66</span><a id="link_8"></a>CHAPTER
+ VII<br /><span class="h2fs">TRADE AND INDUSTRY</span>
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Sitka, under the Muscovite, existed because of the fur trade, and every
+ energy and interest centered on the gathering of peltries from every
+ available quarter. Sailing ships moved in and out of the harbor, taken to
+ their moorings or out to sea by the harbor tug; some from Michaelovsk with
+ the beaver and martin from the Yukon, others <i>en route</i> to California
+ or to the Sandwich Islands; the supply ships from Kronstadt around Cape
+ Horn or returning via Canton and the Cape of Good Hope laden with furs;
+ still others bound for the Kuril Islands or Okhotsk. The steamer &#8220;Nikolai&#8221;
+ plied along the passages of the Alexander Archipelago, exploring the
+ inlets, surveying the bays and rivers, gathering furs, always furs, for
+ that was the reason for their living on this distant shore.<a
+ id="FNanchor_15"></a><a href="#Footnote_15" class="fnanchor"><sup>[15]</sup></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="figcenter">
+ <a id="link_i10"></a><img src="images/illus-079.jpg" alt="" />
+ <p class="center caption">
+ Sitka in 1860, Near the Close of the Russian Administration.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ <span class="pagenum pncolor"><a id="page_67"></a>67</span>Near the
+ entrance to the Kolosh village was the market where the natives were
+ permitted to trade. There they brought their game and fish, their furs and
+ baskets, to trade for calico and beads, blankets and ammunition.<a
+ id="FNanchor_16"></a><a href="#Footnote_16" class="fnanchor"><sup>[16]</sup></a>
+ This market was closed by a portcullised door which permitted entrance
+ through the stockaded wall, and was enclosed by a railed yard. Armed
+ guards stood on duty, and at the least dispute in the market, down came
+ the door and they proceeded to punish the delinquents.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The warehouses were stored with thousands on thousands of the richest furs
+ of the Northland; sea-otter, worth today from $800 to $1,000 per skin, and
+ not to be had at any price, were numbered by thousands in the earlier
+ years; sealskins by shiploads, some killed off the harbor, but mainly from
+ the Seal Islands; of land otter, the Hudson&#8217;s Bay Company paid them
+ two thousand skins each year for the lease of the territory from Portland
+ Canal to Cape Spencer. The martin, the American sable, with its fluffy
+ pelage. Foxes, blue, white, black, silver gray, red and cross, were there
+ by thousands, brought from <span class="pagenum pncolor"><a id="page_68"></a>68</span>
+ the Arctic, from the Aleutian Islands, from the Valley of the Yukon; mink,
+ ermine, muskrat, beaver, land otter, pile on pile. Tons of ivory from the
+ walrus herds of Morzhovia and bearskins and wolfskins from Cook Inlet and
+ the Copper River. The right to the fur trade belonged exclusively to the
+ Company by Royal ukase, and any employe who was found attempting to
+ infringe on their rights was arrested and sent to Russia for punishment.<a
+ id="FNanchor_17"></a><a href="#Footnote_17" class="fnanchor"><sup>[17]</sup></a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the top of the Castle, over 100 feet above the sea, a light burned as
+ a beacon to mariners entering the harbor, and this was the first
+ light-house to throw its beams over the waters of this northern ocean. In
+ the cupola which rose from the roof were four little square cups into
+ which seal oil was poured and wicks burned in grooves rising from them,
+ while back of the flame was a reflector that threw the light far out to
+ sea among the islands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The stock of goods in the magazines was large and varied. It covered
+ almost every article carried in the general European trade as a necessity,
+ and many of the luxuries&#8211;sugar and sealing wax, tobacco, both
+ Virginia <span class="pagenum pncolor"><a id="page_69"></a>69</span> and
+ Kirghis, silk and broadcloth, calico and Flemish linen, ravens duck and
+ frieze, arshins of blankets and poods of yarn; vedras of rum, cognac and
+ gin; butter from the Yakut, from California and from Kodiak; salt beef
+ from Ross Colony, from England and from Kodiak; beaver hats and cotton
+ socks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the arsenal were kept about a thousand muskets, three hundred pistols,
+ two hundred rifles, as well as sabres, cutlasses, etc., while four fire
+ engines provided against loss by conflagration. Some rare weapons were
+ also found there. A saber set with gems valued at 560 rubles; a Persian
+ carbine of a value of 450 rubles; two Persian yatighans, silver mounted; a
+ Damascus saber, and two Persian pistols, silver mounted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The soldiers&#8217; guns were for a great part of French or English
+ workmanship; rockets and false-fire for signalling ships were made each
+ year.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tallow for candles was brought from California, moulded at the port and
+ distributed so many candles to each employe according to their presumed
+ needs each month.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Liquors, generally rum, were served by the Company, a drink twice a week,
+ extra allowance being made on difficult work and also for holidays. All
+ kinds of devices were resorted to by individuals in order to get rum,
+ <span class="pagenum pncolor"><a id="page_70"></a>70</span> and one author
+ says that a pair of boots for which the makers would demand ten rubles
+ might be secured in barter for a bottle of rum worth three rubles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The soldiers stationed at the fort when not on duty were employed by the
+ Company and given a special compensation for their labor. Some of the
+ soldiers and hunters by their industry and thrift accumulated considerable
+ money which the Company held to their account and either paid to them on
+ their discharge or sent home to Russia for them. Others spent their
+ earnings, were continually in debt to the Company, and as their contract
+ provided that they were not to be discharged while in arrears of debt,
+ some of them served the remainder of their lives with no hope of return to
+ Russia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Around the hill ran a parapet and sentries walked their beat night and
+ day. On the stockade which enclosed the town from the beach at the edge of
+ the &#8220;Ranche&#8221; to the shore beyond the sawmill, making with the
+ shore line an irregular rectangle, also walked the sentinels on their
+ vigil, for the Thlingit at the gates was at all times an enemy to be
+ feared. Strict military discipline was maintained at all times. At the
+ foot of the hill were clustered barracks, storehouses, bakeries,
+ warehouses, etc., for the use of the garrison <span class="pagenum pncolor"><a
+ id="page_71"></a>71</span> and workmen. The old structure which was used
+ as a bakery, and for shops, was later known as the Sitka Trading Company&#8217;s
+ building, and has recently been removed. The barracks are at present the
+ jail, and the Russian counting house is today the postoffice of the United
+ States. The fur warehouse stood to the west of the hill and was torn down
+ in 1897-8, while the landing warehouse on the wharf was burned in 1916.
+ These were all built about the time of the incumbency of Etolin, and that
+ time might be termed the Golden Age of the Colony. Ships were being built,
+ the fur trade was still prosperous, new explorations were being made into
+ the interior of the country, trade was being extended into the Yukon
+ Valley and there was an active interest in all the industries of the
+ settlement. There were men of many trades, engineers, cabinet makers,
+ jewelers, tailors, builders, etc., and an efficient machine shop
+ constructed engines to equip the vessels constructed in the shipyard.
+ Plowshares and spades for the Spanish farmers in California were forged
+ and bells for the Franciscan missions were cast here. The first steam
+ vessel to be built on the shore of the North Pacific Ocean was constructed
+ at Sitka, for, before 1840 the whole of the machinery for a tug of seven
+ horsepower, as well as of two pleasure boats <span class="pagenum pncolor"><a
+ id="page_72"></a>72</span> had been constructed here. The steamer &#8220;Nikolai&#8221;
+ of 70 horsepower was built and equipped with the exception of the boilers
+ which were brought from New York. The ship ways at Sitka was the repairing
+ place for many a vessel in the days of the gold seekers in the valleys of
+ California.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two sawmills, one near the site of the present mill, the other on Kirenski
+ River, now called Sawmill Creek,<a id="FNanchor_18"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_18" class="fnanchor"><sup>[18]</sup></a> cut the lumber
+ for the settlement and for export. Two flouring mills, one in Sitka, the
+ other at the Ozerskoe Redoubt on Globokoe<a id="FNanchor_19"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_19" class="fnanchor"><sup>[19]</sup></a> (Deep) Lake,
+ ground the breadstuffs. A tannery furnished the leather for shoes, made
+ from California hides, and also prepared the <i>lavtaks</i> for the
+ bidarkas for the seal and sea-otter hunters. The burrs for the Sitka mill
+ were of the finest French stone but those at the Redoubt were cut from the
+ granite found on the lake shore.<a id="FNanchor_20"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_20" class="fnanchor"><sup>[20]</sup></a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A hospital of forty beds provided for the comfort of the sick, of which
+ Governor Simpson said: &#8220;The institution in question would do no
+ disgrace to England.&#8221;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <span class="pagenum pncolor"><a id="page_73"></a>73</span>Brickyards were
+ maintained, ice was cut on the lakes and at times shipped to California.
+ The ice-houses were near the outlet of Swan Lake and were of a capacity of
+ 3,000 tons.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One day in the spring of 1852 the American ship &#8220;Bacchus&#8221; came
+ into Sitka to purchase a cargo of ice. All the ice for San Francisco had
+ to this time been brought in the hold of sailing ships around Cape Horn
+ from Boston and the idea of getting the supply from Sitka was conceived.
+ From the Company&#8217;s icehouses was laden on the ship 250 tons, and
+ this was the beginning of a trade during the year of not less than 1800
+ tons at an average price of about $25.00 per ton. A Company was organized
+ in San Francisco for carrying on the trade and it was known as &#8220;the
+ Ice Company.&#8221; The ice on the lake was not of sufficient thickness
+ owing to the fact that four degrees below zero is the coldest record ever
+ made in Sitka during a hundred years, consequently the Ice Company later
+ transferred their chief place of operation to Wood Island, near Kodiak.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cows were kept for milk, and the hay for their provender was cut on the
+ Katleanski Plains on Squashanski Bay.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir George Simpson, Governor-in-Chief <span class="pagenum pncolor"><a
+ id="page_74"></a>74</span> of the Honourable, the Hudson&#8217;s Bay
+ Company, visited Sitka in 1841 and in 1842. He describes the settlement,
+ the natives, and the fur trade, and was entertained at the Castle by Chief
+ Manager Etolin. During his stay he indulged in a Russian steam bath. His
+ humorous description of the details ends with a promise never again to
+ undergo such a castigation. The account of his stay at the Hot Springs is
+ enlivened by a story of how a rosy cheeked Russian damsel, each time she
+ passed his chair, made a profound obeisance, which he attributed to his
+ personal attraction until he discovered her doing the same when the chair
+ was empty, and then saw that a saintly ikon occupied a place on the wall
+ directly over it, which dispelled the illusion. Thirteen ships were in the
+ harbor, and he remarks that the bustle was sufficient to have done credit
+ to a third rate port in the civilized world. Sir George sailed for Okhotsk
+ on the Russian ship &#8220;Alexander,&#8221; then crossed Siberia overland
+ on his return to England from a journey round the earth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There were eighty cannon mounted in the batteries which commanded the bay
+ or which looked down on the Kolosh village. These cannon were of different
+ make, some being cast in Sitka, others purchased of English or Americans,
+ which were purchased on <span class="pagenum pncolor"><a id="page_75"></a>75</span>
+ the ships on which they were mounted, as on the &#8220;Juno&#8221; and the
+ &#8220;Brutus;&#8221; and other ordnance was brought from Kronstadt,
+ Russia, as in 1804 on the &#8220;Neva,&#8221; and in 1820 on the &#8220;Borodino.&#8221;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Teahouses were situated on the little knoll in the center of the town
+ where the public Gardens were located; the museum, and the library offered
+ instruction to the workers who occupied this lonely post halfway round the
+ world from the Russian Fatherland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There were fourteen chief managers who directed the affairs of the Company
+ at Sitka between the date of the founding in 1804 and the surrender to the
+ United States in 1867.<a id="FNanchor_21"></a><a href="#Footnote_21"
+ class="fnanchor"><sup>[21]</sup></a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Many of the officers resided long in the colonies and their record would
+ establish their right to be denominated as &#8220;Sourdoughs.&#8221;
+ Baranof was manager 28 years; Zarembo was rewarded in 1844 for 25 years&#8217;
+ service; <span class="pagenum pncolor"><a id="page_76"></a>76</span>
+ Krukof, the manager at Unalaska, was rewarded in 1821 for 40 years&#8217;
+ service; Banner remained at Kodiak for at least ten years, and he and his
+ wife both died there; while Kuskof came with Baranof in 1790 and returned
+ to Russia in 1821.
+ </p>
+ <div class="figcenter">
+ <a id="link_i11"></a><img src="images/illus-090.jpg" alt="" />
+ <p class="center caption">
+ Sitka in 1869&#8211;During the Time of the Military Occupation.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <hr class="pb" />
+ <h2>
+ <span class="pagenum pncolor"><a id="page_77"></a>77</span><a id="link_9"></a>CHAPTER
+ VIII<br /><span class="h2fs">SITKA UNDER UNITED STATES RULE</span>
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Then came the day when the Russian was to withdraw from his colonies, and
+ the United States was to occupy them as Alaska. An area as broad as an
+ empire, equal in extent to Norway, Sweden, Finland, and Denmark combined,
+ was to be handed over from the Imperial Ruler of all the Russias to the
+ Republic of the United States, and Sitka, the Capital of the Colonies, was
+ to be the scene of the actual transfer. The statesmanship of Secretary
+ Seward, aided by the eloquence of Sumner, had secured for our country a
+ domain one sixth as large as the whole United States.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ October 18th, 1867, Alexei Pestchouroff, the Commissioner of the Tsar,
+ appeared in front of the Baranof castle, and beside him stood Lovell H.
+ Rousseau, the Commissioner for the United States, who was to receive the
+ Territory.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Russian soldiery were drawn up along the terrace which ran around the
+ Baranof <span class="pagenum pncolor"><a id="page_78"></a>78</span> Hill,
+ and next to them were the men of the United States Infantry.<a
+ id="FNanchor_22"></a><a href="#Footnote_22" class="fnanchor"><sup>[22]</sup></a>
+ The ensign of Russia was lowered, the flag of the United States raised to
+ the accompaniment of the salutes from the batteries and of the guns of the
+ ships in the harbor.<a id="FNanchor_23"></a><a href="#Footnote_23"
+ class="fnanchor"><sup>[23]</sup></a> The few words of the ceremony of
+ transfer were spoken, and Alaska became a possession of the United States.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Most of the Russian residents went back to their native land as soon as
+ they were able to do so, but some remained to cast their lot in the land
+ that had so long been their home.<a id="FNanchor_24"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_24" class="fnanchor"><sup>[24]</sup></a> Among those who
+ remained are the Kashavaroffs, the Kostromitinoffs, the Bolshanins, the
+ <span class="pagenum pncolor"><a id="page_79"></a>79</span> Shutzoffs, and
+ others, whose descendants now live in Alaska.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The commanding officer of the American troops, Gen. Jefferson C. Davis,
+ made his headquarters in the building on the hill that had been so long
+ the residence of the Russian officers. The American soldiers were
+ quartered in the barracks of the Siberian Battalion, and the sentries of
+ the United States walked the beats of the Russian guards. Sitka gradually
+ adjusted itself to the new conditions, to the crowds of adventurers who
+ thronged its streets seeking a profit in speculations in lands and furs.
+ They were doomed to disappointment, for the titles to lands were withheld
+ and the fur trade was overdone, so most of the newly arrived drifted away
+ as they came. Distinguished visitors came and were entertained in the old
+ castle where the Commandant dispensed hospitality. Lady Franklin, the
+ widow of the famous Arctic explorer, was once a guest at the mansion on
+ the kekoor, and Secretary Seward was entertained there in 1869 when he
+ visited the land he added to the possessions of the United States.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While the military garrison were content with their conditions and were
+ not troubled with the affairs of the world at large, the civil population
+ wished for the law and authority of other communities, and set <span
+ class="pagenum pncolor"><a id="page_80"></a>80</span> themselves to remedy
+ the omission of the Government in far-off Washington so far as was
+ possible to do, for there was no provision for an organization of civil
+ government in the community. They organized a municipal association,
+ drafted ordinances, elected councilmen, collected revenue for improving
+ the Governor&#8217;s Walk, changed the name to Lincoln Street, and in
+ December opened a school. After five years the civil population declined
+ until the revenue was insufficient to maintain the expense, the
+ organization was abandoned, with it passed the school, and the first
+ attempt at self-government closed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then followed dark days for Sitka.<a id="FNanchor_25"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_25" class="fnanchor"><sup>[25]</sup></a> Military rules
+ for the garrison and no law or protection for the people. Soldiers from
+ the fort are said to have robbed the church of its ornaments, tearing the
+ covers from the richly bound Bible of the Cathedral. The offenders were
+ apprehended, but there being no civil law all the punishment meted out was
+ to be drummed out of the service and sent to the States on an army
+ transport. The stolen property was hidden under the old hospital building
+ and was discovered by <span class="pagenum pncolor"><a id="page_81"></a>81</span>
+ some boys and nearly all was restored to the church.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On New Year&#8217;s Day, 1869, Colcheka, a noted chief of the Chilkats who
+ was visiting Sitka, was entertained by General Davis at the castle on the
+ hill. The liquid refreshments served to him by the General raised his
+ spirits and his pride of race. After it was over he descended the long
+ flight of steps leading from the Commandant&#8217;s quarters and strode
+ across the parade ground with the dignity becoming to the hereditary chief
+ of the Chilkats, the proudest kwan of the Thlingits. For some reason he
+ crossed the part reserved for officers, was challenged by the sentry, and,
+ not heeding, when he reached the stockade gate was kicked by the sentry
+ stationed there. He was furious.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &#8220;Me, Colcheka, Chief of the Chilkats, kicked!&#8221;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He turned in a rage, seized the musket of the sentry, wrenched it from his
+ hands, then carried it to his house in the Ranche.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The guard was turned out for his arrest and a skirmish ensued in which the
+ guard was worsted and retreated to the barracks. The Sitkas were neutral.
+ The Chilkats were too few in number to fight the troops, so next day
+ Colcheka surrendered, was kept in the guardhouse for a few days and then
+ released.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <span class="pagenum pncolor"><a id="page_82"></a>82</span>Meantime orders
+ that no Indians be permitted to leave the Ranche were issued which were
+ revoked upon Colcheka&#8217;s surrender. Through some mistake in revoking
+ the orders the sentries were not notified. A canoe load of Indians left
+ the Ranche to get wood. The sentries fired on the canoe and killed two of
+ the occupants, a Chilkat and a Kake. It was an unfortunate mistake. Those
+ shots rang from Lynn Canal to Kuiu Island and the echoes vibrated for more
+ than twenty years. By listening intently one might yet hear the
+ vibrations. Two white men died and three Indian villages burned directly
+ as a result, but it happened in places distant from Sitka, and, as they
+ say, it is another story.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On a June day of 1877 the troops of the United States army embarked on a
+ ship for the States and sailed away from Sitka. The buildings and property
+ were left in charge of the Collector of Customs, who, with the Postmaster,
+ constituted the only officials in the Territory. The presence of the
+ military had guaranteed safety from attack by the Indians to the people of
+ the town, and the officers had been a pleasant addition to the social
+ life; with their departure both were lost.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The animosity of the Thlingits had been kindled by many wrongs, some real
+ and <span class="pagenum pncolor"><a id="page_83"></a>83</span> others
+ fancied. They saw in the new order of things an opportunity to recompense
+ themselves for past grievances. All the old stories of the killing of
+ their countrymen by the troops, the burning of old Kake and other
+ villages, the loss of five Keeksitties, in the Schooner &#8220;San Diego&#8221;
+ in Bering Sea and other tales were rehearsed and were used to stir the
+ lust for vengeance. The Keeksittis, under the leadership of Katlean,
+ openly advocated sacking the town, killing the men and making slaves of
+ the women.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &#8220;The government does not care for the country. They have abandoned
+ it. It belongs to us, anyway; why not take the town and do as we wish with
+ it?&#8221; said Katlean.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Kokwantons, under Annahootz, their chief, opposed the outrage. For
+ months there was danger of an outbreak. Insult after insult was placed
+ upon the citizens. The stockade was cut down and carried away by the
+ Indians. Every male inhabitant was armed and expecting a call to battle at
+ any time. A man was killed at the Hot Springs by a Keeksitty. The murderer
+ was arrested through the assistance of the Kokwantons under Annahootz.<a
+ id="FNanchor_26"></a><a href="#Footnote_26" class="fnanchor"><sup>[26]</sup></a>
+ The Keeksitties assembled <span class="pagenum pncolor"><a id="page_84"></a>84</span>
+ to rescue the criminal, but the citizens of the town rallied for defense,
+ the Kokwantons joined them and the murderer was safely placed on board the
+ Steamer &#8220;California&#8221; and taken to Portland for trial where he
+ was afterward hanged.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the same boat went an appeal for assistance, directed to the United
+ States Government, but it fell on deaf ears. Another petition was sent to
+ Victoria, B. C., and was heeded. Captain A. Holmes A&#8217;Court, of H.&nbsp;M.&nbsp;S.&nbsp;&#8220;Osprey,&#8221;
+ at once set out for Sitka, arrived on March 1st, 1879, anchored opposite
+ the Ranche and trained his guns for immediate use. The danger was averted.
+ Captain A&#8217;Court remained until the arrival of the U.&nbsp;S.&nbsp;S.
+ &#8220;Alaska,&#8221; on April 3rd, then departed for Esquimault with the
+ blessings of the grateful people of Sitka.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On June 14th into the harbor came the U.&nbsp;S.&nbsp;S. &#8220;Jamestown.&#8221;
+ Her Commander, Captain L. A. Beardslee, assumed control of affairs in the
+ community and administered them in a manner which brought credit on his
+ name. He found everything at the lowest ebb; every woman and child who
+ could leave, had gone to escape the danger of Indian massacre; witchcraft
+ prevailed among the natives and anarchy among the whites. He took a <span
+ class="pagenum pncolor"><a id="page_85"></a>85</span> census<a
+ id="FNanchor_27"></a><a href="#Footnote_27" class="fnanchor"><sup>[27]</sup></a>
+ upon his arrival, and the result was 325 people, exclusive of the Creole
+ population. He appointed an Indian police; established more sanitary
+ conditions in the &#8220;Ranche,&#8221; numbered the houses, and compelled
+ the attendance of the Indian children at the Mission School.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A school was opened in the old Russian barracks building on April 17,
+ 1878, by Rev. John G. Brady and Miss Fannie E. Kellogg, of the
+ Presbyterian Mission, which was later followed by the present Sheldon
+ Jackson Mission School. George Kostromitinoff, afterward known as Father
+ Sergius, was the interpreter. The opening of the school was a great event
+ for Sitka and nearly everyone in the town attended. Annahootz, the
+ friendly Kokwantan war chief, made a speech. Mr. Cohen, the brewer, hunted
+ up another interpreter to assist. Hymns were sung and the events were
+ auspicious. The Indians <span class="pagenum pncolor"><a id="page_86"></a>86</span>
+ stole in one at a time, some with their faces blackened, all in blankets,
+ but they squatted by the wall and listened attentively. The school was
+ continued until December, when it was given up, but in the spring of 1880
+ Miss Olinda Austin, from New York City, reopened it on April 5th, in one
+ of the rooms of the guardhouse, with an attendance of 103 children. The
+ school thus established was the beginning of the present Sheldon Jackson
+ Training School. The support of the naval officers at the station was such
+ that the missionary teacher was moved to say: &#8220;It is not often that
+ the Government sends out a missionary, but they have sent one in this
+ young commander and his lieutenant, Mr. F. M. Symonds,&#8221; in referring
+ to Captain Glass, who succeeded Captain Beardslee.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some form of local government giving the residents a right to regulate
+ their civil affairs was favored by the Commander, who had not even a code
+ under which to act. A meeting was called, ordinances were drafted, a
+ magistrate and councilmen elected for a town government. But all were not
+ agreed upon these acts and opposition arose against it from the very
+ inception of the movement. One of the traders of the town, Caplin, said:
+ &#8220;De Captain may go to &#8213; wid his tam <span
+ class="pagenum pncolor"><a id="page_87"></a>87</span> government; I&#8217;ll
+ bay no daxes.&#8221; And from Silver Bay where he was mining, Geo. E. Pilz
+ sent in a protest against the proceeding. The dealers who traded molasses
+ to the Indians, from which the villainous liquor called &#8220;hoochinoo&#8221;
+ or &#8220;Hooch,&#8221; was distilled, objected to the ordinances
+ restricting the trade. Finally an English miner named Roy was shot by his
+ partner, &#8220;Scotty,&#8221; and the inability of the self-made
+ government to try the offender brought a crisis. The next day a notice
+ appeared stating the organization had been dissolved, and the second
+ attempt at self-government by the people in Alaska passed into oblivion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Scotty was sent to Oregon for trial and was discharged because of lack of
+ a law to punish a man for assault with a dangerous weapon in Alaska.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the dawn of a better day was at hand, Alaska&#8217;s darkest hours
+ were past, and morning was breaking. The rule of the Navy Department
+ continued until 1884, then, although the warships still remained in
+ Alaskan waters, by Act of Congress of May 17th, a form of civil government
+ was granted, and the official Capital was placed at Sitka. The terror of
+ the Indian outbreaks was past; schools were in reach, for the same act
+ <span class="pagenum pncolor"><a id="page_88"></a>88</span> provided for
+ the establishment of a system of public education, and the Code of Oregon
+ was adopted as the law of the land.<a id="FNanchor_28"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_28" class="fnanchor"><sup>[28]</sup></a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then some of the life of the former years returned to the beautiful
+ village by the sea; there were pleasant parties among the residents, the
+ Governor held receptions, the officers of the warships added to the social
+ life, many a gay ball was celebrated on the top floor of the court house,
+ and for more than twenty years it was the Capital of Alaska.<a
+ id="FNanchor_29"></a><a href="#Footnote_29" class="fnanchor"><sup>[29]</sup></a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With the influx of the Americans prospecting began, for in the vast wild
+ mountains of Baranof and Chicagof Islands there is a wealth of mineral
+ stored in the ledges.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Russians had attempted to find the mineral of the mountains, and in
+ 1848 a Mr. Doroshin, a mining engineer, had been sent <span
+ class="pagenum pncolor"><a id="page_89"></a>89</span> out from St.
+ Petersburg to search for mineral wealth in the colonies. He was not
+ successful enough to make it of profit to them, although he found coal on
+ Cook Inlet, gold on the Kenai Peninsula, earth promising to bear diamonds
+ near Kootznahoo, and copper was known to be on the Myednooskie, or Copper,
+ River.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Discharged soldiers of the garrison were the first to take to the hills
+ with pick and shovel. Nicholas Haley, an old-time prospector of Arizona,
+ who came with the troops to Sitka, was one of the most energetic and
+ daring of these. Year after year, with pick and shovel, with rifle and
+ blankets, Nicholas attacked the rugged mountains. Rich specimens were
+ brought in and yielded enough when brayed in a mortar to keep him in a
+ grubstake, but it takes capital to develop a hard rock mine and capital
+ was wary. So Nicholas toiled on year after year, keeping up his
+ assessments and living on hopes until at last he passed over the Great
+ Divide to a Better Diggings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Others tried it. In 1878 a mining company was organized at Sitka, but
+ there was not yet a law under which a claim could be legally taken. Ledges
+ were found, small mills were placed on the ground at the Stewart Mine, the
+ Lucky Chance and elsewhere, and <span class="pagenum pncolor"><a
+ id="page_90"></a>90</span> later great fakes were promoted at the Pande
+ Basin and elsewhere. But it was years after that when two Indian boys,
+ hunting on Chicagof Island, lay down to drink at a stream, and, behold, in
+ the shimmering water was white rock with yellow, glittering particles
+ dancing in the clear stream. With the fear it was but fools gold they took
+ specimens and marked the place where they were found. When they reached
+ Sitka they submitted these samples to Judge DeGroff, and to Professor
+ Kelly of the Sheldon Jackson School. It was pronounced to be gold, pure
+ shining, yellow gold, and richer than the most sanguine had hoped for.
+ After much labor and many disappointments the ledge was located from which
+ the float came, and today that mine, the Chicagof it is called, is known
+ as the richest and best paying mine in the United States in proportion to
+ the money invested, and more than one fortune has been taken out of the
+ tunnels in the mountain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Off the shores of the continent, reaching far off to the westward almost
+ to the shores of Asia are vast fishing grounds, perhaps the greatest in
+ the world. A great submarine plateau stretches along shore, past the
+ Aleutian Islands and into Bering Sea. There are estimated to be forty
+ thousand square miles <span class="pagenum pncolor"><a id="page_91"></a>91</span>
+ of cod and halibut banks that are known to the surveys. The fisheries of
+ Gloucester and Cape Cod fade into insignificance and the famous
+ Newfoundland Banks are but small in comparison.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sitka goes back the farthest in historic memory of any city of the
+ Northwest. When Lewis and Clarke came to the mouth of the Columbia River
+ she was looking out over the Pacific from her stockaded walls and Resanof
+ was sailing to search for locations for new colonies. When Astoria was
+ founded she was placing her outpost on the Russian River in California.
+ Before San Francisco was a city she sent her bidarkas to take the
+ sea-otter from under the very noses of the Padres in their missions. Here
+ the civilization of the East met the progress of the West, the Orient and
+ the Occident met here and met without bloodshed. Sitka, with her wealth of
+ fisheries in the waters at her doors, with her wealth of mineral in the
+ ledges at her back, with the wealth of forest on the mountain slopes
+ around her, is in the same latitude as Edinburgh, Scotland. The time is
+ coming when she will have population, and wealth; beauty she already has.
+ What more is wanted for the happiness of her people? Only energy,
+ perseverance, and thrift, and those will be forthcoming.
+ </p>
+ <hr class="pb" />
+ <h2>
+ <span class="pagenum pncolor"><a id="page_92"></a>92</span><a id="link_10"></a>CHAPTER
+ IX<br /><span class="h2fs">WHAT TO SEE</span>
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Approaching Sitka by the usual steamer route from the north at a distance
+ of six miles the site of Old Sitka is passed. It lies to the left of the
+ steamer track, in a small bay, and is marked by a native house which is
+ visible from the ship. From near this place, looking to the westward, the
+ first sight of Mount Edgecumbe is to be had between the islands. On
+ approaching the town the ship goes through a narrow channel between
+ Japonski Island at the right and the townsite at the left. Near the middle
+ of the channel a rock is marked by a buoy and along the shore is the
+ native village, or &#8220;Ranche,&#8221; with a sloping beach upon which
+ in former days the canoes were drawn up. The paths by which they were
+ brought from the water may be seen, marked by the rocks being thrown to
+ each side from the track.
+ </p>
+ <div class="figcenter">
+ <a id="link_i12"></a><img src="images/illus-107.jpg" alt="" />
+ <p class="center caption">
+ Sitka&#8211;East on Lincoln Street&#8211;the Governor&#8217;s Walk of
+ the Russians.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ <span class="pagenum pncolor"><a id="page_93"></a>93</span>On Japonski
+ Island is the U.&nbsp;S. Naval Coaling Station and the U.&nbsp;S. wireless
+ telegraph. The magnetic observatory of the Russians was situated there.
+ The name means Japan Island and is given because Resanof designated it as
+ the place to keep captive Japanese whom he expected to capture through his
+ expedition against the lower Kuril Islands in 1806.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The dock at which the ship lands is in the same location as the one used
+ by the Russians, but it has been extended to deeper water. The timbers of
+ the old hulk once used by the Russians as a landing stage may still be
+ seen in the water at low tide. On the dock was the landing warehouse of
+ the Russians, a log structure with a passage through the center. It was
+ burned in 1916. Leaving the wharf and going eastward along Lincoln Street,
+ at the side are the booths or tents of the native merchants, kept by the
+ women from the village, a veritable arcade of little markets, and each of
+ the vendors is as interested as though she occupied a seat on the famous
+ Rialto Bridge to sell the wares of ancient Venice. The picturesque,
+ dark-skinned Thlingit women sit at the doors of their little tents hour
+ after hour, offering the strangely carved totems, the beautiful baskets of
+ spruce roots woven in mystic designs, the beaded moccasins, etc., products
+ of their industry during the long winter when the tourist boats do not
+ call at the Sitka <span class="pagenum pncolor"><a id="page_94"></a>94</span>
+ wharves. Passing up the street to the east from the landing&#8211;at the
+ right is the U.&nbsp;S. cable office, occupying the site of the old
+ Russian fur warehouse. Next is the three-story building used for
+ courthouse and jail, formerly the Russian Barracks where the Siberian
+ Battalion was quartered. This is one of the most prominent of the old
+ buildings which remain. In front of this is the stairway leading to the
+ top of the hill on which is situated the building of the Agricultural
+ Department, on the site of the former residence of the chief manager of
+ the Russian American Company. Around this hill were the batteries of the
+ Russians, commanding the Kolosh village and the harbor. The former
+ building was often called the Governor&#8217;s Mansion, or the Baranof
+ Castle, was built about 1837 and was destroyed by fire in 1894. The hill
+ commands a fine view of the harbor and the surrounding islands. The
+ present structure is the headquarters of the Alaska division of the
+ Agricultural Department. Opposite the stairway to the hill is the way
+ leading to the &#8220;Ranche;&#8221; the open square was the former parade
+ ground of the Army, and later of the U.&nbsp;S. Marines from the
+ Man-of-War which was stationed here. East of the old barracks building is
+ the former counting house of the Company, now occupied as <span
+ class="pagenum pncolor"><a id="page_95"></a>95</span> the U.&nbsp;S.
+ Postoffice, and during the time when Sitka was the Capital of the
+ Territory it was used by the United States for a Customs office, and by
+ the Governor as an office. Going east on Lincoln Street, the next large
+ building at the right was the old bakery and shops of the Company, later
+ commonly known as the Sitka Trading Company Building, having been occupied
+ by that company for many years. Beyond this on the same side of the street
+ at a short distance is a small building, standing back from the walk,
+ surmounted by a Greek cross, which marks the site of the first church
+ built in Sitka, in 1817. Next to this lot is the one formerly occupied by
+ the Lutheran Church, built in the time of Etolin, and in which the first
+ church service was held by Chaplain Rainier of the U.&nbsp;S. Army, after
+ the American occupation.
+ </p>
+ <div class="figcenter">
+ <a id="link_i13"></a><img src="images/illus-110.jpg" alt="" />
+ <p class="center caption">
+ Interior of Cathedral of St. Michael
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Across the street is the Cathedral of St. Michael, the headquarters of the
+ Greek Orthodox Church in Alaska. In the Territory are claimed to be ten
+ thousand communicants of that faith and from Sitka the management of
+ affairs is conducted. The church is in the form of a cross and is
+ surmounted by the Greek cross. The interior is richly decorated after the
+ usual custom of the Russian churches. Candlesticks of <span
+ class="pagenum pncolor"><a id="page_96"></a>96</span> massive design stand
+ at either side of the doors of the inner sanctuary. The building, with its
+ dome, is distinctive, and is a good example of Russian church
+ architecture.<a id="FNanchor_30"></a><a href="#Footnote_30"
+ class="fnanchor"><sup>[30]</sup></a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Continuing east along Lincoln Street a short distance beyond the Cathedral
+ a vacant space on the right marks the spot formerly occupied by the
+ clubhouse, built by Etolin for a home for the clerks, navigators, and
+ other employes of the Company&#8211;opposite it was situated the foundry
+ and machine shops, while a little farther to the east stood the sawmills,
+ at the mouth of the outlet to Swan Lake. Along this stream was the eastern
+ boundary of the stockade of the Russian fort, with a blockhouse near the
+ point of the lower end of the lake. East of this stockade were the kitchen
+ gardens, but all traces of them have long since vanished. Continuing along
+ the street following the shore, the Bishop&#8217;s house is passed on the
+ left, where the Russian school is taught, and a short distance beyond is
+ the house of the Episcopal Bishop of the diocese, Rev. Bishop P. T. Rowe.
+ Still farther to the east is the Sheldon Jackson School, the Presbyterian
+ Mission School, consisting of a group of buildings, the first of which was
+ completed <span class="pagenum pncolor"><a id="page_97"></a>97</span> in
+ 1880, under the superintendence of Rev. Alonzo Austin, and others have
+ been added from time to time until the present fine establishment has
+ resulted. An octagonal structure shelters the Sheldon Jackson Museum, a
+ fine collection of native work of many kinds, gathered from all parts of
+ Alaska by the first superintendent of native schools for the Territory. A
+ small paper is published by the mission, the <i>Verstovian</i>, and is
+ printed by the native students of the institution.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Opposite the mission, at the edge of the curving beach, a large,
+ flat-topped rock lies at the side of the way, called the Blarney Stone. On
+ this it is said that Baranof often sat, during the last year of his
+ residence here, and looked out through the vistas between the islands to
+ the broad Pacific. What were the thoughts of the brave, strong, strange,
+ old man as he sat here will never be known, but it is sure that there was
+ much of sadness for him in those days.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Beyond the Mission is the famous Indian River Road, a continuation of the
+ Governor&#8217;s Walk of the Russians, and often called the Lover&#8217;s
+ Lane. It winds along the shore of the sea, through the Park, with here and
+ there an opening in the forest where there are splendid examples of Hydah
+ carvings <span class="pagenum pncolor"><a id="page_98"></a>98</span> in
+ the tall totems placed in well chosen spots. These totem poles were taken
+ to the St. Louis Fair in 1904, as a part of the Alaska Exhibit, and
+ afterward returned to this park. One of the most interesting is the house
+ totem of Chief Son-i-hat, of Kasaan, accompanied by the four supporting
+ columns of the ancient tribal house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the rustic bridge on the Indian River there are enticing paths
+ leading along the stream and toward Mt. Verstovia, which towers above the
+ bay to the height of 3,216 feet. Along the river, known as the <i>Kolosh
+ Ryeka</i>, by the Russians, the winding paths are bordered with huge Sitka
+ spruces and giant cedars, with the space thickly filled with a dense
+ growth of shrubbery, among which is prominent the Devil&#8217;s Club (<i>panax
+ horridus</i>), with its beautifully palmated leaves and its cruel spines
+ concealed underneath. This shrub was formerly used by the natives as an
+ instrument of torture in their witchcraft. In the depths of the forest the
+ earth is covered with a carpet of ferns and mosses, and the trunks of
+ fallen trees of former years may be seen with other trees of from two to
+ three feet in diameter growing on their prostrate bodies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Returning toward the town, at the Mission the Davis Road turns toward the
+ north. <span class="pagenum pncolor"><a id="page_99"></a>99</span> It was
+ built by the Army during their occupation, in the process of their
+ securing wood from the forest, and named for General Jeff C. Davis, the
+ Commander of the post. Following it the Military Cemetery is reached at
+ the distance of about three-eighths of a mile. Here are some interesting
+ monuments, among them being that of Gouverneur Morris, a descendent of the
+ famous financier of the Revolution. A stone marks the resting place of a
+ lieutenant of the U.&nbsp;S. Army, around whose memory lingers stories of
+ a duel with a brother officer in a solitary spot along Indian River, over
+ a Russian beauty of Sitka.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Turning aside from Lincoln Street at the Mission, or at the street next
+ westward, a walk of a quarter of a mile leads to the experiment farm of
+ the Agricultural Department of the United States. There may be seen many
+ products, including apples and strawberries of an excellent quality. Of
+ the latter is a variety originated by Prof. Georgeson through hybridizing
+ the cultivated berries with the wild native berry which grows luxuriantly
+ at many places in Alaska.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On reaching the Cathedral a street turns northward along which one finds,
+ at the right, on the little knoll in the town, among the scattered spruce
+ trees, the spot where formerly stood the tea houses of the Russians. <span
+ class="pagenum pncolor"><a id="page_100"></a>100</span> They were in the
+ center of the public gardens which covered the knoll and were approached
+ by beautifully bordered walks. Farther along, on the left of the walk, is
+ the remaining Russian blockhouse, the last of three which formerly stood
+ on the line of the stockade that protected the town from the Kolosh. A
+ little back of the blockhouse is the grave of the Princess Maksoutoff,
+ marked with a marble slab lying on the raised mound above her resting
+ place. At the end of the walk is the modern Russian cemetery, with its
+ forest of Greek crosses, and in the center, at the highest point, is a
+ platform from which is had an excellent view of the harbor, islands, Mt.
+ Edgecumbe, and of the lake and town.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Returning as far as the site of the tea gardens, then going westward
+ toward the water, at the right is an enclosure in which there is a small
+ building marking the site of the Koloshian Church, or the Church of the
+ Resurrection, as it is called in the church records. This was the building
+ occupied by the natives in 1855 when they made an attack upon the town. It
+ was on the line of the stockade which formerly ran from the water front at
+ the end of the &#8220;Ranche,&#8221; east to the lake, then back to the
+ water at the sawmill. On the line of the stockade were three blockhouses,
+ the church being between the first and second of these. Surrounding the
+ site of the church are a number of graves, and among them are some
+ interesting monuments dating back to the Russian days, for this is the
+ older of the two cemeteries.
+ </p>
+ <div class="figcenter">
+ <a id="link_i14"></a><img src="images/illus-117.jpg" alt="" />
+ <p class="center caption">
+ Russian Blockhouse.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ <span class="pagenum pncolor"><a id="page_101"></a>101</span>Going down to
+ the entrance to the native town, or &#8220;Ranche,&#8221; there is a
+ choice of two streets, one in front of the houses along the water front,
+ the other at the rear. The one at the front is preferable. The houses are
+ built of lumber and in general are constructed by the native workmen, who
+ have been instructed at the mission school, at which there is an excellent
+ manual training department. The great tribal houses of former days have
+ long since disappeared. The older houses were named by the natives much as
+ were the inns of old England; the <i>Gooch-haet</i>, or wolf house; the <i>Tahn-haet</i>,
+ or sea-lion house; the <i>Kahse-haet</i>, or cow house, and others, named
+ for different animals. The <i>Kahse-haet</i> was named from the head of a
+ cow being brought there from a wreck off the coast in which the animal was
+ drowned. Formerly there were many canoes along the water front&#8211;as
+ many as 150 at a time being often seen, but now their place is occupied by
+ gas boats&#8211;generally built by the owners and the engines installed by
+ them. The loss in the picturesque is partly compensated by the gain <span
+ class="pagenum pncolor"><a id="page_102"></a>102</span> in utility, but
+ the native canoe was a wonder of marine architecture, cut from a single
+ log and shaped with fire and adzed into elegant lines. An occasional
+ specimen is sometimes yet to be seen on the beach or carefully covered
+ from the weather in some sheltered and secluded cove.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There were no great house totem poles in front of the houses as there are
+ at Wrangell, Kasaan and elsewhere. There were some mortuary columns near
+ the grave houses which formerly stood on the ridge back of the village,
+ but these have long been covered by the dense undergrowth which sprang up
+ in recent years.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this village have lived some interesting and strong characters.
+ Annahootz and Katlean both figured boldly in the history of the town, and
+ Sitka Jack was noted for his great potlatch held in 1877, when he gave a
+ housewarming at which he presented to his visitors over 500 blankets, not
+ to mention the hoochinoo and whiskey which flowed liberally for all. He
+ beggared himself by the feast, but his reputation was established above
+ reproach for the rest of life. Princess Tom was another celebrity, whose
+ fame was founded on her wealth which was estimated at ten thousand
+ dollars, and which was acquired by skill in basket making and shrewdness
+ <span class="pagenum pncolor"><a id="page_103"></a>103</span> in dealing
+ in native manufactures on which she was a connoisseur&#8211;going out to
+ the villages in her long canoe to gather the stock of baskets, bracelets,
+ carved dishes, masks, dance hats, etc., which she disposed of to advantage
+ upon her return to Sitka. Chief Tlan Tech was one of the prominent
+ citizens and frequently might have been seen on the street in his frock
+ coat, tall hat, with cane and kid gloves, cutting quite a dash. His
+ English vocabulary was very limited and he was accustomed for many years
+ to fly the Russian flag over his canoe when he went out to a neighboring
+ village for a potlatch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some of the silversmiths were skilled workmen. Sitka Jack, and Kooska, and
+ Hydah Jake, all fashioned bracelets, spoons, and other articles, carved
+ with totemic designs of delicate beauty and line of proportion, made from
+ silver coins which they melted down.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some of the shamans of the olden time acquired great influence and made
+ life miserable for their fellow-citizens by the practice of witchcraft.
+ One of the most obnoxious of these, called Skondoo, was captured and his
+ shock of matted hair, which, like that of Samson, was supposed to be the
+ seat of his power, was shorn by the commander of the U.S.S. &#8220;Pinta,&#8221;
+ and in addition he was <span class="pagenum pncolor"><a id="page_104"></a>104</span>
+ thoroughly scrubbed with soap and brush, perhaps for the first time in his
+ existence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Even to this day there are instances of the weird belief in the villages
+ at Hootznahoo or at Klukwan. Not many years ago an Indian girl was rescued
+ by the whites from a damp hole under a house where she had been confined
+ to die of cold and starvation by the order of the shaman, or <i>Ekht</i>,
+ as the Thlingit calls him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among the island and the inlet dented shores surrounding the town are many
+ interesting places forming an opportunity for delightful excursions. The
+ most desirable of these are:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mount Edgecumbe, 3467 ft.&#8211;Taking a launch from Sitka the trip may be
+ made to Crab Bay, or to the landing behind the island of St. Lazaria on
+ which is a populous bird rookery, and the ascent of the mountain is
+ possible to be made in a day. Perhaps better that two days be taken to the
+ trip, however. The first to go to the top was Lisianski in 1804. From the
+ summit of the mountain an unusually beautiful panorama is to be had of
+ island-studded bay, and mountain ridges capped with glaciers on one side,
+ while on the other spreads the expanse of the broad Pacific.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Old Sitka, and Katleanski Bay.&#8211;By <span class="pagenum pncolor"><a
+ id="page_105"></a>105</span> launch the site of the Russian settlement of
+ 1799-1802 may be reached and from that point a continuation of the
+ excursion may be made to the head of Nesquashanski Bay, where the meadows
+ are situated from which the Russians procured their provender for the
+ cattle kept at the post. In the streams entering the bay may be seen,
+ during the season of the salmon run, the strange spectacle of the brown
+ bears in the role of fishermen, scooping salmon from the waters with their
+ paws, if good fortune attend. This journey may be made in a day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Silver Bay.&#8211;A veritable Norwegian fjord transplanted to Alaska&#8211;with
+ picturesque waterfalls plunging into its waters, deep glacial valleys
+ entering at right angles with Yosemite-like cliffs bordering them, the
+ Scottish bluebells clinging to the dripping rocks which beetle overhead,
+ Kalampy&#8217;s Slide around which hangs a tale, the Stewart mine, etc.&#8211;about
+ ten miles to the head of the bay, where a fine waterfall plunges from the
+ mountainside.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Redoubt and the Globokoe Lake.&#8211;Southwest from Sitka about ten
+ miles was the location of the fishery of the Russians from which for more
+ than sixty years they drew their stores of <i>krasnia ruiba</i> (the red
+ salmon), which provided so important a part <span class="pagenum pncolor"><a
+ id="page_106"></a>106</span> of their subsistence. Here in the rocky wall
+ which divided Globokoe, or Deep Lake, from the sea, and over which the
+ outlet flowed, channels were blasted, forming reservoirs, and in these
+ channels were placed <i>zapors</i>, or fences, which made traps into which
+ the salmon swam and lay in the clear cold pools until they were removed
+ for use. Here also was one of the Russian flouring mills, where they
+ ground the wheat brought from California, or from the farms of the Hudson&#8217;s
+ Bay Company at Nisqually or on the Columbia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Sitka Hot Springs.&#8211;About four miles farther to the southwest
+ than the Redoubt, is situated the Sitka Hot Springs, possessing valuable
+ medicinal qualities, and used for more than a century as a health resort.
+ Here Dr. Goddard has established a sanitarium in the midst of a veritable
+ nature lover&#8217;s paradise, the forest behind, and the island-studded
+ sea in front, with game in the deep woods and fish in the sea, all to be
+ had for the taking.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Many other interesting and beautiful places may be visited. Lisianski Bay,
+ Deep Bay, Herring Bay with the gorge of Sawmill Creek and the chain of
+ lakes, Blue Lake, and others lying adjacent, are among the important ones.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <span class="pagenum pncolor"><a id="page_107"></a>107</span>Mt.
+ Verstovia.&#8211;The ascent of this mountain comprises one of the most
+ interesting excursions about the town. The trail leaves the shore of
+ Jamestown Bay at the point where the trough of the watering place of the
+ &#8220;Jamestown,&#8221; came to the beach. This place may be reached by
+ boat or on foot through the Park by the mouth of Indian River. The ascent
+ should be under the guidance of one familiar with the route, for it is not
+ plainly marked and none but an experienced woodsman can find the way
+ alone. It leads through a forest, the first 800 or 1,000 feet through
+ dense undergrowth under the trees, the mosses and ferns forming a
+ veritable carpet; above that the woods are more open&#8211;at about 2,500
+ feet the forest ceases. It is called Koster's Trail. The first eminence or
+ shoulder of the mountain is near the timber line and is often spoken of as
+ the Mountain of the Cross, while above it towers the Arrowhead, or the
+ summit of Verstovia, otherwise called at times Popoff Mountain, or the
+ Ponce, to a height of 3,216 feet, nearly a Russian verst, and from this it
+ derives its name. From the top an expanse of island-studded waters stretch
+ toward the sea. Eastward crest after crest of glacier-capped peaks rise
+ for a hundred miles, northward the lofty summits of Mt. Crillon and Mt.
+ Fairweather may be seen at an elevation of <span class="pagenum pncolor"><a
+ id="page_108"></a>108</span> over 15,000 feet, equal in height to the
+ highest Alp of Switzerland. Around the base of the Arrowhead, in July and
+ August, are found a myriad of wild flowers, carpeting the earth&#8211;violets,
+ daises, cyclamen, and a multitude of others.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These are the nearer points which may be visited, but more extended
+ journeys full of new and varied interest, to Sergius Narrows and Peril
+ Straits or to the Place of Islands and the Chicagof Mine to the northward,
+ and to Redfish Bay to the southward, may be made.
+ </p>
+ <hr class="pb" />
+ <p>
+ Footnotes
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <a id="Footnote_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1"><span class="label">[1]</span></a>
+ <p>
+ January 20th, 1820, a letter written by the Directory at St. Petersburg
+ to Chief Manager Muravief at Sitka enclosing instructions previously
+ given to Hagemeister, instructing him to find the descendants of
+ Chirikof&#8217;s lost men, urging that it must be done, and expressing
+ surprise that it had been neglected thus long. (Russian American
+ Archives, Correspondence, Vol. II, No. 108.)
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <!-- footnote -->
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <a id="Footnote_2"></a><a href="#FNanchor_2"><span class="label">[2]</span></a>
+ <p>
+ In Wrangell, and at a few other places in Alaska may yet be seen some of
+ these old tribal houses, built as in primitive days in most ways. The
+ beams and planks were fashioned with an adze, and the evenness of the
+ workmanship in hewing them is marvelous.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <!-- footnote -->
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <a id="Footnote_3"></a><a href="#FNanchor_3"><span class="label">[3]</span></a>
+ <p>
+ The livestock taken to Sitka in 1804 consisted of &#8220;Four cows, two
+ calves, three bulls, three goats, a ewe and a ram, with many swine and
+ fowls.&#8221; (Lisianski, Voyage Round the World, p. 218.)
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <!-- footnote -->
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <a id="Footnote_4"></a><a href="#FNanchor_4"><span class="label">[4]</span></a>
+ <p>
+ Lisianski made the surveys and named the islands of the archipelago
+ which had not been charted by Vancouver, of which he says: &#8220;By our
+ survey it appears that amongst the group of islands, which in my chart I
+ have denominated the Sitka Islands, from the inhabitants, who call
+ themselves Sitka-hans, or Sitka people, are four principal ones, viz.:
+ Jacobi, Crooze, Baranof, and Chichagof.&#8221; (A Voyage Round the
+ World, Lisianski, p. 235.)
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <!-- footnote -->
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <a id="Footnote_5"></a><a href="#FNanchor_5"><span class="label">[5]</span></a>
+ <p>
+ The Russian sazhen is 7 feet.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <!-- footnote -->
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <a id="Footnote_6"></a><a href="#FNanchor_6"><span class="label">[6]</span></a>
+ <p>
+ Pronounced Al-e-ut.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <!-- footnote -->
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <a id="Footnote_7"></a><a href="#FNanchor_7"><span class="label">[7]</span></a>
+ <p>
+ These books and letters were brought by Resanof in the &#8220;Nedeshda,&#8221;
+ and upon reaching Kodiak Resanof established the library at that place.
+ It was afterward removed to Sitka, probably by Baranof when he changed
+ the chief factory to that place in 1807. After the United States took
+ possession the library disappeared, whether taken to Russia or left in
+ Sitka does not appear, but the books were likely left in Sitka and
+ gradually disappeared through theft in the years when there was no
+ custodian of such property.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <!-- footnote -->
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <a id="Footnote_8"></a><a href="#FNanchor_8"><span class="label">[8]</span></a>
+ <p>
+ The &#8220;Neva&#8221; was long identified with the affairs of the
+ colony. Bought in England for the first Russian expedition round the
+ world, Captain Lisianski reached Sitka in time for her to participate in
+ the driving of the Indians from their fortifications. She returned to
+ Russia later to be sailed to the colony in 1810, and was on her third
+ voyage at the time of her loss.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <!-- footnote -->
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <a id="Footnote_9"></a><a href="#FNanchor_9"><span class="label">[9]</span></a>
+ <p>
+ Golofnin, Voyage of the Sloop &#8220;Kamchatka,&#8221; in Mat. Pt. 4, p.
+ 103.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <!-- footnote -->
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <a id="Footnote_10"></a><a href="#FNanchor_10"><span class="label">[10]</span></a>
+ <p>
+ Lutke: Voyages. Mat. Pt. 4, p. 147.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <!-- footnote -->
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <a id="Footnote_11"></a><a href="#FNanchor_11"><span class="label">[11]</span></a>
+ <p>
+ The tows were large pieces of native copper from the Copper River
+ hammered out flat by the natives. These were carried in front of the
+ chiefs by slaves who beat them like gongs.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <!-- footnote -->
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <a id="Footnote_12"></a><a href="#FNanchor_12"><span class="label">[12]</span></a>
+ <p>
+ In the church records appears the entry: &#8220;Died, August 27, 1832,
+ Naval Captain of the 1st Rank and Cavalier Baron Ferdinand Wrangell&#8217;s
+ daughter&#8211;Mary.&#8221; There is also to be found: &#8220;Died,
+ December 29th, 1839, Priest Vasili Michaeloff Ocheredin, 23 years old.&#8221;
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <!-- footnote -->
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <a id="Footnote_13"></a><a href="#FNanchor_13"><span class="label">[13]</span></a>
+ <p>
+ Narrative of a Voyage Round the World, 1836-1842, by Captain Sir Edward
+ Belcher, Vol. 1, pages 95 et seq.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <!-- footnote -->
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <a id="Footnote_14"></a><a href="#FNanchor_14"><span class="label">[14]</span></a>
+ <p>
+ Frederick Schwatka, the explorer, seems to have been one of the first to
+ put the story in print, which he did in the early eighties. It appeared
+ in the Alaska News, a newspaper of Juneau, on December 24th, 1896, and
+ the time is fixed as being in the administration of Baron Wrangell. In
+ 1891 Hon. Henry E. Hayden published it in verse in a small volume
+ printed at Sitka. John W. Arctander, in his Lady in Blue, elaborates it
+ to a small volume and ascribes it to Etolin&#8217;s time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is a strange fact which gives some color to the story. In the
+ Russian American Company&#8217;s Archives now on file in the State
+ Department, Washington, D. C., under date of September 23rd, 1833, a
+ letter from St. Petersburg refers to a report of Baron Wrangell of
+ November 30, 1831, which reported the death of under officer Paul
+ Buikof, and implicating one Col. Borusof. Unfortunately the records of
+ 1831 are missing and so the report cannot be had. Baron Wrangell&#8217;s
+ daughter, Mary, died during his stay in Sitka.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <!-- footnote -->
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <a id="Footnote_15"></a><a href="#FNanchor_15"><span class="label">[15]</span></a>
+ <p>
+ Between 1821 and 1862 there were shipped by the Russian American
+ Company, from Alaska, 51,315 sea-otter, 831,396 fur-seal, 319,514
+ beaver, 291,655 fox. Fur-Seal Arbitration, Vol. 2, p. 127 (Washington,
+ Government Printing Office).
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <!-- footnote -->
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <a id="Footnote_16"></a><a href="#FNanchor_16"><span class="label">[16]</span></a>
+ <p>
+ &#8220;For the largest deer, which weighs about four poods, five sazhens
+ of calico are paid; for a duck, a quid of tobacco; for a goose, two
+ quids; fish priced according to size all according to price list
+ established by the commander of the post of New Archangel.&#8221;
+ Russkie na Vostochnom Okean (Russians on the Eastern Ocean), by A.
+ Markof, St. Petersburg, 1856.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <!-- footnote -->
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <a id="Footnote_17"></a><a href="#FNanchor_17"><span class="label">[17]</span></a>
+ <p>
+ Hunters who disposed of their furs to an English shipmaster were
+ arrested and sent to Siberia. Russian American Archives. Corr. Vol. I,
+ p. 275. In January of 1820 Muravief was ordered to watch certain
+ officers of a ship who were suspected of trading for furs on their own
+ account. Id. Vol. 2, p. 38.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <!-- footnote -->
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <a id="Footnote_18"></a><a href="#FNanchor_18"><span class="label">[18]</span></a>
+ <p>
+ The mill on Sawmill Creek was located in the gorge below where the dam
+ is situated which provides the power for the present light plant of the
+ town. The timbers of the old mill were removed in 1916 to make way for
+ the building of the present improvement.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <!-- footnote -->
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <a id="Footnote_19"></a><a href="#FNanchor_19"><span class="label">[19]</span></a>
+ <p>
+ Golobokoe Lake was sounded to a depth of 190 fathoms by the Russians.
+ Materialui, Pt. 3, p. 48.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <!-- footnote -->
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <a id="Footnote_20"></a><a href="#FNanchor_20"><span class="label">[20]</span></a>
+ <p>
+ Obzor Russkikh Colonii iv Syevernoe-Amerika, Survey of the Russian
+ Colonies in North America, by Captain-Lieutenant P. N. Golovin, pp.
+ 72-73.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <!-- footnote -->
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <a id="Footnote_21"></a><a href="#FNanchor_21"><span class="label">[21]</span></a>
+ <p>
+ Their names and dates of holding office are as follows:
+ </p>
+ <p style="margin-left:1em;">
+ Alexander Andreevich Baranof, 1790 to January 11, 1818.<br /> Leonti
+ Andreanvich Hagemeister, Jan. 11, 1818, to Oct. 24, 1818.<br /> Semen
+ Ivanovich Yanovski, Oct. 24, 1818, to Sept. 15, 1820.<br /> Matvei
+ Ivanovich Muravief, Sept. 15, 1820, to Oct. 14, 1825.<br /> Peter
+ Egorovich Chistiakof, Oct. 14, 1825, to June 1st, 1830.<br /> Baron
+ Ferdinand Von Wrangell, June 1st, 1830, to Oct. 29, 1835.<br /> Ivan
+ Antonovich Kupreanof, Oct. 29, 1835, to May 25, 1840.<br /> Adolf
+ Karlovich Etolin, May 25, 1840, to July 9, 1845.<br /> Michael Dmitrevich
+ Tebenkof, July 9, 1845, to Oct. 14, 1850.<br /> Nikolai Yakovlevich
+ Rosenberg, Oct. 14, 1850, to March 31, 1853.<br /> Alexander Ilich
+ Rudakof, March 31, 1853, to April 22, 1854.<br /> Stephen Vasili
+ Voevodski, April 22, 1854, to June 22, 1859.<br /> Ivan Vasilivich
+ Furuhelm, June 22, 1859, to Dec. 2, 1863.<br /> Prince Dmitri Maksoutof,
+ Dec. 2, 1863, to Oct. 18, 1867.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <!-- footnote -->
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <a id="Footnote_22"></a><a href="#FNanchor_22"><span class="label">[22]</span></a>
+ <p>
+ The Russian soldiery were dressed in a dark uniform, trimmed with red,
+ with glazed caps. The United States troops appeared in the usual full
+ dress.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of American ladies, six were present: the wives of General Davis,
+ Colonel Weeks, Capt. Wood, and Rev. Mr. Rainier, of the &#8220;John L.
+ Stevens,&#8221; the wife of Mr. Dodge, Collector of the Port, and the
+ wife of Captain MacDougall, of the &#8220;Jamestown.&#8221; Six Russian
+ ladies were also present: the Princess Maksoutoff, the wife and daughter
+ of Vice-Governor Gardsishoff, and three whose names I do not know. H.
+ Ex. Doc. No. 177, 40th Cong. 2nd Sess., p. 72.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <!-- footnote -->
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <a id="Footnote_23"></a><a href="#FNanchor_23"><span class="label">[23]</span></a>
+ <p>
+ On the lowering of the Russian ensign it caught in the halyards and a
+ sailor was sent aloft to release it. He tore it loose and flung it down
+ on the bayonets of the Russian soldiery.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <!-- footnote -->
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <a id="Footnote_24"></a><a href="#FNanchor_24"><span class="label">[24]</span></a>
+ <p>
+ On December 14, 1807, the Russian ship &#8220;Czaritza,&#8221; sailed
+ for Russia, via London, with 168 passengers. January 1, 1868, the
+ Russian ship &#8220;Cyane&#8221; cleared for Novgorod, Asia, with 69
+ soldiers of the garrison on board. November 30, 1868, the Russian ship
+ &#8220;Winged Arrow,&#8221; went to Kronstadt, but there is no record of
+ the passengers. April 24th, 1868, the American steamer &#8220;Alexander&#8221;
+ took special clearance for Nikolofski, Asia, to touch at all the posts
+ along the Alaskan coasts to close up the business of the Russian
+ American Company. Customs Records of Alaska, Record of Clearances.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ship &#8220;Winged Arrow&#8221; sailed on December 8th, 1868, for
+ St. Petersburg, taking over 300 persons. Seattle Intelligencer, January
+ 11, 1869. This is the same voyage as the one above under the clearance
+ of November 30th.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <!-- footnote -->
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <a id="Footnote_25"></a><a href="#FNanchor_25"><span class="label">[25]</span></a>
+ <p>
+ If we may believe the current reports of the time, the military
+ occupation of Sitka was anything but a happy time for the civil
+ inhabitants, especially the Russians who remained. See Colyer&#8217;s
+ Report, Ex. Doc. H. R. 41st Cong. 2nd Ses., p. 1030; Seattle
+ Intelligencer, December 14th. 1868; The Victoria Colonist, et al.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <!-- footnote -->
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <a id="Footnote_26"></a><a href="#FNanchor_26"><span class="label">[26]</span></a>
+ <p>
+ Annahootz, the friend of the whites, married his 13th wife. Afterward
+ becoming blind and decrepit he starved himself to death. See Sitka
+ Alaskan, February 6, 1890.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Katlean still lives at Sitka and may often be seen on the streets of the
+ town.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <!-- footnote -->
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <a id="Footnote_27"></a><a href="#FNanchor_27"><span class="label">[27]</span></a>
+ <p>
+ The population of Sitka in 1818 was: Russian, 190; Creoles, 72; Aleuts,
+ 173 of males, and female 185; of Russian and Creole, total, 620.
+ Materialui, pt. 3, p. 20.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ January 1, 1825, there were: Russians, 309; Creoles, 58; Aleuts, 33.
+ Total, 400. Ib. p. 52.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In April, 1880, citizens by birth, 92; citizens by naturalization, 123;
+ citizens by treaty, 229. Total, 444. Beardslee&#8217;s Report, 47th
+ Cong. Sen. Ex. Doc. No. 71, p. 34. In this census are many names well
+ known in Alaska by the &#8220;Old Timers,&#8221; as: A. T. Whitford,
+ John G. Brady, N. A. Fuller, M. Travis, Edward DeGroff, S. Sessions, R.
+ Willoughby, M. P. Berry, A. Cohen, Miss P. Cohen, Miss H. Cohen, Ed.
+ Bean, D. Ackerman, A. Milletich, P. T. Corcoran, L. Caplin, Pierre
+ Erussard, Ed. Doyle, George E. Pilz, Nicholas Haley, John McKenna, Reub
+ Albertson, John Olds and others.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <!-- footnote -->
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <a id="Footnote_28"></a><a href="#FNanchor_28"><span class="label">[28]</span></a>
+ <p>
+ Governors of Alaska who made their residence at Sitka:
+ </p>
+ <p style="margin-left:1em;">
+ John H. Kinkead, of Nevada, appointed July 4, 1884.<br /> Alfred P.
+ Swineford, of Michigan, appointed May 8, 1885.<br /> Lyman E. Knapp, of
+ Vermont, appointed April 32, 1889.<br /> James Sheakley, of Alaska,
+ appointed June 28, 1893.<br /> John G. Brady, of Alaska, appointed June
+ 23, 1897.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <!-- footnote -->
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <a id="Footnote_29"></a><a href="#FNanchor_29"><span class="label">[29]</span></a>
+ <p>
+ &#8220;The United States District Court, established by the Act of May
+ 17th, 1884, was formerly organized on the 4th day of November of that
+ year in a room set apart for the use of the court in the old barracks
+ building at Sitka, the following officers being present: Ward
+ McAllister, Jr., Judge; Andrew T. Lewis, Clerk of the Court; Munson C.
+ Hillyer, U.&nbsp;S. Marshal; Edward W. Haskett, District Attorney.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &#8220;On the same day John F. McLean, an officer connected with the
+ signal service, and Major M. P. Berry, a veteran of the Civil and
+ Mexican wars, were admitted to the bar, as well as District Attorney
+ Haskett. These three gentlemen comprised the Alaska Bar of Attorneys
+ until June 20th, 1885, when Mr. John G. Held was added to the roll and
+ in the month of October, 1885, Willoughby Clark, John F. Maloney, R. D.
+ Crittenden, and John G. Brady were admitted.&#8221; Alaska Bar
+ Association and Sketch of the Judiciary, by Arthur K. Delaney.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <!-- footnote -->
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <a id="Footnote_30"></a><a href="#FNanchor_30"><span class="label">[30]</span></a>
+ <p>
+ The first church in Alaska was built at Kodiak (Paulovski) in 1795, the
+ next at Unalaska soon after, and the third at Sitka in 1817.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <!-- footnote -->
+ <hr class="pb" />
+ <div class="figcenter map">
+ <a id="link_i15"></a><img src="images/illus-map-sm.jpg" alt="" /><br /> <a
+ href="images/illus-map.jpg"><span class="fs08">Click for larger image</span></a>
+ <p class="center caption">
+ MAP OF SITKA&#8211;OCTOBER, 1867
+ </p>
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+
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+ </body>
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Story of Sitka, by C. L. Andrews
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Story of Sitka
+ The Historic Outpost of the Northwest Coast
+
+Author: C. L. Andrews
+
+Release Date: April 2, 2010 [EBook #31862]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE STORY OF SITKA ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Roger Frank and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at http://www.fadedpage.com
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE STORY OF SITKA
+
+THE HISTORIC OUTPOST OF THE NORTHWEST COAST
+
+THE CHIEF FACTORY OF THE RUSSIAN AMERICAN COMPANY
+
+By
+
+C. L. ANDREWS
+
+Seattle, Washington
+
+PRESS OF
+
+Lowman & Hanford Co.
+
+SEATTLE
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+ Foreword 1
+ I Discovery 7
+ II Settlement 13
+ III Progress of the Colony 27
+ IV Natives 45
+ V Churches and Schools 54
+ VI Social Life 60
+ VII Trade and Industry 66
+ VIII Sitka under United States Rule 77
+ IX What to See 92
+
+ILLUSTRATIONS
+
+ Facing Page
+ Lovers' Lane 1
+ Mount Edgecumbe 11
+ Sitka in 1805 25
+ Bakery and Shops of the Russians 36
+ The Ranche 46
+ Cathedral of St. Michael 54
+ The Madonna 56
+ The Baranof Castle 60
+ The Grave of Princess Maksoutoff 62
+ Sitka in 1860 66
+ Sitka in 1869 77
+ Sitka--East on Lincoln Street 93
+ Interior of Cathedral 95
+ Russian Blockhouse 100
+ Map of Sitka 108
+
+
+
+
+TO MY MOTHER
+
+THIS VOLUME IS AFFECTIONATELY
+
+DEDICATED
+
+THE AUTHOR
+
+Copyright 1922
+
+By C. L. ANDREWS
+
+Seattle, Wash.
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: Lovers' Lane, Sitka.]
+
+
+
+
+SITKA
+
+Foreword
+
+
+The panorama of sea, island, and mountain, which holds Sitka, Alaska, as
+a jewel in its setting, is one of the most beautiful of those which
+surround the cities of the world. Toward the sea from the peninsula on
+which Sitka is situated stretches an expanse of waters, studded with
+forest-clad islands which break the swell of the Pacific that foams and
+tumbles on the outer barriers. To the westward Mount Edgecumbe lifts its
+perfect cone, its summit truncated by the old crater whose fires have
+been dead for centuries; to the northward Harbor peak lifts its signal
+to mariners; the Sisters, with a gleam of snow and ice among their
+pinnacles, lie in the distance of Indian River; to the east is the
+arrowhead of Mount Verstovia; the glaciers glisten beyond; and the sweep
+of mist-clad mountains, in their softness, beyond the bay to the
+southeast completes the circle.
+
+Radiating like the spokes of a wheel, waterways with historic memories
+reach out from the town. Krestof Bay, where the early navigators cast
+anchor; Neva Strait, commemorating the first Russian ship that visited
+Sitka from around the world; Katleanski Bay, on which was situated Old
+Sitka; Silver Bay, a Norwegian fjord transplanted to Alaska; Lisianski
+Bay, named for the Russian navigator of a century ago; the inlet at
+Ozerskoe Redoubt and Globokoe (Deep) Lake; the island-studded way to the
+Hot Springs; each with its individual charm; the ocean, with the deep,
+rich, marine tints of northern waters; the forest of blue, that folds
+like a robe over the mountains; the mountain summits beside the
+glaciers, clad in the exquisitely wonderful green of the Northland, all
+are delightful. But when the sun sinks low in the west, with the long,
+lingering twilight of the North, and the soft, delicate rays touch and
+blend with the water and islands, the mountains and sky--then, in the
+mystery of the evening, is the supreme beauty of the land. To those who
+have really known and loved Sitka, there is no place on earth to
+compare.
+
+There are pleasant recollections of those who have lived there. Jovial
+Edward Degroff and his stories at the Roastology Club; the Mills, whose
+hospitable home is known to every resident of the town; Wm. Gouverneur
+Morris, whose name recalls a leader of Revolutionary days; genial George
+Barron, who upheld every good tradition of the Navy; the gallant old
+soldier, Matthew P. Berry; dignified Judge Delaney, Alaska's staunchest
+advocate through all vicissitudes; Governor Brady, with his neverfailing
+faith in Alaska's greatness; Captain Francis, without whom the early
+naval commanders thought the warships could not thread the intricate
+passages; Nicholas Haley, with his optimistic dreams of El Doradoes;
+Pauline Archangelsky, for whom the "Old Timers" have pleasant
+recollections; Alonzo Austin and his mission; Captain Kilgore of the
+"Rush"; Merrill, who caught on the photograph plate the elusive spirit
+of the varying surroundings as only a true artist could; Katherine
+Delaney Abrams, whose touch in watercolor delineated the glory of the
+sunsets as none else could; Professor Richardson, who for a quarter of a
+century returned year after year thousands of miles to perpetuate in
+paintings the exquisite tintings of glaciers and mountain; George
+Kostromitinoff (Father Sergius); Father Metropolski, and many others who
+have made a part of the quaint old town.
+
+There is a saying that whosoever comes to love the waters of the Indian
+River will ever after yearn for them, and it seems true, for always is
+that harking back to its banks with an unsatisfied longing.
+
+From prehistoric time this has been the home of the Sitka Kwan of the
+Thlingit people. For sixty-three years it was the scene of the chief
+activities of the Russian American Company, who represented the rule of
+the Muscovites, who, when Chicago was but a blockhouse in a sedgy swamp
+on the banks of a sluggish, reedy river, and when San Francisco was but
+a mission and a Presidio of sun-burned bricks, maintained in Sitka a
+community of busy people who were casting cannon and bells, and who were
+building ships for commerce.
+
+In the establishment of this outpost the foundation was laid for the
+title of the United States to the southeastern part of Alaska, a land
+rich in fur and forest, in gold and copper, in marble and fish, the
+potential possibilities of which are not even approximately forecasted
+today. Enough to say of it, that in its limits are two mines, one of
+which has yielded over sixty-five millions of dollars in gold, and the
+other ranks among the richest of the mineral producing veins of the
+world.
+
+Some may have an interest in the story of the quaint, quiet, beautiful
+village on the shore of Baranof Island. I hope this may add something to
+history, keeping the events of the past bright in the memory of those
+who love the Northland and its story, and add a little of interest and
+information of the present to those who come as transient visitors to
+while away a few days among the myriad islands of the Sitkan
+Archipelago. It is a link to connect the Sitka of the past, the _Novo
+Arkangelsk_ of the great Russian American Company in the romantic
+days of the fur trade when it was the center of the vast domain of
+Russian America and gathered to its magazines the pelts of sea-otter and
+fox, with the Sitka of today with its fisheries and mines. The old
+landmarks are fast disappearing, scarce a year passes without some
+monument passing away, and even their location will soon be forgotten
+unless some record is made for those who do not know where they stood.
+
+
+
+
+SITKA
+
+THE HISTORIC OUTPOST OF THE
+NORTHWEST
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+DISCOVERY
+
+
+Sitka of the Russians, a century ago, was the center of trade and
+civilization on the Northwest Coast of America, the chief factory of the
+Russian American Company in the vast and little known land of the
+Russian Possessions in America. The sails of ships from far off
+Kronstadt on the Baltic brought Russian cargoes. The famous clipper
+ships of New England made it a stopping place on their way to the China
+seas. English traders and explorers visited it on their voyages, and in
+it was centered the trade of a wide region. It was the chief factory of
+the greatest rival in the fur trade of the world, with which the
+Honourable, the Hudson's Bay Company, which then was the controlling
+power in the English fur market, had to contend.
+
+The story of Sitka goes back past the middle of the Eighteenth Century.
+There are Russians, Spanish, English, French and Americans who have
+woven each their own part of the web of the tale, and the scenes have
+been as varied and strange as the people.
+
+July 16, 1741, a Russian ship stood into a broad harbor on the Northwest
+Coast of America. The commander, Captain Alexei Chirikof, had sailed
+three thousand miles across the unknown Pacific from the shores of the
+Okhotsk Sea. Civilized eyes had never before rested on these shores and
+he was keen with the excitement of adventure and discovery as he dropped
+anchor. He sent a party ashore in the ship's longboat to explore, and
+awaited the result. Days passed and no word or signal came, so the
+remaining boat was sent to recall the party and it was swallowed up in
+the labyrinth among the green islands. Signals indicated that it safely
+landed but none returned to the ship although the orders were imperative
+that both boats return at once. The last boat was gone. Three weeks
+passed. Captain Chirikof could not reach the shore and could no longer
+lie at anchor, so reluctantly and sadly he set his course for the far
+off Kamchatkan shores and sailed away from the port of missing men.
+
+Nearly two centuries have passed since the Russian seamen landed and no
+word has come from them. For more than seventy years the Russian
+Government sought for some sign of their fate.[1] Tales were told of a
+colony of Russians existing on the coast but each upon investigation
+proved but a rumor.
+
+There is a dim tradition among the Sitkas of men being lured ashore in
+the long ago. They say that Chief Annahootz, the predecessor of the
+chief of that name who was the firm friend of the whites at Sitka in
+1878, was the leading actor in the tragedy. Annahootz dressed himself in
+the skin of a bear and played along the beach. So skillfully did he
+simulate the sinuous motions of the animal that the Russians in the
+excitement of the chase plunged into the woods in pursuit and there the
+savage warriors killed them to a man, leaving none to tell the story.
+The disappearance of Chirikof's men has remained one of the many
+unsolved mysteries of the Northland, and their fate will never be known
+to a certainty.
+
+The faulty record of the navigation of a time that counted by dead
+reckoning, and without a knowledge of the currents of those seas, does
+not tell us the exact location of the anchorage, but beyond a reasonable
+doubt it was in Sitka Sound, and the Russian seamen died at the hands of
+the Sitka Kwan of the Thlingits. In this manner Sitka first became known
+to the White Man's World.
+
+On the 16th day of August, 1775, came the Royal Standard of Spain, flung
+to the breeze from the little schooner "Sonora," only 36 feet in length,
+under command of Don Francisco de la Bodega y Quadra. Quadra was one of
+the greatest and best of the Spanish navigators in the North. His
+voyages are among the most successful of those of the mariners of his
+nation in the waters of the north Pacific ocean, and his name was once
+linked with that of the English Commander on the island now bearing the
+name of Vancouver. Quadra came from the Mexican port of San Blas, and
+after many thrilling adventures and grievous hardships he sailed into a
+broad bay and dropped anchor. There was a mountain, of which he says:
+"Of the most regular and beautiful form I had ever seen. It was also
+quite detached from the great ridge of mountains. Its top was covered
+with snow, under which appeared some gullies, which continue till about
+the middle of the mountain, and from thence to the bottom are trees of
+the same kind as those at Trinity."
+
+[Illustration: Mount Edgecumbe.]
+
+He named the mountain _San Jacinthus_, and the point of the island
+that extends out toward the sea, Cape _del Engano_. No one who has
+looked upon the slopes of the mountain which stands to the seaward from
+Sitka can mistake the description. He anchored in what is now known as
+Krestof Bay, about six miles northwest from Sitka, and he called it Port
+_Guadalupe_.
+
+Captain Cook, on his Third Voyage of Exploration, in 1778, with the
+ships "Resolution" and "Discovery," passed along the coast and noted the
+bay, of which he says: "An arm of this bay, in the northern part of it,
+seemed to extend in toward the north, behind a round elevated mountain I
+called Mount Edgecumbe, and the point of land that shoots out from it
+Cape Edgecumbe." This name supplanted the one given by the Spaniard and
+the beautiful cone is yet known by the title he bestowed.
+
+The early Russians called the mountain St. Lazaria, assuming that it was
+the peak seen by Chirikof on his ill fated voyage of discovery and so
+named by him. The small island at the south is still known as San
+Lazaria Island.
+
+Captain Dixon, of H. M. S. "Queen Charlotte," came during the summer of
+1787, on a fur trading voyage. Dixon had just departed from the harbor
+when Captain Portlock, of the English ship "King George," which was
+lying in Portlock Harbor, to the northward in Chichagoff Island, sent
+his ship's boat through the passage behind Kruzof Island to about the
+present site of Sitka, and made the discovery for the civilized world
+that Mount Edgecumbe is on an island.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+SETTLEMENT
+
+
+The sea-otter, a marine animal about four feet in length when fully
+grown, with soft, long black pelage of silky texture, is one of the most
+valued of the fur-bearers. It was found abundantly all the way along the
+Northwest Coast, and especially in the passages about Sitka. It is now
+nearly extinct.
+
+The Russians had been gathering the skins of the sea-otter in the
+northern waters for years, ever since Chirikof made his voyage to Sitka,
+and they were truly an El Dorado, in fur, to the traders who plied their
+trade along the coasts. Captain Cook and his sailors, when on their
+voyage in these waters, bought skins for mere trifles, some for a
+handful of iron nails. These same skins sold for as much as sixty
+dollars each in China where they visited on their way home. The story of
+the furs went over the world and English, French and American traders
+thronged to these waters to sail their ships into the straits and barter
+for the rich pelts. To secure a profit of $50,000 on a voyage was not
+unusual. Ingraham, the lieutenant of Captain Gray whom we all know so
+well for his discovery of the great River of the West, sailed to near
+Sitka before his principal entered the river which he named for his
+ship, the Columbia. The French ship "Solide," in 1791, sailed from
+France to gather a portion of the harvest. Her captain, Etienne
+Marchand, anchored in Sitka Bay, and called it _Tchinkitinay_, as
+he declares it was known to the natives. To his ship flocked the painted
+and skin-clad natives with their peltries for barter. On their persons
+he saw articles of European manufacture, showing that other ships had
+visited there, and in the ears of one young savage were hanging pendant
+two copper coins of the colony of Massachusetts. His success in trade
+was not such as he might have wished, so he sailed way, remarking that,
+"The modern Hebrews would, perhaps, have little to teach to these people
+in the art of trade."
+
+March 31st, 1799, the Yankee skipper, Cleveland, of the merchant ship
+"Caroline," sailed into the bay, dropped anchor and fired a cannon shot
+as a signal. He was one of those shrewd, lean traders, skilled in
+navigation, who sailed from Boston round the Horn, with their bucko
+mates, who could drive a tack with the prow of a ship, so to speak, and
+in those days there were no corners of the earth where they might not be
+found seeking for profit. He was wise to the ways of the sharp trading
+canoemen of these waters, and their aggressive proclivities, so he
+prepared his ship with regard for all the possibilities of the business.
+Around it as a bulwark he stretched a barrier of dry bull hides brought
+from the California coast. At the stern was a place prepared for the
+trading. Forward on the deck were planted cannon, shotted with shrapnel,
+trained so as to rake the afterdeck, and beside each was a gunner's
+match.
+
+On the first day, for two hundred yards of broadcloth, he purchased a
+hundred prime sea-otter skins, worth $50 each in Canton. Barter was
+going merrily on, when a scream from amidships startled the crew. The
+Thlingits sprang to their boats. The squaws backed the canoes away from
+the ship's sides. Arrows were fitted to bowstrings, spears were poised
+and muskets primed. On the ships the sailors lighted the cannon matches
+and stood by ready to fire. A fight was hovering in the air when the
+cause of the disturbance was discovered. An inquisitive Thlingit pried
+between the bull hides opposite the cook's galley, and the cook had
+saluted him with a ladle of hot water. In his surprise he upset his
+canoe and his family were struggling in the sea. His baby was rescued by
+a seaman, amends were made to his injured feelings, and the barter
+proceeded as before.
+
+The waters were filled with ships. In a stay of a month the "Caroline"
+spoke the ship "Hancock," the ship "Despatch," the ship "Ulysses," and
+the ship "Eliza," all of Boston; and the English ship "Cheerful," all
+trading for furs among the Sitkan Islands.
+
+The Russians, in their colony on Kodiak Island, were jealous of the
+intruders on what they considered as their domain. Gregory Shelikof, a
+Siberian merchant, one of the wealthiest and most far seeing of the
+leaders among the Aleutian Islands, conceived the plan of combining the
+whole of the fur trade in one great monopoly. In pursuance of this
+policy he secured a charter from Emperor Paul in 1799, under the name of
+the Russian American Company, which gave the exclusive right to all
+profits to be derived from every form of resource in the Russian
+possessions in America for a period of twenty years. To the management
+of his business in the Colony he established on Kodiak Island he
+appointed Alexander Andreevich Baranof, a Siberian trader of great
+ability and experience. Baranof, the wise and far-seeing Russian ruler
+of the Russian American Company, at his factory in St. Paul's Harbor on
+Kodiak Island, had long planned the extension of his settlements to the
+southeast. The sea-otter catch of the Russians was made by brigades of
+Aleuts from the western islands, who went along the shores and to sea as
+far as 20 miles, in their wonderful skin boats called bidarkas, to hunt.
+When a sea-otter lifted its head from the water to breathe, within sight
+of a detachment of Aleut hunters, its fate was sealed, for it seldom
+escaped.
+
+The passages between the islands about Sitka were called the "Straits"
+by the Russians, and in them the sea-otter skins were taken by the
+thousands. It was not unusual for a Russian hunting party consisting of
+a hundred bidarkas to take on one expedition 2,000 skins of the
+_Morski bobrov_, as they called the sea-otter.
+
+The animals were becoming scarce in the seas about the western islands
+and Baranof was compelled to replenish his trade by the catch of the
+southeastern waters. In 1795 he sent one of his ships as far south as
+the Queen Charlotte Islands and it visited Sitka on the way. Two
+thousand skins were secured by the hunters while on this voyage. In the
+same year Baranof himself paid Sitka a visit, coming through the strait
+from the north in his little schooner "Olga," a 40-foot boat, and he
+named the passage for his craft as Olga Strait. On the shore near his
+anchorage he erected a cross; the bay he named Krestof Bay, and he then
+selected the locality of his future settlement.
+
+In the spring of 1799, Baranof sent orders to the toyons, or chiefs, of
+the tribes on the islands around Kodiak to assemble the hunters. Five
+hundred and fifty bidarkas, each manned by from two to three Aleut
+paddlers, came in answer to his call, and with two convoying ships he
+set sail for Sitka Sound. On July 7th he landed at a bay six miles north
+of the present town of Sitka, purchased a tract of land from
+Skayeutlelt, a local chief, and began the construction of a post which
+he named redoubt St. Michael. The building was done under great
+difficulties. Rain fell incessantly. There were but thirty Russian
+workmen as most of the Aleuts returned to Kodiak, hunting as they went.
+Of the men who remained ten had to stand guard constantly, for the
+Thlingits were not to be trusted. Barracks, storehouses, quarters for
+the commanding officer, were constructed; a bath house also, for the
+Russian must have his bath, and the whole was surrounded by a stockade
+and strengthened by blockhouses. Their troubles were not all with the
+elements, for during the winter the scarcity of provision and other
+causes brought scurvy to add to their discomfort. Their food was mostly
+yuhali (dried salmon), but during the winter the hunters took 40
+sea-lions, and in the spring many seals were killed in the bay by the
+Aleuts.
+
+The natives, called Thlingits at the present, were known as the Kolosh
+by the Russians. They were divided among themselves in their feelings
+toward the new settlers in their midst. Some looked with extreme
+disfavor upon the establishment, while others were friendly. The young
+and turbulent warriors were hostile. A messenger was sent to invite them
+to a prasdnik (holiday) at the fort. He was taken prisoner by them and
+detained until Baranof landed in their midst with an armed force and
+demanded his release, when they set him free and ridiculed the incident.
+At a dance at the fort many of the Kolosh came with long knives
+concealed under their cloaks. Their treachery was detected and their
+design frustrated. The courage and caution of Baranof held them in check
+until spring when he departed for Kodiak, leaving strict instructions as
+to the precautions to be observed during his absence. After his
+departure the discipline grew more lax and the Kolosh became more bold.
+The watchful savages at last saw an opportunity to rid themselves of
+their new neighbors.
+
+On a June day of 1802, the exact date is not recorded, a horde of
+painted savages burst from the forest, clad in all the paraphernalia of
+war masks and barbaric armour. A fleet of war canoes landed warriors on
+the beach in front of the redoubt. In the attack that followed the
+stockade and buildings were reduced to smoking ruins, the magazines were
+robbed of rich stores of furs, most of the defenders died on the spears
+of the Kolosh or were tortured till death relieved their sufferings, and
+the women and children were made slaves. Skayeutlelt, the false friend
+of Baranof, directed the battle from a nearby knoll and his nephew,
+Katlean, was one of the principal actors in the bloody tragedy. A few
+survivors who were hunting in their bidarkas or were in the forest,
+escaped to the ships of the English and American traders which were in
+the bay.
+
+Captain Ebbetts on an American ship and Captain Barber of the British
+ship "Myrtle" were in the harbor. Some of the survivors on reaching
+these ships asked them to rescue their countrymen. Captain Ebbetts
+ransomed several prisoners, but Captain Barber adopted a more effective
+course. Chief Katlean and Chief Skayeutlelt came on board his ship to
+trade. He at once put them in irons and threatened to hang them to the
+yardarm of the ship if the captives remaining in the hands of the
+natives, and also the plundered sea-otter skins, were not immediately
+surrendered to him. The threat was effective, the greater part of the
+sea-otter furs and several captives were brought on the ship and
+delivered to him. He then took the ransomed captives from the other ship
+and sailed for Kodiak, where he demanded a ransom of 50,000 rubles from
+Baranof for the captives. The ransom was later reduced to 10,000 rubles
+which was paid by Mr. Baranof.
+
+Two years passed before much is again known of Sitka. English and
+American captains sailed their ships into the harbor and gathered the
+furs which Baranof had endeavored to garner in the storehouses of the
+Russian American Company. In the summer of 1804 Baranof gathered a force
+at Kodiak with which to cross the Gulf of Alaska to re-establish his
+post. There were one hundred and fifty bearded _promyshileniks_, or
+fur hunters, and over 500 Aleuts in their skin bidarkas. With him were
+the ships "Alexander," "Ekaterina," "Yermak," and "Rostislaf." When they
+reached Sitka they found there Captain Lisianski of the Imperial Russian
+Navy, with the ship "Neva," one of the first Russians to circle the
+globe, and who came to help to recapture the post.
+
+The Indian village of Sitka was almost in the same place as the present
+town, grouped around the Baranof hill which was called by the Russians a
+_kekoor_. On the top of the kekoor was a redoubt, and a stronger
+fort was near the mouth of the Indian River, or _Kolosh Ryeku_.
+
+On the morning of September 28th the Russian ships moved to a point
+opposite the village, the "Neva" being towed by a hundred bidarkas. The
+Sitkans abandoned their village and the fort on the hill and withdrew to
+the stronger fortification near the river. Baranof landed a force and
+occupied the kekoor, planted cannon on the top, then opened negotiations
+for the surrender of the other fort, but his overtures were rejected by
+the Indians.
+
+The ships were brought near the river fort and the cannon were trained
+on it. The fort was built of thick logs in the shape of an irregular
+square, with portholes on the side next the sea, and inside the breast
+works were 14 barabaras, or native houses.
+
+The walls were of such thickness that the cannon shot from the "Neva"
+made but little impression on the structure. Baranof was impatient and
+urged an attack. Reinforcements were landed from the ships under command
+of Lieutenants Arbusof and Polavishin. The hunters, sailors, and Aleuts
+flung themselves against the fortifications, but meeting a murderous
+fire were driven back in disorder and only saved from disaster by the
+protection of the fire of the ships. Ten men were killed and 26 wounded,
+and among the wounded was Baranof.
+
+Captain Lisianski then took command and moved his ships nearer the
+shore. A canoe with reinforcements and a supply of powder for the
+Indians approached among the islands but a shot from the "Neva" struck
+it, the powder exploded, and the Indians who were saved from the wreck
+were taken on board the Russian ship. The bombardment was steadily
+continued until the 6th of October, when the Kolosh proposed to
+surrender, and a parley was held, but during the night they evacuated
+the fort and went over the mountains to the north. In the fort were left
+the bodies of 30 warriors and also the bodies of five children who had
+been killed to prevent their cries making the retreat known to the
+Russians. The only remaining survivors were two old women and a little
+boy. A few straggling warriors remained lurking about, seeking revenge,
+and a few days later they killed eight Aleuts who were fishing on
+Jamestown Bay.
+
+How the Kolosh went over the mountains was long a mystery to the
+Russians. They reached the shore of Peril Strait and crossing to the
+north shore placed a fort near the entrance to Sitkoh Bay which was
+stronger than their old fort at Indian River and where over 1,000 people
+gathered. A tradition among the old Indians says that the fugitives
+first went to Old Sitka, then over the mountains to the northeastern
+side of the island. On the way they suffered extremely from fatigue and
+hunger, and one Sitka Indian who lives on Peril Strait relates that his
+father was a child at the time of the exodus. His father carried him
+till exhausted, when he abandoned him, and his mother then took him up
+and carried him the remainder of the way.
+
+The property left in the fort by the Kolosh was taken out, the
+fortification was burned and the canoes on the beach were broken to
+pieces. There was enough remaining of the structure that some of the
+remains of the foundation may yet be seen in the forest which has sprung
+up around it in the Indian River Park, although more than a century has
+since elapsed.
+
+[Illustration: Sitka in 1805--From Lisianski's Voyage.]
+
+Then began the restoration of the post, on the present site of Sitka,
+and with energy and despatch the building of a new Russian settlement
+proceeded. Around the kekoor the native houses were removed, and along
+with them more than a hundred burial houses with the ashes of the bodies
+which had been burned. The great tribal houses, or barabaras, as they
+are called in the Russian accounts, were spacious, some measuring 50
+feet in width and 80 feet in length.[2] In their place rose the town of
+New Archangel (_Novo Arkangelsk_,) and on the kekoor was built a
+redoubt. This was the official name and generally recognized by the
+Russians, but the name Sitka was early used by them. Baranof frequently
+used the term Sitka in his letters, and in the letter of the Minister of
+Finance to the Minister of Marine, from St. Petersburg, April 9, 1820,
+Sitka is used in several places. The name Sitka, or Sheetkah, in the
+Thlingit language, means, in this place, that this is the place, or the
+best place, implying superiority over all other places.
+
+All winter there was cutting of logs in the forest and by the spring of
+1805 there were eight substantial buildings, the space for 15 kitchen
+gardens had been cleared, the livestock brought on the ships were
+thriving, and an air of prosperity pervaded the place.[3] Surveys of the
+harbor were made by Captain Lisianski who also made the first ascent of
+Mt. Edgecumbe, and who then sailed for Kronstadt, Russia, by the way of
+Canton, with a cargo of furs for the China trade valued at 450,000
+rubles.[4]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+PROGRESS OF THE COLONY
+
+
+The courtly Chamberlain of the Tsar, Nicholas P. Resanof, son-in-law of
+Shelikof who was the founder of the first Russian colony in America,
+came to Sitka in 1805, via Petropavlovsk, Siberia, on the "Nadeshda,"
+one of the first Russian ships to circumnavigate the world, and was a
+special representative of the Russian American Company, of which
+organization he was one of the founders.
+
+In his report to the Company he tells us: "The fort is on the high hill,
+or kekoor, on a peninsula in the gulf. On the left side of the kekoor
+close on the peninsula is built an immense barracks with two projecting
+blockhouses or towers. All the building is made from mast timber from
+the top to the foundation, under which is a cellar. Besides this
+building are two warehouses, a material magazine and two cellars, also
+two large sheds for storing food, and under the sheds are the quarters
+for the workmen. On the side opposite the fort is a shed for storing
+cargo, at the right side is the kitchen, bath, and quarters for the
+servants of the Company, clerks, etc., and on the shore are the
+blacksmith shops and other workshops. On the top of the kekoor is a
+building five sazhens[5] long and three sazhens wide, with two rooms. In
+one I live, and in the other there are two shipmasters. There are still
+some old Kolosh _yourts_, in which live the _kayours_ and the
+Kodiak Americans (Aleuts, they are generally called).[6]
+
+"Our guns are always loaded, everywhere are sentinels with loaded arms,
+and in the rooms of each of us arms constitute the greater part of the
+furniture. All the night the signals from post to post continue, war
+discipline prevails; in a word, we are ready at any minute to receive
+our dear guests, who generally profit by the darkness of night to make
+an attack."
+
+The additional number in the garrison owing to the arrival of the
+Chamberlain and his suite made it more difficult to procure provisions
+for the winter. The hostile Kolosh made hunting and fishing dangerous.
+In the autumn there was but flour enough for an allowance of a pound a
+week for one month for the 200 men in the fort. For other food supply
+they were dependent on the fish caught in the bay, the dried
+_yukali_ and sealion meat from Kodiak, and the dried seal meat from
+the Seal Islands.
+
+Baranof bought the ship "Juno," an American sailing ship of about 250
+tons, from Captain George D'Wolf, of Bristol, Conn., with its cargo of
+flour, sugar and other articles, for the sum of 68,000 piastres
+(Spanish), equivalent to about the same number of dollars. This relieved
+the immediate necessity, but before spring the supply became so low that
+the scurvy, that dread malady of the seas and of outlying localities,
+attacked the garrison. This scourge often fell heavily on the early
+Russian expeditions, and in 1821 the Russian ship "Borodino" lost 40 men
+through its ravages in a voyage from Sitka to Kronstadt.
+
+In March, Resanof sailed for San Francisco in the "Juno" to purchase
+breadstuffs and other supplies. He also wished to examine the coast with
+the view of making other settlements farther south, at Nootka, at the
+Columbia, or even farther south in California. He secured a cargo of the
+products of the south and returned to Sitka in June.
+
+On his southward journey Resanof reconnoitred the mouth of the Columbia
+River, seeking a site for a future settlement. He was unable to enter
+the river owing to contrary winds; and the condition of his crew,
+debilitated by lack of proper food and suffering from scurvy, caused him
+to hasten on. He heard that a party of U. S. soldiers were building a
+fort there. This rumor doubtless came from the presence of Lewis and
+Clarke near the present Astoria.
+
+While on this visit to San Francisco Resanof met the Spanish beauty,
+Dona Concepcion de Arguello, of whom one of the visitors said, "She was
+lively and animated, had sparkling, love-inspiring eyes, beautiful
+teeth, pleasing and expressive features, a fine form and a thousand
+other charms," and he lost his heart to her. The romance of the Russian
+courtier and the fair Californian furnished to Bret Harte the theme for
+some of his most beautiful verse. Resanof, hurrying home to Russia to
+gain the Imperial permission to his marriage, died at Krasnoyarsk,
+Siberia, and Dona Concepcion waited for years for the coming of her
+lover, not knowing that he lay dead under the Siberian snows. When the
+news of his sad fate came to her she donned the habit of a nun and
+devoted herself to charitable works.
+
+This visit to California was the beginning of a trade that continued for
+many years, through all the period of Russian occupation. During the
+days of the gold discoveries in California large shipments of goods were
+made from Sitka to San Francisco, and after the sale of the territory to
+the United States great quantities of merchandise were shipped from the
+warehouses of the Company to the California metropolis, amounting to
+over a quarter of a million dollars in one year.
+
+The breadstuffs for the colonies were procured from California, from San
+Francisco and from Ross Colony, or from Peru, until 1840, when a
+contract was made with the Hudson's Bay Company under which the supplies
+were brought from the farms of the Nisqually or from Vancouver, in
+Oregon Territory.
+
+Until the time of the arrival of the "Neva", 1804, all trading goods
+were brought across Siberia to Okhotsk, and thence by sailing vessel to
+the colony, or were purchased from the American or English trading ships
+which came to the coast for furs. To the natives the English who came to
+these waters became known as "King George Men," and the Americans were
+called "Boston Men," the latter being from the great number of ships
+that sailed from the great shipping port of New England. From these
+traders goods were purchased by Baranof at lower rates than those cost
+which were brought from Russia. John Jacob Astor was one of the first to
+engage in the trade. He sent the ship "Enterprise" to Sitka in 1810, and
+the "Beaver" in 1812. From Washington Irving we have the description,
+through the account of the Captain, of the "Hyperborean veteran
+ensconsed in a fort which crested the top of a high rock promontory,"
+which is well known to all readers of stories of western life, and in
+which the impression of the character of Baranof as given to the reader
+is very erroneous. The traders exchanged their goods with the Russians
+for furs, sometimes going to the Pribilof Islands to receive the
+seal-skins; sailed to China, where the furs were traded for silks,
+nankins, and teas; they then voyaged on around the world to their home
+port.
+
+The sloop-of-war "Diana," the first Russian warship to reach Sitka,
+arrived in 1810 under the command of Captain Vasili M. Golofnin, who was
+widely known for his adventures while a captive in the Kingdom of the
+Nipponese, where he was carried about in a bamboo cage and exhibited to
+the populace. His description of his visit to Sitka is entertaining, and
+of it he says:
+
+"In the fort we met nothing so unusual or costly as to be worthy of
+special remark; the fort consisted of solid log towers, and high strong
+palisades, with apertures or embrasures, in which were set guns and
+carronades of different calibres. The interior construction, barracks,
+storehouses, house of the commander and other buildings were made of
+thick logs and were very solid, these being very common in this place,
+around which grows, so to say, within reach of a windlass, a multitude
+of most beautiful trees suitable for structures of every description.
+
+"In the house of Mr. Baranof were ornaments and furniture in profusion,
+of masterly workmanship and costly price, brought from St. Petersburg
+and from England, which corresponded with his position as the head
+official of a great company. What astonished us most was an extensive
+library in nearly all European languages, and many pictures of
+remarkable merit. I must confess, that I badly judge in painting, and
+only could know, that in the uncultivated wild border of America, there
+would be none except Mr. Baranof to value and understand them, unless
+there might happen to be educated travelers, or masters of United States
+trading vessels visiting this place, there would be no one to appreciate
+the fine art. Mr. Baranof, noting my astonishment, explained the riddle,
+saying, that the pictures attracting our attention were gifts of the
+Company and of distinguished persons in St. Petersburg, for the
+establishing of a library, and the Directory sent them out. On these
+works he commented with the following remarkable view: 'Better that our
+directors had sent us a doctor, for in all the Company's colonies there
+is not one doctor, nor one doctor's assistant, nor one doctor's pupil.'"
+
+Golofnin soon left Sitka to return to St. Petersburg. His successful
+voyage, together with that of the "Neva" and the "Nadeshda," encouraged
+the shipment of goods by sea from Russia, and from that time onward
+ships came regularly, laden with supplies of every kind for the post,
+and returned with rich cargoes of peltry.
+
+By 1825 surgical and astronomical instruments of the best quality were
+sent to the colony, an apothecary shop of three rooms provided
+medicines, and four Creole boys, under the charge of a doctor, attended
+to the dispensing of the potions. A hospital was in connection and the
+sick received fresh food, tea, sugar, and medicines, free, upon the
+order of the doctor.
+
+An observatory, equipped with the most improved magnetic and
+meteorological instruments was later provided and there was kept a
+record of natural phenomena, while a museum of objects of interest from
+the surrounding country was open for the instruction of all.
+
+The library was brought from St. Petersburg in 1806 by Resanof. Mr.
+Khlebnikof tells us that it contained more than 1,200 volumes, valued at
+7,500 rubles, and they were in the Russian, French, German, English,
+Latin and other languages.
+
+When Mr. Resanof was preparing for his journey he addressed letters to
+many of the leading men of St. Petersburg, soliciting their contribution
+of books to promote the beginning of education in the far off possession
+of the Czar. Many sent a response in writing accompanied by one or more
+volumes, and the letters so sent were richly bound in a separate volume
+and placed with the library in the building at Sitka. Among the patrons
+were the Metropolite Ambrosia, Count Rumiantzof, Count Stroganof,
+Admiral Chichagof, Minister of Justice Dimitrief, Senator Zakarof and
+others. The sentiments were varied, but many agreed in voicing the
+desire to "sow the seed of science in the breasts of the peoples so far
+outlying from the enlightenment of Europe." Some of them reflected the
+personal character of the donors: The Metropolite Ambrosia sent books
+for church services; the Minister of Marine sent plans of ships; and
+Count Rumiantzof contributed works on husbandry.[7]
+
+Mr. Kyril Khlebnikof, the accountant of the Company, who was in charge
+of the counting house at Sitka from 1818 to 1832, to whom we are
+indebted for many valuable writings relating to the early history of the
+settlements, tells us that when Mr. Baranof left the colony the
+buildings had become badly decayed and much new construction had to be
+done. In 1827 there had been built, three sentry houses, a battery of
+thirty guns on the kekoor, and below them magazines, barracks and other
+buildings, a bakery, wharf, arsenal, etc. In the shops were blacksmiths,
+coppersmiths, locksmiths, coopers, turners, rope spinners, chandlers,
+painters, masons, etc.
+
+At the Ozerskoe Redoubt, on Deep Lake, were barracks and a fort, a
+flouring mill, a tannery, and other buildings. A zapor, or fish trap, in
+the stream took sixty thousand fish each year.
+
+[Illustration: The Bakery and Shops of the Russians--Later the Sitka
+Trading Co.'s Building.]
+
+The workmen got out timber from the forest for the building of ships,
+they cut fuel and burned charcoal in large quantities; kept the
+buildings in repair and did other duties required on the factory. The
+work of the gardening was chiefly done by the Aleuts, who were paid a
+ruble a day for their services.
+
+The Russian Captain Lutke came to Sitka about this time and he tells us
+that there were many pigs and chickens raised by the inhabitants, and
+that a pig might be had for 5 to 7 rubles, a hen for 4 to 5 rubles, and
+eggs at from 3-1/2 to 10 rubles per dozen. The chief drawback to the
+chicken industry was the presence of the great black ravens that carried
+away the young chicks and sometimes even the old hens. The ravens were
+such successful scavengers that they were called the New Archangel
+police, and he says they even bit the tails off the young pigs, so that
+all the hogs of the place were tailless.
+
+He mentions the abundance of deer on the islands and also says that
+mountain sheep were killed by the Aleuts and brought to the fort. He
+must have confused the sheep with the goats, for the sheep never
+approach the coast so closely, and he speaks of the wool being used for
+weaving the blankets for the ceremonial dances of the Kolosh. This would
+indicate that the animal in question was the mountain goat. A later
+writer says that 2,700 game animals were brought into Sitka for sale
+during the winter of 1861-62.
+
+A shipyard was established as soon as the necessary buildings to house
+the garrison were completed. It occupied a part of the present parade
+ground near the Russian Barracks and included a portion of the present
+street. Many vessels were built in the yard during the Russian
+occupation, the first, being the tender "Avoss," launched in 1806,
+followed by the brig "Sitka," built by an American shipbuilder named
+Lincoln, and for which he was paid 2,000 rubles as a royalty upon the
+completion of the ship. A frigate of 320 tons was the largest vessel
+built before 1819, and at that time construction was discontinued until
+1834, when work was resumed and continued until the close of the Russian
+regime.
+
+The "Politofsky" was one of the last vessels to be built at Sitka, and
+it was sold by Prince Maksoutoff to H. M. Hutchinson and Abraham Hirsch
+for $4,000 in 1867. The next year it was sold to Hutchinson, Kohl & Co.,
+and later was sold to a firm that ran it to Puget Sound, and from Alaska
+to San Francisco. It was built of Alaska cedar timber, the _dushnoi
+dereva_ or scented wood of the Russians, and was spiked with
+hand-made copper spikes. It was taken to Alaska in the gold rush of
+1898, and found its last resting place, very appropriately, in the land
+where it was built, in the harbor of St. Michael, the old Russian port
+on Bering Sea.
+
+The fear of shipwreck, and of death at sea hung over every soul of the
+community. The long voyages in uncharted and unlighted waters with
+sailing ships--more than six months at the shortest from
+Kronstadt--often three months or more against baffling winds from
+Okhotsk--the voyages to the redoubts and _odinoshkas_ (detached
+posts with one man only) of the Bering Sea and of the Gulf of Alaska, to
+collect the fur catch of the year and bring it to Sitka; the long
+journey via Canton on the return to Russia--all held many dangers for
+the sailing ships of those days. The "Phoenix," the first ship built on
+the Alaskan shores, foundered with all on board, including the Bishop
+and his retinue, in 1799, on the return voyage from Okhotsk; the "St.
+Nicholas" went ashore on the coast of Washington in 1808, and those who
+survived the waves were held in bondage for years by the savages of that
+coast.
+
+During the latter part of August, 1812, the ship "Neva" left
+Okhotsk--contrary winds delayed her in the Sea of Okhotsk--storms beat
+her back along the Aleutian Islands till it was November before land was
+sighted in Alaska. The storms damaged the rigging and ship until it was
+necessary to put into Voskresenski Harbor (Resurrection Bay) for
+repairs. She arrived off Sitka about December 1st. After four or five
+days Mt. Edgecumbe was sighted but a storm drove the ship to sea where
+she beat about for weeks before again nearing the port. Scurvy afflicted
+the passengers and crew and added to the general distress. On January
+8th, 1813, Mt. Edgecumbe again appeared. In trying to make the harbor
+the ship grounded on the rocks under the cape on the morning of the 9th
+and speedily broke to pieces under the terrific pounding of the seas.[8]
+Some of the people on board reached shore after incredible suffering and
+hardship.
+
+After several days two of the sailors wandering along the shore met a
+Kolosh boy and persuaded him to take them to Sitka, where they arrived,
+cold, exhausted, and almost starving. Boats were at once fitted out by
+Mr. Baranof, the survivors were rescued, brought to Sitka, and their
+sufferings relieved. From those on board the ship, 38 had perished,
+including Kalinin, the commander, Boronovolokof, the intended future
+chief manager of the Company, and five women passengers. In the cargo
+was food and clothing, the messages of the year for the exiles, and rich
+vestments and furnishings for the church that was soon to be built in
+Sitka, all scattered for miles along the wild coast of Kruzof Island.
+This was one of the worst disasters of the sea that visited the colony,
+although many others are part of the records of the time.
+
+It is said that Chief Katlean tore his hair with rage when he learned of
+the wreck, because he did not find it and destroy the survivors out of
+revenge for his defeat and expulsion from his home at Sitka.
+
+There are many traditions among the residents of Sitka concerning the
+wreck of the "Neva." Among them is that there was a vast treasure of
+gold for the use of the garrison and the traders. This is erroneous, for
+there was no gold used in the colonies, the trade being by barter or
+conducted with scrip, called _assignats_, issued by the Company for
+the purpose. The story of the gold has been so generally believed that
+serious plans have been made for attempting the salvage of the treasure.
+
+The term of office of Alexander Andreevich Baranof as the chief manager
+of the Russian American Company came to a close in 1818. He had been 28
+years in the colonies, leaving Russia in 1790 for the post of Three
+Saints on Kodiak Island, which at that time constituted almost the only
+Russian establishment in America, the other stations being little more
+than outlying trading posts. He left their dominion an empire in extent,
+reaching from the Seal Islands in Bering Sea, at the edge of the ice
+pack of the Arctic, to Fort Ross, among the sunny hills of Golden
+California. Captain Hagmeister came to relieve him, and in his 72nd year
+the old chief manager, bent with the weight of years and of long and
+arduous service, closed his accounts and set sail on the "Kutusof," one
+of the Company's vessels, for his far-off home in Russia.
+
+When the time arrived for Baranof to take his departure from the land he
+had made his home for so many years, sorrowfully he took his leave of
+the associates with whom he had so long shared the dangers and hardships
+of the uncivilized land. Upon being relieved of the duties of his office
+he first considered building a home at the Ozerskoe Redoubt and spending
+the remainder of his days in the place he had learned to love. Later he
+decided to return to his native land and sailed on the "Kutusof" for
+Kronstadt. A delay at Batavia in the tropics proved too severe for his
+advanced years. The day after leaving Batavia he died and was buried at
+sea in the waters of the Indian Ocean.
+
+Captain Leontius Andreanovich Hagemeister succeeded to the office of
+chief manager but remained only a short time at Sitka, then sailed for
+Russia, leaving Captain Simeon Ivanovich Yanovski in charge.
+
+Captain Yanovski became enamored with the beautiful daughter of Baranof,
+and if you search the old records of the Cathedral of St. Michaels at
+Sitka you will find the entry as made of the marriage of Simeon Ivanof
+Yanovski "with the late head governor of the Russian American
+possessions, Collegiate Adviser and Cavalier Baranof's daughter Irina,
+one of Creoles."
+
+In 1830, Baron Ferdinand Petrovich Wrangell, scientist and explorer,
+came to administer the office. He had sailed the frozen ocean along the
+northern shores of Siberia as an explorer, and Wrangell Island,
+Wrangell Strait, etc., on the maps of today perpetuate his name.
+
+Under Baron Wrangell, as assistant to the manager, served Adolph
+Carlovich Etolin, a native of Finland, who came to the colony as an
+officer on the war sloop "Kamchatka" in 1817, who sailed in the service
+of the Company to nearly every port from the Seal Islands of Bering Sea
+to Chile, who made several voyages around the world, and who was made
+chief manager in 1840. In 1846 he returned to Russia to accept the trust
+of Commercial Counsellor in the head office of the Company in St.
+Petersburg.
+
+About fourteen miles to the southwest, across the bay and facing
+Edgecumbe, with a beautiful view of the peak and islands, is the Hot
+Springs, well known for their medicinal properties by the natives before
+the advent of the Russians, and frequently resorted to by both as a
+panacea for many ills. In the Place of Islands _(Chasti Ostrova)_
+is reputed to be a spring with a sour taste, while almost within the
+limits of the town of Sitka, Dr. Scheffer, a German physician who made a
+sojourn in the place about 1815, claimed to have found a medical spring
+whose waters were equal to some of the famed watering places of Germany.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+NATIVES
+
+
+Most of the Sitkan Kolosh kept aloof from the Russian settlement after
+the establishment of the new fort on Chatham Strait, near the entrance
+of Peril Strait. All the kwans, the Khootznoos, the Hoonahs, the
+Chilkats, the Auks, Stikines, Kakes and others, joined with the Sitkas
+in the hatred of the Russians. Parties going out from the fort at Sitka
+for hunting expeditions, for cutting of wood, for traveling to the Hot
+Springs, had to be on their guard and with arms at hand prepared to
+fight at a moment's notice.[9] Small groups were often cut off and
+murdered. As it was impossible to decide which of the many kwans did the
+act, and as there were those in each kwan who were peaceable, with whom
+it was desired to keep the peace, revenge against any village was
+inadvisable. Even as late as the date of the lease to the Hudson's Bay Co.
+the Russian ships that sailed among the islands to trade with the Kolosh
+were compelled to act with the strictest caution. Only a few natives
+were admitted on board at a time, the trading was done in a space near
+the stern, and was conducted under the muzzles of loaded cannon
+concealed in the fore part of the ship.[10] The conditions were thus
+until 1821, when the Sitkas were invited to reoccupy the site of the old
+village and to live in what is now known as the "Ranche," under the guns
+of the redoubt.
+
+The Thlingit nation is a strange, warlike, shrewd people, physically
+strong and enduring, and possessed of many excellent qualities. Hunters
+and fishermen by nature and training, they are skillful boatmen, and in
+those days they built wonderfully beautiful canoes of the red cedar,
+some of them large enough to carry sixty men at the paddles. Each spring
+more than a thousand men gathered together in Sitka Bay, coming from the
+different villages, to fish for herring at the spawning time, when those
+fish run in countless myriads in those waters. Hemlock boughs were
+placed in the water, and on them the herring roe collected until they
+were encrusted with the eggs which were then stripped off and dried for
+future use.
+
+[Illustration: The "Ranche"--Looking north from the top of the Baranof
+Castle. The Steamer at the left is the "Coquitlam," noted for her
+participation in pelagic sealing and she was under seizure by the U. S.
+Government.]
+
+In 1807 there were over 2,000 hostile natives gathered in the harbor at
+the herring season and they threatened an attack on the settlement.
+Kuskof, the most trusted and able lieutenant of Baranof, was in charge,
+and it put his wisdom and watchfulness to the test to avert disaster.
+The strictest discipline was maintained. The tribesmen waited outside
+day after day, hoping for news of some relaxation of the precautions of
+the defenders to be brought to them by the women of the tribe who were
+married to the Russian promishleniki (hunters). Day and night the
+sentinels paced the beats on the stockade and along the waterfront,
+till, weary of waiting, the Kolosh finally dispersed to their homes.
+
+In the great tribal houses several families lived, sometimes as many as
+fifty or sixty persons. Over the door of the house was painted the
+family totem, for the Sitkas did not raise the house totem in a pole in
+front as did many of the kwans of the Thlingits, and as the Hydahs do.
+In these houses were held the potlatches, or gift parties, which were
+made by the wealthy chiefs.
+
+The potlatches were of different kinds, although all partook of the
+nature of a feasting or merrymaking and were distinguished by the giving
+of gifts. In the ordinary visiting potlatches, or in the berry
+potlatches, the visitors came in their canoes with which they formed a
+line off shore opposite the houses, put planks from one canoe to another
+and on these planks danced the tribal dance. Those on shore danced the
+welcome dance and invited the guests ashore. Then the visitors
+disembarked and each family became the guest of their kinsmen of their
+totem or they went to the guesthouse of the kwan. All the people of the
+same totem are supposed to be blood relations, so all those of the wolf
+totem go to the _Gooch-heat_, or the dwelling blazoned by the rude
+heraldry with the wolf rampant. In the great social potlatches a wealthy
+chief invites his friends from many villages and entertains them for a
+week or more with dancing and feasting and makes presents varied and
+valuable, from Hudson's Bay blankets to bolts of calico or of flannel,
+and in primitive days, copper tows,[11] Chilkat blankets, and even
+slaves were handed over with a lavish hospitality.
+
+On special occasions in the olden time, with great ceremony the visitors
+landed at a distance from the village, drew their canoes ashore and
+proceeded to the village dressed in festive garments adorned with
+sealion heads or other strange headdresses, in which they danced the
+rare and picturesque "Beach Dance," in acknowledgement to the Spirit of
+the Sea for the bountiful supply of salmon and herring of the past
+season--for the native American is a thankful being and omits not to
+show it when occasion offers to acknowledge it to the Giver of all good
+and perfect gifts.
+
+During the earlier years of the colony the Kolosh were implacable
+enemies. War parties of young men constantly haunted the islands of the
+bay, lying in wait for any unwary hunter or fisherman from the fort.
+Later, when they were settled under the walls of the fort they became
+more tractable, for their homes and families were commanded by the guns
+of the fortress, but on the least provocation the savagery in their
+blood would boil, from their great tribal houses they issued forth,
+faces blackened to the semblance of devils, war masks grinning, and the
+howling mob shouted defiance at their neighbor over the stockade. Many a
+bloody tragedy was enacted in the "Ranche" for their code was primitive,
+"an eye for an eye," and a life for a life.
+
+Feuds raged between the different totemic families. About 1853 a party
+of Wrangell Indians (Stikines) visited Sitka, and while being
+entertained in the guest-house were murdered and their bodies piled into
+a canoe which was then paddled to Japonski Island. On striking the shore
+it was so heavily laden with the bodies of the dead that tradition says
+the canoe split from end to end. It is said that the bones of the dead
+are still to be seen in the undergrowth along the shore. In retaliation,
+about 1855, the Wrangell Kolosh made an attack on the Hot Springs
+settlement, burned the buildings, stripped the inhabitants of property
+and clothing and left them to make their way over the mountains around
+the head of Silver Bay to Sitka, where they arrived more dead than alive
+from hunger and exhaustion. This feud was not settled until 1918, when a
+peace treaty was consummated between the kwans on Armistice Day, a
+coincidence which is much made of by the tribesmen.
+
+The Kolosh were as firm believers in witchcraft as any of the more
+civilized nations. They resorted to their shamans (_ekhts_) or
+medicine men in case of illness. If his weird incantations failed to
+relieve the sufferer, his resort was that the victim was bewitched and
+some poor unfortunate paid the penalty by enduring the most fiendish
+torture.
+
+One March day in 1855 a commotion arose in the Kolosh village. A sentry
+caught an Indian who was stealing and punished him, for which the tribe
+called for vengeance. Some rushed to the stockade and began to cut away
+the palisades. Other forced their way into the Koloshian Church through
+the outer door. From this vantage point they fired on the garrison and
+in return the batteries of the fort blazed back with solid shot and
+shrapnel. For two hours the fight continued, when the Kolosh gave up all
+hope of success, and ceased the battle. The Russian loss in killed and
+wounded was 20 men, while the Kolosh loss was estimated at 60. This was
+the last attempt of the natives to destroy the Russian stronghold.
+
+At times during the later days of the colony the Kolosh were employed as
+seamen and as workers in the ice trade by the Russians and thus they
+occupied a place in the industrial life. Etolin was the most successful
+in conciliating them of any of the chief managers, and he at one time
+held a fur fair at Sitka to which peltry was brought from far and near,
+modeled somewhat upon the idea of the great fur mart of Nizhni Novgorod.
+Most of them, however, hunted and fished, lived in their tribal houses,
+carved their canoes, wove their baskets, and practiced their witchcraft,
+while their civilized neighbors gathered the furs and built ships.
+
+Under the walls of the fort, in the old tribal houses of the Kolosh
+which had not been destroyed, lived the Aleuts. Properly speaking the
+name belongs to the natives of the Aleutian Islands, but the term was
+also applied to the natives of Kodiak Island and the surrounding islets.
+These speak a different language from the true Aleuts, but otherwise
+resemble them closely. During the hunting season they scoured the seas
+in their skin bidarkas, in the pursuit of fur animals. In winter many of
+them remained at Sitka instead of returning to their homes. Their time
+was spent in idleness, spending the summer's earnings in the pleasures
+and vices of the white man. One who saw them in their kazhims, as their
+dwellings were often called, describes them: "Morally, the Aleut is not
+bloodthirsty. He delights in simple rejoicings and will play you a game
+of chess with walrus ivory pieces--a duck for a pawn and a penguin for a
+king--with the greatest of good humor. Even when squabbles arrive the
+argument is carried on in poetry to the accompaniment of dancing, and
+one would be inclined to prefer the Aleut angry to the Aleut amiable,
+did he not know he also dances when festive and when religious.
+
+"Among them the social duty of visiting has its drawbacks. Several
+families live together in the kazhims, and during one's visit they all
+lie around in every conceivable posture, jolly and genial, naked and
+unashamed. The fumes of the blubber oil lamps and stoves, the stores of
+raw meat, the many naked bodies, well smeared with grease and scented
+with primitive unguents, combine to make an atmosphere difficult to
+tolerate and not easy to describe. Yet, if you will, you may enjoy the
+warmest hospitality, and have heaped upon you the most assiduous
+attentions."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+CHURCHES AND SCHOOLS
+
+
+It was not until 1816 that a priest arrived at Sitka, and in that year
+the first entry is made in the church records under the name of
+Alexander Sokolof. A church was built at the south of the street, which
+was then called the Governor's Walk, almost opposite the present
+cathedral. A monument marks the spot where the altar stood, and a cross
+marks the site of a grave, said to be that of a priest. Tradition also
+tells that there are two graves there, and assigns the other one to the
+daughter of Baron Wrangell, the chief manager of the Company at one
+time.[12]
+
+[Illustration: Cathedral of St. Michael]
+
+The present cathedral of St. Michael, which is the central point of
+historic interest, in the center of the town at Lincoln Street, was
+dedicated November 20, 1848. It fronts on a small court and with its
+green painted spire surmounted by the Greek Cross is so typically
+Russian that it might readily be believed to have been transplanted from
+old Russia. The chime of bells, a gift from the Church at Moscow, would
+be worthy of any shrine. The building is in the form of a cross, has
+three sanctuaries and three altars. The larger and central sanctuary is
+that of the _Archistrategos_ Michael. In the center is an elevated
+platform, the episcopal _Cathedra_, and it is separated from the
+main body of the church by a partition called the _Ikonastas_,
+which is ornamented with twelve _ikons_, or holy paintings, covered
+by plates of silver in _repousse_ work in the true Russian style of
+art, and through the Royal Gates the priest appears. The silver in the
+ikons is valued at over $6,000. The ikon of St. Michael is said to have
+been in the wreck of the "Neva," and was rescued after being cast up by
+the sea. Another is a gift of the monks of the monastery of Solovetsk;
+another was brought by Bishop Innocentius (Veniaminof) from
+Petropavlovsk. The ikon of the Resurrection is painted on a board from a
+tree in Hebron, was consecrated in Bethlehem, and bears the autograph
+signature of the Patriarch of Jerusalem.
+
+The chapel at the right is dedicated in the name of St. John the
+Precursor and Prince Alexander Nevsky.
+
+The chapel at the left is in honor of Our Lady of Kazan. In it is a
+painting of a Madonna and Child from which the beautiful Byzantine face
+looks down with a sweet radiance.
+
+The vestments and sacred vessels are rich and elegant. The white Easter
+vestment is of cloth of silver and the cloth of gold for high feast days
+was the personal gift of Alexander Andreevich Baranof, the great Russian
+who established the colony. The belfry clock is said to be the work of
+the hands of Veniaminof. The priest in richly brocaded vestments holds
+the services, and a choir of boys chant the chorus with a melody that
+would be the envy of many a far more pretentious edifice. The worshipers
+stand during the services, the clouds of incense rise toward the rounded
+dome, then one by one the worshipers pass and kiss the jeweled cross in
+the hand of the priest. Father Metropolski presided over the church for
+many years, and Father Sergius is one of the best known in recent years.
+
+[Illustration: The Madonna.]
+
+There were two other churches during Russian days, one, a Lutheran,
+built during Etolin's time, which stood near the site of the first
+church, and is said to have contained a small but very excellent pipe
+organ, brought from Germany. The other church stood near the blockhouse
+on the hill, was on the line of the stockade, and had two doors, one
+inside the fortification, the other outside and used as an entrance by
+the natives. It was known as the Koloshian Church, and its site is
+marked by a monument. Both these buildings long ago fell into ruin and
+were removed.
+
+The Russian religion was closely associated with the Government, so in
+the colonies the official charter of the Company compelled them to
+provide well for the church and the priests according to the standard of
+the times, and the work was carried on with zeal and fortitude by the
+missionaries who came from the monasteries of the old Russian cities.
+
+Of all the missionaries who came to Russian America, the greatest was
+Ivan Veniaminof. Father John he is often called in the old records, a
+wonderful man, broad of mind and of body, combining the qualities that
+inspire awe and reverence with a gentleness of word and deed that made
+him beloved wherever he was known. His zapiski, or letters, are among
+the best authorities extant which remain from those years on Alaskan
+matters, and they were written home to Russia during his stay in the
+Aleutian Islands and at Sitka. He came to Sitka after a ten-year stay at
+Unalaska, remained there for five years working for the church and
+teaching in the schools, then returned to Moscow and was consecrated as
+bishop of the new diocese. He again arrived in Sitka in 1842, and made a
+tour of all the churches in the colonies, traveling by sailing ship to
+every settlement, then went home to Russia where he became Metropolite
+of Moscow.
+
+The schools of Sitka, under the Russian regime, were well maintained,
+and many of the mechanics, clerks, pilots, and men of other trades were
+educated there. Kadin, who drew the charts for Tebenkof's Atlas of
+Alaska from the surveys made by the Russian Navigators; Tarantief, who
+engraved the maps on copper-plate at Sitka; and many of the shipmasters
+and accountants in the employ of the Company, were the product of the
+educational institutions of Sitka. In the time of the greatest prosperity
+there were five schools. The church school was advanced to the grade of
+a seminary in 1849 and there were taught navigation, mathematics,
+astronomy, bookkeeping, and other branches of learning. Some of the best
+pupils, both Russian and Creole, were sent to St. Petersburg for more
+advanced instruction. Chief Manager Etolin was the especial patron of
+education, and made many improvements in the system. Under the auspices
+of Madame Etolin, who was a native of Helsingfors and was educated in
+the schools of that city, a school was opened and maintained by the
+Company for the girls of the colony. After the transfer to the United
+States of the Territory the teachers returned to Russia and the schools
+were closed.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+SOCIAL LIFE
+
+
+At the top of the kekoor, or the Baranof Hill as it was called in recent
+years, there stood a building occupied during Russian days as a
+residence by the chief managers of the Russian American Company. The one
+known to the residents and visitors of the earlier days of the American
+occupation was known as the Baranof Castle, although Baranof himself
+never lived in it. There were three, if not four different buildings
+which occupied that position. The first to be placed there was built at
+once upon the founding of the post and is described by Resanof in his
+letters to the Company as being a very "Unpretentious building, and
+poorly constructed." Before the close of Baranof's administration,
+however, according to the account of Captain Golofnin, it was an
+establishment well built and furnished with some degree of luxury.
+
+[Illustration: The Baranof Castle. Built in 1837 for the official
+residence of the chief managers of the Russian American Company, and
+occupied from the time of Kuprianof until 1867. It was the headquarters
+building of the Commanding Officers of the U. S. troops 1867 to 1877, and
+was destroyed by fire in 1894. The U. S. Agricultural Department
+building occupies the site at the present time.]
+
+The structure known as the Baranof Castle, which stood on the hill at
+the time of the transfer to the United States, would seem to be the
+third building constructed on the site, was completed about 1837,[13]
+and was burned to the ground on the morning of March 17th, 1894.
+
+The historic building was the scene of many interesting events, and
+sheltered many distinguished persons.
+
+The first mistress who presided over the mansion on the kekoor was
+Madame Yanovski, a daughter of Baranof and the wife of Lieutenant
+Yanovski, the third chief manager of the Russian American Company.
+
+Lady Wrangell was the first to come from Russia to preside as the First
+Lady of Sitka, and she was succeeded by Madame Kupreanof, who is said to
+have crossed Siberia and the Pacific Ocean to accompany her husband to
+his post. Sir Edward Belcher gives a spirited account of a ball given in
+his honor, in the castle, which was then, in 1837, just completed. He
+says: "The evening passed most delightfully," although "few could
+converse with their partners," English being spoken by few at that time
+in the capital of Russian America.
+
+Princess Maksoutoff, the wife of the last chief manager of the colonies,
+came from St. Petersburg, but died soon after her arrival, and the stone
+which marks her grave may be seen on the hill between the two
+cemeteries, near the site of the upper Blockhouse. Her successor, the
+second Princess Maksoutoff, young and beautiful, presided with grace and
+tact over the mansion until the transfer of the territory to the United
+States. She was one of six Russian ladies present at the ceremonies and
+is said to have wept when the Russian flag was lowered.
+
+There is a legend of a beautiful princess whose ghost haunted the Castle
+for many years. The story has been told by many at different times and
+is one of the romantic tales that cluster around the old metropolis of
+the fur trading days. Her lover was sent away or killed through the
+influence of an _ober offitzer_ who sought her hand in marriage.
+Eliza Ruhamah Scidmore, who wrote so delightfully of Sitka in her
+journeys in Alaska in 1883, says that, "By tradition the Lady in Black
+was the daughter of one of the old governors. On her wedding night she
+disappeared from the ballroom in the midst of the festivities, and after
+a long search was found dead in one of the small drawing rooms."[14]
+
+[Illustration: The Grave of the Princess Maksoutoff.]
+
+The chief managers entertained lavishly, and the dinners in the Castle
+were events long to be remembered. They were well worthy the
+representatives of a rich and powerful company, a corporation with a
+domain that was greater than the realm of many a royal ruler. Into the
+sumptuously furnished and richly decorated dining-room came the bishop
+and priests, resplendent in the official robes, the naval officers
+glittering in their gold laced uniforms, the secretaries, accountants,
+storekeepers, all in the uniform of the Ministry of Finance, the masters
+and mates of the ships in the harbor; the guests in their best apparel;
+all gathered around the hospitable board of the chief manager. At times
+a hundred sat at the table and back of them dined the cadets of the
+naval school. After the dinner came dancing and until morning the gayety
+went merrily on, for Russian cheer is proverbial, and their hospitality
+is lavish.
+
+Usually the Captain of the port, the secretaries, three public and two
+private, two masters in the navy, the commercial agent, two doctors, and
+the Lutheran clergyman, dined with the chief manager by general
+invitation, Sir George Simpson tells us. The civilian masters of
+vessels, accountants, engineers, clerks, and bookkeepers, dined at a
+club which was organized by Mr. Etolin, and they lived at the old club
+house a little to the east of the church.
+
+A wedding was an elaborate affair, a bridal cake which figured in many
+mystic signs, tea, coffee, chocolate and champagne; the ladies attired
+in muslin dresses, white satin shoes, silk stockings, kid gloves, fans,
+and other necessary appurtances. After the ceremony of an hour and a
+half was consummated, the ball was opened by the bride and the highest
+officer present, and the dancing lasted until three in the morning.
+
+Easter was an event of much hilarity after the close of Lent, which was
+strictly observed by all. From morning to night everyone ran a gauntlet
+of kisses; when two persons met, one said, "Christ has risen," while the
+other replied, "He has risen, indeed," and then followed the
+salutations. These seemed not to have been distasteful to visitors,
+although one remarks that most of the dames had been more liberal with
+other liquids than of pure water. Throughout it all was a continuous
+peal of bells, for the Russian is fond of bell-ringing. All carried
+eggs, boiled into stones, and dyed, gilded or painted, which they
+presented to their friends.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+TRADE AND INDUSTRY
+
+
+Sitka, under the Muscovite, existed because of the fur trade, and every
+energy and interest centered on the gathering of peltries from every
+available quarter. Sailing ships moved in and out of the harbor, taken
+to their moorings or out to sea by the harbor tug; some from Michaelovsk
+with the beaver and martin from the Yukon, others _en route_ to
+California or to the Sandwich Islands; the supply ships from Kronstadt
+around Cape Horn or returning via Canton and the Cape of Good Hope laden
+with furs; still others bound for the Kuril Islands or Okhotsk. The
+steamer "Nikolai" plied along the passages of the Alexander Archipelago,
+exploring the inlets, surveying the bays and rivers, gathering furs,
+always furs, for that was the reason for their living on this distant
+shore.[15]
+
+[Illustration: Sitka in 1860, Near the Close of the Russian
+Administration.]
+
+Near the entrance to the Kolosh village was the market where the natives
+were permitted to trade. There they brought their game and fish, their
+furs and baskets, to trade for calico and beads, blankets and
+ammunition.[16] This market was closed by a portcullised door which
+permitted entrance through the stockaded wall, and was enclosed by a
+railed yard. Armed guards stood on duty, and at the least dispute in the
+market, down came the door and they proceeded to punish the delinquents.
+
+The warehouses were stored with thousands on thousands of the richest
+furs of the Northland; sea-otter, worth today from $800 to $1,000 per
+skin, and not to be had at any price, were numbered by thousands in the
+earlier years; sealskins by shiploads, some killed off the harbor, but
+mainly from the Seal Islands; of land otter, the Hudson's Bay Company
+paid them two thousand skins each year for the lease of the territory
+from Portland Canal to Cape Spencer. The martin, the American sable,
+with its fluffy pelage. Foxes, blue, white, black, silver gray, red and
+cross, were there by thousands, brought from the Arctic, from the
+Aleutian Islands, from the Valley of the Yukon; mink, ermine, muskrat,
+beaver, land otter, pile on pile. Tons of ivory from the walrus herds of
+Morzhovia and bearskins and wolfskins from Cook Inlet and the Copper
+River. The right to the fur trade belonged exclusively to the Company by
+Royal ukase, and any employe who was found attempting to infringe on
+their rights was arrested and sent to Russia for punishment.[17]
+
+From the top of the Castle, over 100 feet above the sea, a light burned
+as a beacon to mariners entering the harbor, and this was the first
+light-house to throw its beams over the waters of this northern ocean.
+In the cupola which rose from the roof were four little square cups into
+which seal oil was poured and wicks burned in grooves rising from them,
+while back of the flame was a reflector that threw the light far out to
+sea among the islands.
+
+The stock of goods in the magazines was large and varied. It covered
+almost every article carried in the general European trade as a
+necessity, and many of the luxuries--sugar and sealing wax, tobacco,
+both Virginia and Kirghis, silk and broadcloth, calico and Flemish
+linen, ravens duck and frieze, arshins of blankets and poods of yarn;
+vedras of rum, cognac and gin; butter from the Yakut, from California
+and from Kodiak; salt beef from Ross Colony, from England and from
+Kodiak; beaver hats and cotton socks.
+
+In the arsenal were kept about a thousand muskets, three hundred
+pistols, two hundred rifles, as well as sabres, cutlasses, etc., while
+four fire engines provided against loss by conflagration. Some rare
+weapons were also found there. A saber set with gems valued at 560
+rubles; a Persian carbine of a value of 450 rubles; two Persian
+yatighans, silver mounted; a Damascus saber, and two Persian pistols,
+silver mounted.
+
+The soldiers' guns were for a great part of French or English
+workmanship; rockets and false-fire for signalling ships were made each
+year.
+
+Tallow for candles was brought from California, moulded at the port and
+distributed so many candles to each employe according to their presumed
+needs each month.
+
+Liquors, generally rum, were served by the Company, a drink twice a
+week, extra allowance being made on difficult work and also for
+holidays. All kinds of devices were resorted to by individuals in order
+to get rum, and one author says that a pair of boots for which the
+makers would demand ten rubles might be secured in barter for a bottle
+of rum worth three rubles.
+
+The soldiers stationed at the fort when not on duty were employed by the
+Company and given a special compensation for their labor. Some of the
+soldiers and hunters by their industry and thrift accumulated
+considerable money which the Company held to their account and either
+paid to them on their discharge or sent home to Russia for them. Others
+spent their earnings, were continually in debt to the Company, and as
+their contract provided that they were not to be discharged while in
+arrears of debt, some of them served the remainder of their lives with
+no hope of return to Russia.
+
+Around the hill ran a parapet and sentries walked their beat night and
+day. On the stockade which enclosed the town from the beach at the edge
+of the "Ranche" to the shore beyond the sawmill, making with the shore
+line an irregular rectangle, also walked the sentinels on their vigil,
+for the Thlingit at the gates was at all times an enemy to be feared.
+Strict military discipline was maintained at all times. At the foot of
+the hill were clustered barracks, storehouses, bakeries, warehouses,
+etc., for the use of the garrison and workmen. The old structure which
+was used as a bakery, and for shops, was later known as the Sitka
+Trading Company's building, and has recently been removed. The barracks
+are at present the jail, and the Russian counting house is today the
+postoffice of the United States. The fur warehouse stood to the west of
+the hill and was torn down in 1897-8, while the landing warehouse on the
+wharf was burned in 1916. These were all built about the time of the
+incumbency of Etolin, and that time might be termed the Golden Age of
+the Colony. Ships were being built, the fur trade was still prosperous,
+new explorations were being made into the interior of the country, trade
+was being extended into the Yukon Valley and there was an active
+interest in all the industries of the settlement. There were men of many
+trades, engineers, cabinet makers, jewelers, tailors, builders, etc.,
+and an efficient machine shop constructed engines to equip the vessels
+constructed in the shipyard. Plowshares and spades for the Spanish
+farmers in California were forged and bells for the Franciscan missions
+were cast here. The first steam vessel to be built on the shore of the
+North Pacific Ocean was constructed at Sitka, for, before 1840 the whole
+of the machinery for a tug of seven horsepower, as well as of two
+pleasure boats had been constructed here. The steamer "Nikolai" of 70
+horsepower was built and equipped with the exception of the boilers
+which were brought from New York. The ship ways at Sitka was the
+repairing place for many a vessel in the days of the gold seekers in the
+valleys of California.
+
+Two sawmills, one near the site of the present mill, the other on
+Kirenski River, now called Sawmill Creek,[18] cut the lumber for the
+settlement and for export. Two flouring mills, one in Sitka, the other
+at the Ozerskoe Redoubt on Globokoe[19] (Deep) Lake, ground the
+breadstuffs. A tannery furnished the leather for shoes, made from
+California hides, and also prepared the _lavtaks_ for the bidarkas
+for the seal and sea-otter hunters. The burrs for the Sitka mill were of
+the finest French stone but those at the Redoubt were cut from the
+granite found on the lake shore.[20]
+
+A hospital of forty beds provided for the comfort of the sick, of which
+Governor Simpson said: "The institution in question would do no disgrace
+to England."
+
+Brickyards were maintained, ice was cut on the lakes and at times
+shipped to California. The ice-houses were near the outlet of Swan Lake
+and were of a capacity of 3,000 tons.
+
+One day in the spring of 1852 the American ship "Bacchus" came into
+Sitka to purchase a cargo of ice. All the ice for San Francisco had to
+this time been brought in the hold of sailing ships around Cape Horn
+from Boston and the idea of getting the supply from Sitka was conceived.
+From the Company's icehouses was laden on the ship 250 tons, and this
+was the beginning of a trade during the year of not less than 1800 tons
+at an average price of about $25.00 per ton. A Company was organized in
+San Francisco for carrying on the trade and it was known as "the Ice
+Company." The ice on the lake was not of sufficient thickness owing to
+the fact that four degrees below zero is the coldest record ever made in
+Sitka during a hundred years, consequently the Ice Company later
+transferred their chief place of operation to Wood Island, near Kodiak.
+
+Cows were kept for milk, and the hay for their provender was cut on the
+Katleanski Plains on Squashanski Bay.
+
+Sir George Simpson, Governor-in-Chief of the Honourable, the Hudson's
+Bay Company, visited Sitka in 1841 and in 1842. He describes the
+settlement, the natives, and the fur trade, and was entertained at the
+Castle by Chief Manager Etolin. During his stay he indulged in a Russian
+steam bath. His humorous description of the details ends with a promise
+never again to undergo such a castigation. The account of his stay at
+the Hot Springs is enlivened by a story of how a rosy cheeked Russian
+damsel, each time she passed his chair, made a profound obeisance, which
+he attributed to his personal attraction until he discovered her doing
+the same when the chair was empty, and then saw that a saintly ikon
+occupied a place on the wall directly over it, which dispelled the
+illusion. Thirteen ships were in the harbor, and he remarks that the
+bustle was sufficient to have done credit to a third rate port in the
+civilized world. Sir George sailed for Okhotsk on the Russian ship
+"Alexander," then crossed Siberia overland on his return to England from
+a journey round the earth.
+
+There were eighty cannon mounted in the batteries which commanded the
+bay or which looked down on the Kolosh village. These cannon were of
+different make, some being cast in Sitka, others purchased of English or
+Americans, which were purchased on the ships on which they were mounted,
+as on the "Juno" and the "Brutus;" and other ordnance was brought from
+Kronstadt, Russia, as in 1804 on the "Neva," and in 1820 on the
+"Borodino."
+
+Teahouses were situated on the little knoll in the center of the town
+where the public Gardens were located; the museum, and the library
+offered instruction to the workers who occupied this lonely post halfway
+round the world from the Russian Fatherland.
+
+There were fourteen chief managers who directed the affairs of the
+Company at Sitka between the date of the founding in 1804 and the
+surrender to the United States in 1867.[21]
+
+Many of the officers resided long in the colonies and their record would
+establish their right to be denominated as "Sourdoughs." Baranof was
+manager 28 years; Zarembo was rewarded in 1844 for 25 years' service;
+Krukof, the manager at Unalaska, was rewarded in 1821 for 40 years'
+service; Banner remained at Kodiak for at least ten years, and he and
+his wife both died there; while Kuskof came with Baranof in 1790 and
+returned to Russia in 1821.
+
+[Illustration: Sitka in 1869--During the Time of the Military Occupation.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+SITKA UNDER UNITED STATES RULE
+
+
+Then came the day when the Russian was to withdraw from his colonies,
+and the United States was to occupy them as Alaska. An area as broad as
+an empire, equal in extent to Norway, Sweden, Finland, and Denmark
+combined, was to be handed over from the Imperial Ruler of all the
+Russias to the Republic of the United States, and Sitka, the Capital of
+the Colonies, was to be the scene of the actual transfer. The
+statesmanship of Secretary Seward, aided by the eloquence of Sumner, had
+secured for our country a domain one sixth as large as the whole United
+States.
+
+October 18th, 1867, Alexei Pestchouroff, the Commissioner of the Tsar,
+appeared in front of the Baranof castle, and beside him stood Lovell H.
+Rousseau, the Commissioner for the United States, who was to receive the
+Territory.
+
+The Russian soldiery were drawn up along the terrace which ran around
+the Baranof Hill, and next to them were the men of the United States
+Infantry.[22] The ensign of Russia was lowered, the flag of the United
+States raised to the accompaniment of the salutes from the batteries and
+of the guns of the ships in the harbor.[23] The few words of the
+ceremony of transfer were spoken, and Alaska became a possession of the
+United States.
+
+Most of the Russian residents went back to their native land as soon as
+they were able to do so, but some remained to cast their lot in the land
+that had so long been their home.[24] Among those who remained are the
+Kashavaroffs, the Kostromitinoffs, the Bolshanins, the Shutzoffs, and
+others, whose descendants now live in Alaska.
+
+The commanding officer of the American troops, Gen. Jefferson C. Davis,
+made his headquarters in the building on the hill that had been so long
+the residence of the Russian officers. The American soldiers were
+quartered in the barracks of the Siberian Battalion, and the sentries of
+the United States walked the beats of the Russian guards. Sitka gradually
+adjusted itself to the new conditions, to the crowds of adventurers who
+thronged its streets seeking a profit in speculations in lands and furs.
+They were doomed to disappointment, for the titles to lands were
+withheld and the fur trade was overdone, so most of the newly arrived
+drifted away as they came. Distinguished visitors came and were
+entertained in the old castle where the Commandant dispensed
+hospitality. Lady Franklin, the widow of the famous Arctic explorer, was
+once a guest at the mansion on the kekoor, and Secretary Seward was
+entertained there in 1869 when he visited the land he added to the
+possessions of the United States.
+
+While the military garrison were content with their conditions and were
+not troubled with the affairs of the world at large, the civil
+population wished for the law and authority of other communities, and
+set themselves to remedy the omission of the Government in far-off
+Washington so far as was possible to do, for there was no provision for
+an organization of civil government in the community. They organized a
+municipal association, drafted ordinances, elected councilmen, collected
+revenue for improving the Governor's Walk, changed the name to Lincoln
+Street, and in December opened a school. After five years the civil
+population declined until the revenue was insufficient to maintain the
+expense, the organization was abandoned, with it passed the school, and
+the first attempt at self-government closed.
+
+Then followed dark days for Sitka.[25] Military rules for the garrison
+and no law or protection for the people. Soldiers from the fort are said
+to have robbed the church of its ornaments, tearing the covers from the
+richly bound Bible of the Cathedral. The offenders were apprehended, but
+there being no civil law all the punishment meted out was to be drummed
+out of the service and sent to the States on an army transport. The
+stolen property was hidden under the old hospital building and was
+discovered by some boys and nearly all was restored to the church.
+
+On New Year's Day, 1869, Colcheka, a noted chief of the Chilkats who was
+visiting Sitka, was entertained by General Davis at the castle on the
+hill. The liquid refreshments served to him by the General raised his
+spirits and his pride of race. After it was over he descended the long
+flight of steps leading from the Commandant's quarters and strode across
+the parade ground with the dignity becoming to the hereditary chief of
+the Chilkats, the proudest kwan of the Thlingits. For some reason he
+crossed the part reserved for officers, was challenged by the sentry,
+and, not heeding, when he reached the stockade gate was kicked by the
+sentry stationed there. He was furious.
+
+"Me, Colcheka, Chief of the Chilkats, kicked!"
+
+He turned in a rage, seized the musket of the sentry, wrenched it from
+his hands, then carried it to his house in the Ranche.
+
+The guard was turned out for his arrest and a skirmish ensued in which
+the guard was worsted and retreated to the barracks. The Sitkas were
+neutral. The Chilkats were too few in number to fight the troops, so
+next day Colcheka surrendered, was kept in the guardhouse for a few days
+and then released.
+
+Meantime orders that no Indians be permitted to leave the Ranche were
+issued which were revoked upon Colcheka's surrender. Through some
+mistake in revoking the orders the sentries were not notified. A canoe
+load of Indians left the Ranche to get wood. The sentries fired on the
+canoe and killed two of the occupants, a Chilkat and a Kake. It was an
+unfortunate mistake. Those shots rang from Lynn Canal to Kuiu Island and
+the echoes vibrated for more than twenty years. By listening intently
+one might yet hear the vibrations. Two white men died and three Indian
+villages burned directly as a result, but it happened in places distant
+from Sitka, and, as they say, it is another story.
+
+On a June day of 1877 the troops of the United States army embarked on a
+ship for the States and sailed away from Sitka. The buildings and
+property were left in charge of the Collector of Customs, who, with the
+Postmaster, constituted the only officials in the Territory. The
+presence of the military had guaranteed safety from attack by the
+Indians to the people of the town, and the officers had been a pleasant
+addition to the social life; with their departure both were lost.
+
+The animosity of the Thlingits had been kindled by many wrongs, some
+real and others fancied. They saw in the new order of things an
+opportunity to recompense themselves for past grievances. All the old
+stories of the killing of their countrymen by the troops, the burning of
+old Kake and other villages, the loss of five Keeksitties, in the
+Schooner "San Diego" in Bering Sea and other tales were rehearsed and
+were used to stir the lust for vengeance. The Keeksittis, under the
+leadership of Katlean, openly advocated sacking the town, killing the
+men and making slaves of the women.
+
+"The government does not care for the country. They have abandoned it.
+It belongs to us, anyway; why not take the town and do as we wish with
+it?" said Katlean.
+
+The Kokwantons, under Annahootz, their chief, opposed the outrage. For
+months there was danger of an outbreak. Insult after insult was placed
+upon the citizens. The stockade was cut down and carried away by the
+Indians. Every male inhabitant was armed and expecting a call to battle
+at any time. A man was killed at the Hot Springs by a Keeksitty. The
+murderer was arrested through the assistance of the Kokwantons under
+Annahootz.[26] The Keeksitties assembled to rescue the criminal, but the
+citizens of the town rallied for defense, the Kokwantons joined them and
+the murderer was safely placed on board the Steamer "California" and
+taken to Portland for trial where he was afterward hanged.
+
+On the same boat went an appeal for assistance, directed to the United
+States Government, but it fell on deaf ears. Another petition was sent
+to Victoria, B. C., and was heeded. Captain A. Holmes A'Court, of
+H. M. S. "Osprey," at once set out for Sitka, arrived on March 1st, 1879,
+anchored opposite the Ranche and trained his guns for immediate use. The
+danger was averted. Captain A'Court remained until the arrival of the U.
+S. S. "Alaska," on April 3rd, then departed for Esquimault with the
+blessings of the grateful people of Sitka.
+
+On June 14th into the harbor came the U. S. S. "Jamestown." Her
+Commander, Captain L. A. Beardslee, assumed control of affairs in the
+community and administered them in a manner which brought credit on his
+name. He found everything at the lowest ebb; every woman and child who
+could leave, had gone to escape the danger of Indian massacre;
+witchcraft prevailed among the natives and anarchy among the whites. He
+took a census[27] upon his arrival, and the result was 325 people,
+exclusive of the Creole population. He appointed an Indian police;
+established more sanitary conditions in the "Ranche," numbered the
+houses, and compelled the attendance of the Indian children at the
+Mission School.
+
+A school was opened in the old Russian barracks building on April 17,
+1878, by Rev. John G. Brady and Miss Fannie E. Kellogg, of the
+Presbyterian Mission, which was later followed by the present Sheldon
+Jackson Mission School. George Kostromitinoff, afterward known as Father
+Sergius, was the interpreter. The opening of the school was a great
+event for Sitka and nearly everyone in the town attended. Annahootz, the
+friendly Kokwantan war chief, made a speech. Mr. Cohen, the brewer,
+hunted up another interpreter to assist. Hymns were sung and the events
+were auspicious. The Indians stole in one at a time, some with their
+faces blackened, all in blankets, but they squatted by the wall and
+listened attentively. The school was continued until December, when it
+was given up, but in the spring of 1880 Miss Olinda Austin, from New
+York City, reopened it on April 5th, in one of the rooms of the
+guardhouse, with an attendance of 103 children. The school thus
+established was the beginning of the present Sheldon Jackson Training
+School. The support of the naval officers at the station was such that
+the missionary teacher was moved to say: "It is not often that the
+Government sends out a missionary, but they have sent one in this young
+commander and his lieutenant, Mr. F. M. Symonds," in referring to
+Captain Glass, who succeeded Captain Beardslee.
+
+Some form of local government giving the residents a right to regulate
+their civil affairs was favored by the Commander, who had not even a
+code under which to act. A meeting was called, ordinances were drafted,
+a magistrate and councilmen elected for a town government. But all were
+not agreed upon these acts and opposition arose against it from the very
+inception of the movement. One of the traders of the town, Caplin, said:
+"De Captain may go to ---- wid his tam government; I'll bay no daxes."
+And from Silver Bay where he was mining, Geo. E. Pilz sent in a protest
+against the proceeding. The dealers who traded molasses to the Indians,
+from which the villainous liquor called "hoochinoo" or "Hooch," was
+distilled, objected to the ordinances restricting the trade. Finally an
+English miner named Roy was shot by his partner, "Scotty," and the
+inability of the self-made government to try the offender brought a
+crisis. The next day a notice appeared stating the organization had been
+dissolved, and the second attempt at self-government by the people in
+Alaska passed into oblivion.
+
+Scotty was sent to Oregon for trial and was discharged because of lack
+of a law to punish a man for assault with a dangerous weapon in Alaska.
+
+But the dawn of a better day was at hand, Alaska's darkest hours were
+past, and morning was breaking. The rule of the Navy Department
+continued until 1884, then, although the warships still remained in
+Alaskan waters, by Act of Congress of May 17th, a form of civil
+government was granted, and the official Capital was placed at Sitka.
+The terror of the Indian outbreaks was past; schools were in reach, for
+the same act provided for the establishment of a system of public
+education, and the Code of Oregon was adopted as the law of the
+land.[28]
+
+Then some of the life of the former years returned to the beautiful
+village by the sea; there were pleasant parties among the residents, the
+Governor held receptions, the officers of the warships added to the
+social life, many a gay ball was celebrated on the top floor of the
+court house, and for more than twenty years it was the Capital of
+Alaska.[29]
+
+With the influx of the Americans prospecting began, for in the vast wild
+mountains of Baranof and Chicagof Islands there is a wealth of mineral
+stored in the ledges.
+
+The Russians had attempted to find the mineral of the mountains, and in
+1848 a Mr. Doroshin, a mining engineer, had been sent out from St.
+Petersburg to search for mineral wealth in the colonies. He was not
+successful enough to make it of profit to them, although he found coal
+on Cook Inlet, gold on the Kenai Peninsula, earth promising to bear
+diamonds near Kootznahoo, and copper was known to be on the Myednooskie,
+or Copper, River.
+
+Discharged soldiers of the garrison were the first to take to the hills
+with pick and shovel. Nicholas Haley, an old-time prospector of Arizona,
+who came with the troops to Sitka, was one of the most energetic and
+daring of these. Year after year, with pick and shovel, with rifle and
+blankets, Nicholas attacked the rugged mountains. Rich specimens were
+brought in and yielded enough when brayed in a mortar to keep him in a
+grubstake, but it takes capital to develop a hard rock mine and capital
+was wary. So Nicholas toiled on year after year, keeping up his
+assessments and living on hopes until at last he passed over the Great
+Divide to a Better Diggings.
+
+Others tried it. In 1878 a mining company was organized at Sitka, but
+there was not yet a law under which a claim could be legally taken.
+Ledges were found, small mills were placed on the ground at the Stewart
+Mine, the Lucky Chance and elsewhere, and later great fakes were
+promoted at the Pande Basin and elsewhere. But it was years after that
+when two Indian boys, hunting on Chicagof Island, lay down to drink at a
+stream, and, behold, in the shimmering water was white rock with yellow,
+glittering particles dancing in the clear stream. With the fear it was
+but fools gold they took specimens and marked the place where they were
+found. When they reached Sitka they submitted these samples to Judge
+DeGroff, and to Professor Kelly of the Sheldon Jackson School. It was
+pronounced to be gold, pure shining, yellow gold, and richer than the
+most sanguine had hoped for. After much labor and many disappointments
+the ledge was located from which the float came, and today that mine,
+the Chicagof it is called, is known as the richest and best paying mine
+in the United States in proportion to the money invested, and more than
+one fortune has been taken out of the tunnels in the mountain.
+
+Off the shores of the continent, reaching far off to the westward almost
+to the shores of Asia are vast fishing grounds, perhaps the greatest in
+the world. A great submarine plateau stretches along shore, past the
+Aleutian Islands and into Bering Sea. There are estimated to be forty
+thousand square miles of cod and halibut banks that are known to the
+surveys. The fisheries of Gloucester and Cape Cod fade into
+insignificance and the famous Newfoundland Banks are but small in
+comparison.
+
+Sitka goes back the farthest in historic memory of any city of the
+Northwest. When Lewis and Clarke came to the mouth of the Columbia River
+she was looking out over the Pacific from her stockaded walls and
+Resanof was sailing to search for locations for new colonies. When
+Astoria was founded she was placing her outpost on the Russian River in
+California. Before San Francisco was a city she sent her bidarkas to
+take the sea-otter from under the very noses of the Padres in their
+missions. Here the civilization of the East met the progress of the
+West, the Orient and the Occident met here and met without bloodshed.
+Sitka, with her wealth of fisheries in the waters at her doors, with her
+wealth of mineral in the ledges at her back, with the wealth of forest
+on the mountain slopes around her, is in the same latitude as Edinburgh,
+Scotland. The time is coming when she will have population, and wealth;
+beauty she already has. What more is wanted for the happiness of her
+people? Only energy, perseverance, and thrift, and those will be
+forthcoming.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+WHAT TO SEE
+
+
+Approaching Sitka by the usual steamer route from the north at a
+distance of six miles the site of Old Sitka is passed. It lies to the
+left of the steamer track, in a small bay, and is marked by a native
+house which is visible from the ship. From near this place, looking to
+the westward, the first sight of Mount Edgecumbe is to be had between
+the islands. On approaching the town the ship goes through a narrow
+channel between Japonski Island at the right and the townsite at the
+left. Near the middle of the channel a rock is marked by a buoy and
+along the shore is the native village, or "Ranche," with a sloping beach
+upon which in former days the canoes were drawn up. The paths by which
+they were brought from the water may be seen, marked by the rocks being
+thrown to each side from the track.
+
+[Illustration: Sitka--East on Lincoln Street--the Governor's Walk of the
+Russians.]
+
+On Japonski Island is the U. S. Naval Coaling Station and the U. S.
+wireless telegraph. The magnetic observatory of the Russians was
+situated there. The name means Japan Island and is given because Resanof
+designated it as the place to keep captive Japanese whom he expected to
+capture through his expedition against the lower Kuril Islands in 1806.
+
+The dock at which the ship lands is in the same location as the one used
+by the Russians, but it has been extended to deeper water. The timbers
+of the old hulk once used by the Russians as a landing stage may still
+be seen in the water at low tide. On the dock was the landing warehouse
+of the Russians, a log structure with a passage through the center. It
+was burned in 1916. Leaving the wharf and going eastward along Lincoln
+Street, at the side are the booths or tents of the native merchants,
+kept by the women from the village, a veritable arcade of little
+markets, and each of the vendors is as interested as though she occupied
+a seat on the famous Rialto Bridge to sell the wares of ancient Venice.
+The picturesque, dark-skinned Thlingit women sit at the doors of their
+little tents hour after hour, offering the strangely carved totems, the
+beautiful baskets of spruce roots woven in mystic designs, the beaded
+moccasins, etc., products of their industry during the long winter when
+the tourist boats do not call at the Sitka wharves. Passing up the
+street to the east from the landing--at the right is the U. S. cable
+office, occupying the site of the old Russian fur warehouse. Next is the
+three-story building used for courthouse and jail, formerly the Russian
+Barracks where the Siberian Battalion was quartered. This is one of the
+most prominent of the old buildings which remain. In front of this is
+the stairway leading to the top of the hill on which is situated the
+building of the Agricultural Department, on the site of the former
+residence of the chief manager of the Russian American Company. Around
+this hill were the batteries of the Russians, commanding the Kolosh
+village and the harbor. The former building was often called the
+Governor's Mansion, or the Baranof Castle, was built about 1837 and was
+destroyed by fire in 1894. The hill commands a fine view of the harbor
+and the surrounding islands. The present structure is the headquarters
+of the Alaska division of the Agricultural Department. Opposite the
+stairway to the hill is the way leading to the "Ranche;" the open square
+was the former parade ground of the Army, and later of the U. S. Marines
+from the Man-of-War which was stationed here. East of the old barracks
+building is the former counting house of the Company, now occupied as
+the U. S. Postoffice, and during the time when Sitka was the Capital of
+the Territory it was used by the United States for a Customs office, and
+by the Governor as an office. Going east on Lincoln Street, the next
+large building at the right was the old bakery and shops of the Company,
+later commonly known as the Sitka Trading Company Building, having been
+occupied by that company for many years. Beyond this on the same side of
+the street at a short distance is a small building, standing back from
+the walk, surmounted by a Greek cross, which marks the site of the first
+church built in Sitka, in 1817. Next to this lot is the one formerly
+occupied by the Lutheran Church, built in the time of Etolin, and in
+which the first church service was held by Chaplain Rainier of the U. S.
+Army, after the American occupation.
+
+[Illustration: Interior of Cathedral of St. Michael]
+
+Across the street is the Cathedral of St. Michael, the headquarters of
+the Greek Orthodox Church in Alaska. In the Territory are claimed to be
+ten thousand communicants of that faith and from Sitka the management of
+affairs is conducted. The church is in the form of a cross and is
+surmounted by the Greek cross. The interior is richly decorated after
+the usual custom of the Russian churches. Candlesticks of massive design
+stand at either side of the doors of the inner sanctuary. The building,
+with its dome, is distinctive, and is a good example of Russian church
+architecture.[30]
+
+Continuing east along Lincoln Street a short distance beyond the
+Cathedral a vacant space on the right marks the spot formerly occupied
+by the clubhouse, built by Etolin for a home for the clerks, navigators,
+and other employes of the Company--opposite it was situated the foundry
+and machine shops, while a little farther to the east stood the
+sawmills, at the mouth of the outlet to Swan Lake. Along this stream was
+the eastern boundary of the stockade of the Russian fort, with a
+blockhouse near the point of the lower end of the lake. East of this
+stockade were the kitchen gardens, but all traces of them have long
+since vanished. Continuing along the street following the shore, the
+Bishop's house is passed on the left, where the Russian school is
+taught, and a short distance beyond is the house of the Episcopal Bishop
+of the diocese, Rev. Bishop P. T. Rowe. Still farther to the east is the
+Sheldon Jackson School, the Presbyterian Mission School, consisting of a
+group of buildings, the first of which was completed in 1880, under the
+superintendence of Rev. Alonzo Austin, and others have been added from
+time to time until the present fine establishment has resulted. An
+octagonal structure shelters the Sheldon Jackson Museum, a fine
+collection of native work of many kinds, gathered from all parts of
+Alaska by the first superintendent of native schools for the Territory.
+A small paper is published by the mission, the _Verstovian_, and is
+printed by the native students of the institution.
+
+Opposite the mission, at the edge of the curving beach, a large,
+flat-topped rock lies at the side of the way, called the Blarney Stone.
+On this it is said that Baranof often sat, during the last year of his
+residence here, and looked out through the vistas between the islands to
+the broad Pacific. What were the thoughts of the brave, strong, strange,
+old man as he sat here will never be known, but it is sure that there
+was much of sadness for him in those days.
+
+Beyond the Mission is the famous Indian River Road, a continuation of
+the Governor's Walk of the Russians, and often called the Lover's Lane.
+It winds along the shore of the sea, through the Park, with here and
+there an opening in the forest where there are splendid examples of
+Hydah carvings in the tall totems placed in well chosen spots. These
+totem poles were taken to the St. Louis Fair in 1904, as a part of the
+Alaska Exhibit, and afterward returned to this park. One of the most
+interesting is the house totem of Chief Son-i-hat, of Kasaan,
+accompanied by the four supporting columns of the ancient tribal house.
+
+From the rustic bridge on the Indian River there are enticing paths
+leading along the stream and toward Mt. Verstovia, which towers above
+the bay to the height of 3,216 feet. Along the river, known as the
+_Kolosh Ryeka_, by the Russians, the winding paths are bordered
+with huge Sitka spruces and giant cedars, with the space thickly filled
+with a dense growth of shrubbery, among which is prominent the Devil's
+Club (_panax horridus_), with its beautifully palmated leaves and
+its cruel spines concealed underneath. This shrub was formerly used by
+the natives as an instrument of torture in their witchcraft. In the
+depths of the forest the earth is covered with a carpet of ferns and
+mosses, and the trunks of fallen trees of former years may be seen with
+other trees of from two to three feet in diameter growing on their
+prostrate bodies.
+
+Returning toward the town, at the Mission the Davis Road turns toward
+the north. It was built by the Army during their occupation, in the
+process of their securing wood from the forest, and named for General
+Jeff C. Davis, the Commander of the post. Following it the Military
+Cemetery is reached at the distance of about three-eighths of a mile.
+Here are some interesting monuments, among them being that of Gouverneur
+Morris, a descendent of the famous financier of the Revolution. A stone
+marks the resting place of a lieutenant of the U. S. Army, around whose
+memory lingers stories of a duel with a brother officer in a solitary
+spot along Indian River, over a Russian beauty of Sitka.
+
+Turning aside from Lincoln Street at the Mission, or at the street next
+westward, a walk of a quarter of a mile leads to the experiment farm of
+the Agricultural Department of the United States. There may be seen many
+products, including apples and strawberries of an excellent quality. Of
+the latter is a variety originated by Prof. Georgeson through
+hybridizing the cultivated berries with the wild native berry which
+grows luxuriantly at many places in Alaska.
+
+On reaching the Cathedral a street turns northward along which one
+finds, at the right, on the little knoll in the town, among the
+scattered spruce trees, the spot where formerly stood the tea houses of
+the Russians. They were in the center of the public gardens which
+covered the knoll and were approached by beautifully bordered walks.
+Farther along, on the left of the walk, is the remaining Russian
+blockhouse, the last of three which formerly stood on the line of the
+stockade that protected the town from the Kolosh. A little back of the
+blockhouse is the grave of the Princess Maksoutoff, marked with a marble
+slab lying on the raised mound above her resting place. At the end of
+the walk is the modern Russian cemetery, with its forest of Greek
+crosses, and in the center, at the highest point, is a platform from
+which is had an excellent view of the harbor, islands, Mt. Edgecumbe,
+and of the lake and town.
+
+Returning as far as the site of the tea gardens, then going westward
+toward the water, at the right is an enclosure in which there is a small
+building marking the site of the Koloshian Church, or the Church of the
+Resurrection, as it is called in the church records. This was the
+building occupied by the natives in 1855 when they made an attack upon
+the town. It was on the line of the stockade which formerly ran from the
+water front at the end of the "Ranche," east to the lake, then back to
+the water at the sawmill. On the line of the stockade were three
+blockhouses, the church being between the first and second of these.
+Surrounding the site of the church are a number of graves, and among
+them are some interesting monuments dating back to the Russian days, for
+this is the older of the two cemeteries.
+
+[Illustration: Russian Blockhouse.]
+
+Going down to the entrance to the native town, or "Ranche," there is a
+choice of two streets, one in front of the houses along the water front,
+the other at the rear. The one at the front is preferable. The houses
+are built of lumber and in general are constructed by the native
+workmen, who have been instructed at the mission school, at which there
+is an excellent manual training department. The great tribal houses of
+former days have long since disappeared. The older houses were named by
+the natives much as were the inns of old England; the _Gooch-haet_,
+or wolf house; the _Tahn-haet_, or sea-lion house; the
+_Kahse-haet_, or cow house, and others, named for different
+animals. The _Kahse-haet_ was named from the head of a cow being
+brought there from a wreck off the coast in which the animal was
+drowned. Formerly there were many canoes along the water front--as many
+as 150 at a time being often seen, but now their place is occupied by
+gas boats--generally built by the owners and the engines installed by
+them. The loss in the picturesque is partly compensated by the gain in
+utility, but the native canoe was a wonder of marine architecture, cut
+from a single log and shaped with fire and adzed into elegant lines. An
+occasional specimen is sometimes yet to be seen on the beach or
+carefully covered from the weather in some sheltered and secluded cove.
+
+There were no great house totem poles in front of the houses as there
+are at Wrangell, Kasaan and elsewhere. There were some mortuary columns
+near the grave houses which formerly stood on the ridge back of the
+village, but these have long been covered by the dense undergrowth which
+sprang up in recent years.
+
+In this village have lived some interesting and strong characters.
+Annahootz and Katlean both figured boldly in the history of the town,
+and Sitka Jack was noted for his great potlatch held in 1877, when he
+gave a housewarming at which he presented to his visitors over 500
+blankets, not to mention the hoochinoo and whiskey which flowed
+liberally for all. He beggared himself by the feast, but his reputation
+was established above reproach for the rest of life. Princess Tom was
+another celebrity, whose fame was founded on her wealth which was
+estimated at ten thousand dollars, and which was acquired by skill in
+basket making and shrewdness in dealing in native manufactures on which
+she was a connoisseur--going out to the villages in her long canoe to
+gather the stock of baskets, bracelets, carved dishes, masks, dance
+hats, etc., which she disposed of to advantage upon her return to Sitka.
+Chief Tlan Tech was one of the prominent citizens and frequently might
+have been seen on the street in his frock coat, tall hat, with cane and
+kid gloves, cutting quite a dash. His English vocabulary was very
+limited and he was accustomed for many years to fly the Russian flag
+over his canoe when he went out to a neighboring village for a potlatch.
+
+Some of the silversmiths were skilled workmen. Sitka Jack, and Kooska,
+and Hydah Jake, all fashioned bracelets, spoons, and other articles,
+carved with totemic designs of delicate beauty and line of proportion,
+made from silver coins which they melted down.
+
+Some of the shamans of the olden time acquired great influence and made
+life miserable for their fellow-citizens by the practice of witchcraft.
+One of the most obnoxious of these, called Skondoo, was captured and his
+shock of matted hair, which, like that of Samson, was supposed to be the
+seat of his power, was shorn by the commander of the U. S. S. "Pinta," and
+in addition he was thoroughly scrubbed with soap and brush, perhaps for
+the first time in his existence.
+
+Even to this day there are instances of the weird belief in the villages
+at Hootznahoo or at Klukwan. Not many years ago an Indian girl was
+rescued by the whites from a damp hole under a house where she had been
+confined to die of cold and starvation by the order of the shaman, or
+_Ekht_, as the Thlingit calls him.
+
+Among the island and the inlet dented shores surrounding the town are
+many interesting places forming an opportunity for delightful
+excursions. The most desirable of these are:
+
+Mount Edgecumbe, 3467 ft.--Taking a launch from Sitka the trip may be
+made to Crab Bay, or to the landing behind the island of St. Lazaria on
+which is a populous bird rookery, and the ascent of the mountain is
+possible to be made in a day. Perhaps better that two days be taken to
+the trip, however. The first to go to the top was Lisianski in 1804.
+From the summit of the mountain an unusually beautiful panorama is to be
+had of island-studded bay, and mountain ridges capped with glaciers on
+one side, while on the other spreads the expanse of the broad Pacific.
+
+Old Sitka, and Katleanski Bay.--By launch the site of the Russian
+settlement of 1799-1802 may be reached and from that point a
+continuation of the excursion may be made to the head of Nesquashanski
+Bay, where the meadows are situated from which the Russians procured
+their provender for the cattle kept at the post. In the streams entering
+the bay may be seen, during the season of the salmon run, the strange
+spectacle of the brown bears in the role of fishermen, scooping salmon
+from the waters with their paws, if good fortune attend. This journey
+may be made in a day.
+
+Silver Bay.--A veritable Norwegian fjord transplanted to Alaska--with
+picturesque waterfalls plunging into its waters, deep glacial valleys
+entering at right angles with Yosemite-like cliffs bordering them, the
+Scottish bluebells clinging to the dripping rocks which beetle overhead,
+Kalampy's Slide around which hangs a tale, the Stewart mine, etc.--about
+ten miles to the head of the bay, where a fine waterfall plunges from
+the mountainside.
+
+The Redoubt and the Globokoe Lake.--Southwest from Sitka about ten miles
+was the location of the fishery of the Russians from which for more than
+sixty years they drew their stores of _krasnia ruiba_ (the red
+salmon), which provided so important a part of their subsistence. Here
+in the rocky wall which divided Globokoe, or Deep Lake, from the sea,
+and over which the outlet flowed, channels were blasted, forming
+reservoirs, and in these channels were placed _zapors_, or fences,
+which made traps into which the salmon swam and lay in the clear cold
+pools until they were removed for use. Here also was one of the Russian
+flouring mills, where they ground the wheat brought from California, or
+from the farms of the Hudson's Bay Company at Nisqually or on the
+Columbia.
+
+The Sitka Hot Springs.--About four miles farther to the southwest than
+the Redoubt, is situated the Sitka Hot Springs, possessing valuable
+medicinal qualities, and used for more than a century as a health
+resort. Here Dr. Goddard has established a sanitarium in the midst of a
+veritable nature lover's paradise, the forest behind, and the
+island-studded sea in front, with game in the deep woods and fish in the
+sea, all to be had for the taking.
+
+Many other interesting and beautiful places may be visited. Lisianski
+Bay, Deep Bay, Herring Bay with the gorge of Sawmill Creek and the chain
+of lakes, Blue Lake, and others lying adjacent, are among the important
+ones.
+
+Mt. Verstovia.--The ascent of this mountain comprises one of the most
+interesting excursions about the town. The trail leaves the shore of
+Jamestown Bay at the point where the trough of the watering place of the
+"Jamestown," came to the beach. This place may be reached by boat or on
+foot through the Park by the mouth of Indian River. The ascent should be
+under the guidance of one familiar with the route, for it is not plainly
+marked and none but an experienced woodsman can find the way alone. It
+leads through a forest, the first 800 or 1,000 feet through dense
+undergrowth under the trees, the mosses and ferns forming a veritable
+carpet; above that the woods are more open--at about 2,500 feet the
+forest ceases. It is called Koster's Trail. The first eminence or
+shoulder of the mountain is near the timber line and is often spoken of
+as the Mountain of the Cross, while above it towers the Arrowhead, or
+the summit of Verstovia, otherwise called at times Popoff Mountain, or
+the Ponce, to a height of 3,216 feet, nearly a Russian verst, and from
+this it derives its name. From the top an expanse of island-studded
+waters stretch toward the sea. Eastward crest after crest of
+glacier-capped peaks rise for a hundred miles, northward the lofty
+summits of Mt. Crillon and Mt. Fairweather may be seen at an elevation
+of over 15,000 feet, equal in height to the highest Alp of Switzerland.
+Around the base of the Arrowhead, in July and August, are found a myriad
+of wild flowers, carpeting the earth--violets, daises, cyclamen, and a
+multitude of others.
+
+These are the nearer points which may be visited, but more extended
+journeys full of new and varied interest, to Sergius Narrows and Peril
+Straits or to the Place of Islands and the Chicagof Mine to the
+northward, and to Redfish Bay to the southward, may be made.
+
+
+
+
+Footnotes
+
+[Footnote 1: January 20th, 1820, a letter written by the Directory at
+St. Petersburg to Chief Manager Muravief at Sitka enclosing instructions
+previously given to Hagemeister, instructing him to find the descendants
+of Chirikof's lost men, urging that it must be done, and expressing
+surprise that it had been neglected thus long. (Russian American
+Archives, Correspondence, Vol. II, No. 108.)]
+
+[Footnote 2: In Wrangell, and at a few other places in Alaska may yet be
+seen some of these old tribal houses, built as in primitive days in most
+ways. The beams and planks were fashioned with an adze, and the evenness
+of the workmanship in hewing them is marvelous.]
+
+[Footnote 3: The livestock taken to Sitka in 1804 consisted of "Four
+cows, two calves, three bulls, three goats, a ewe and a ram, with many
+swine and fowls." (Lisianski, Voyage Round the World, p. 218.)]
+
+[Footnote 4: Lisianski made the surveys and named the islands of the
+archipelago which had not been charted by Vancouver, of which he says:
+"By our survey it appears that amongst the group of islands, which in my
+chart I have denominated the Sitka Islands, from the inhabitants, who
+call themselves Sitka-hans, or Sitka people, are four principal ones,
+viz.: Jacobi, Crooze, Baranof, and Chichagof." (A Voyage Round the
+World, Lisianski, p. 235.)]
+
+[Footnote 5: The Russian sazhen is 7 feet.]
+
+[Footnote 6: Pronounced Al-e-ut.]
+
+[Footnote 7: These books and letters were brought by Resanof in the
+"Nedeshda," and upon reaching Kodiak Resanof established the library at
+that place. It was afterward removed to Sitka, probably by Baranof when
+he changed the chief factory to that place in 1807. After the United
+States took possession the library disappeared, whether taken to Russia
+or left in Sitka does not appear, but the books were likely left in
+Sitka and gradually disappeared through theft in the years when there
+was no custodian of such property.]
+
+[Footnote 8: The "Neva" was long identified with the affairs of the
+colony. Bought in England for the first Russian expedition round the
+world, Captain Lisianski reached Sitka in time for her to participate in
+the driving of the Indians from their fortifications. She returned to
+Russia later to be sailed to the colony in 1810, and was on her third
+voyage at the time of her loss.]
+
+[Footnote 9: Golofnin, Voyage of the Sloop "Kamchatka," in Mat. Pt. 4,
+p. 103.]
+
+[Footnote 10: Lutke: Voyages. Mat. Pt. 4, p. 147.]
+
+[Footnote 11: The tows were large pieces of native copper from the
+Copper River hammered out flat by the natives. These were carried in
+front of the chiefs by slaves who beat them like gongs.]
+
+[Footnote 12: In the church records appears the entry: "Died, August 27,
+1832, Naval Captain of the 1st Rank and Cavalier Baron Ferdinand
+Wrangell's daughter--Mary." There is also to be found: "Died, December
+29th, 1839, Priest Vasili Michaeloff Ocheredin, 23 years old."]
+
+[Footnote 13: Narrative of a Voyage Round the World, 1836-1842, by
+Captain Sir Edward Belcher, Vol. 1, pages 95 et seq.]
+
+[Footnote 14: Frederick Schwatka, the explorer, seems to have been one
+of the first to put the story in print, which he did in the early
+eighties. It appeared in the Alaska News, a newspaper of Juneau, on
+December 24th, 1896, and the time is fixed as being in the
+administration of Baron Wrangell. In 1891 Hon. Henry E. Hayden published
+it in verse in a small volume printed at Sitka. John W. Arctander, in
+his Lady in Blue, elaborates it to a small volume and ascribes it to
+Etolin's time.
+
+There is a strange fact which gives some color to the story. In the
+Russian American Company's Archives now on file in the State Department,
+Washington, D. C., under date of September 23rd, 1833, a letter from St.
+Petersburg refers to a report of Baron Wrangell of November 30, 1831,
+which reported the death of under officer Paul Buikof, and implicating
+one Col. Borusof. Unfortunately the records of 1831 are missing and so
+the report cannot be had. Baron Wrangell's daughter, Mary, died during
+his stay in Sitka.]
+
+[Footnote 15: Between 1821 and 1862 there were shipped by the Russian
+American Company, from Alaska, 51,315 sea-otter, 831,396 fur-seal,
+319,514 beaver, 291,655 fox. Fur-Seal Arbitration, Vol. 2, p. 127
+(Washington, Government Printing Office).]
+
+[Footnote 16: "For the largest deer, which weighs about four poods, five
+sazhens of calico are paid; for a duck, a quid of tobacco; for a goose,
+two quids; fish priced according to size all according to price list
+established by the commander of the post of New Archangel." Russkie na
+Vostochnom Okean (Russians on the Eastern Ocean), by A. Markof, St.
+Petersburg, 1856.]
+
+[Footnote 17: Hunters who disposed of their furs to an English
+shipmaster were arrested and sent to Siberia. Russian American Archives.
+Corr. Vol. I, p. 275. In January of 1820 Muravief was ordered to watch
+certain officers of a ship who were suspected of trading for furs on
+their own account. Id. Vol. 2, p. 38.]
+
+[Footnote 18: The mill on Sawmill Creek was located in the gorge below
+where the dam is situated which provides the power for the present light
+plant of the town. The timbers of the old mill were removed in 1916 to
+make way for the building of the present improvement.]
+
+[Footnote 19: Golobokoe Lake was sounded to a depth of 190 fathoms by
+the Russians. Materialui, Pt. 3, p. 48.]
+
+[Footnote 20: Obzor Russkikh Colonii iv Syevernoe-Amerika, Survey of the
+Russian Colonies in North America, by Captain-Lieutenant P. N. Golovin,
+pp. 72-73.]
+
+[Footnote 21: Their names and dates of holding office are as follows:
+ Alexander Andreevich Baranof, 1790 to January 11, 1818.
+ Leonti Andreanvich Hagemeister, Jan. 11, 1818, to Oct. 24, 1818.
+ Semen Ivanovich Yanovski, Oct. 24, 1818, to Sept. 15, 1820.
+ Matvei Ivanovich Muravief, Sept. 15, 1820, to Oct. 14, 1825.
+ Peter Egorovich Chistiakof, Oct. 14, 1825, to June 1st, 1830.
+ Baron Ferdinand Von Wrangell, June 1st, 1830, to Oct. 29, 1835.
+ Ivan Antonovich Kupreanof, Oct. 29, 1835, to May 25, 1840.
+ Adolf Karlovich Etolin, May 25, 1840, to July 9, 1845.
+ Michael Dmitrevich Tebenkof, July 9, 1845, to Oct. 14, 1850.
+ Nikolai Yakovlevich Rosenberg, Oct. 14, 1850, to March 31, 1853.
+ Alexander Ilich Rudakof, March 31, 1853, to April 22, 1854.
+ Stephen Vasili Voevodski, April 22, 1854, to June 22, 1859.
+ Ivan Vasilivich Furuhelm, June 22, 1859, to Dec. 2, 1863.
+ Prince Dmitri Maksoutof, Dec. 2, 1863, to Oct. 18, 1867.]
+
+[Footnote 22: The Russian soldiery were dressed in a dark uniform,
+trimmed with red, with glazed caps. The United States troops appeared in
+the usual full dress.
+
+Of American ladies, six were present: the wives of General Davis,
+Colonel Weeks, Capt. Wood, and Rev. Mr. Rainier, of the "John L.
+Stevens," the wife of Mr. Dodge, Collector of the Port, and the wife of
+Captain MacDougall, of the "Jamestown." Six Russian ladies were also
+present: the Princess Maksoutoff, the wife and daughter of Vice-Governor
+Gardsishoff, and three whose names I do not know. H. Ex. Doc. No. 177,
+40th Cong. 2nd Sess., p. 72.]
+
+[Footnote 23: On the lowering of the Russian ensign it caught in the
+halyards and a sailor was sent aloft to release it. He tore it loose and
+flung it down on the bayonets of the Russian soldiery.]
+
+[Footnote 24: On December 14, 1807, the Russian ship "Czaritza," sailed
+for Russia, via London, with 168 passengers. January 1, 1868, the
+Russian ship "Cyane" cleared for Novgorod, Asia, with 69 soldiers of the
+garrison on board. November 30, 1868, the Russian ship "Winged Arrow,"
+went to Kronstadt, but there is no record of the passengers. April 24th,
+1868, the American steamer "Alexander" took special clearance for
+Nikolofski, Asia, to touch at all the posts along the Alaskan coasts to
+close up the business of the Russian American Company. Customs Records
+of Alaska, Record of Clearances.
+
+The ship "Winged Arrow" sailed on December 8th, 1868, for St.
+Petersburg, taking over 300 persons. Seattle Intelligencer, January 11,
+1869. This is the same voyage as the one above under the clearance of
+November 30th.]
+
+[Footnote 25: If we may believe the current reports of the time, the
+military occupation of Sitka was anything but a happy time for the civil
+inhabitants, especially the Russians who remained. See Colyer's Report,
+Ex. Doc. H. R. 41st Cong. 2nd Ses., p. 1030; Seattle Intelligencer,
+December 14th. 1868; The Victoria Colonist, et al.]
+
+[Footnote 26: Annahootz, the friend of the whites, married his 13th
+wife. Afterward becoming blind and decrepit he starved himself to death.
+See Sitka Alaskan, February 6, 1890.
+
+Katlean still lives at Sitka and may often be seen on the streets of the
+town.]
+
+[Footnote 27: The population of Sitka in 1818 was: Russian, 190;
+Creoles, 72; Aleuts, 173 of males, and female 185; of Russian and
+Creole, total, 620. Materialui, pt. 3, p. 20.
+
+January 1, 1825, there were: Russians, 309; Creoles, 58; Aleuts, 33.
+Total, 400. Ib. p. 52.
+
+In April, 1880, citizens by birth, 92; citizens by naturalization, 123;
+citizens by treaty, 229. Total, 444. Beardslee's Report, 47th Cong. Sen.
+Ex. Doc. No. 71, p. 34. In this census are many names well known in
+Alaska by the "Old Timers," as: A. T. Whitford, John G. Brady, N. A.
+Fuller, M. Travis, Edward DeGroff, S. Sessions, R. Willoughby, M. P.
+Berry, A. Cohen, Miss P. Cohen, Miss H. Cohen, Ed. Bean, D. Ackerman, A.
+Milletich, P. T. Corcoran, L. Caplin, Pierre Erussard, Ed. Doyle, George
+E. Pilz, Nicholas Haley, John McKenna, Reub Albertson, John Olds and
+others.]
+
+[Footnote 28: Governors of Alaska who made their residence at Sitka:
+
+John H. Kinkead, of Nevada, appointed July 4, 1884. Alfred P.
+Swineford, of Michigan, appointed May 8, 1885. Lyman E. Knapp, of
+Vermont, appointed April 32, 1889. James Sheakley, of Alaska, appointed
+June 28, 1893. John G. Brady, of Alaska, appointed June 23, 1897. ]
+
+[Footnote 29: "The United States District Court, established by the Act
+of May 17th, 1884, was formerly organized on the 4th day of November of
+that year in a room set apart for the use of the court in the old
+barracks building at Sitka, the following officers being present: Ward
+McAllister, Jr., Judge; Andrew T. Lewis, Clerk of the Court; Munson C.
+Hillyer, U. S. Marshal; Edward W. Haskett, District Attorney.
+
+"On the same day John F. McLean, an officer connected with the signal
+service, and Major M. P. Berry, a veteran of the Civil and Mexican wars,
+were admitted to the bar, as well as District Attorney Haskett. These
+three gentlemen comprised the Alaska Bar of Attorneys until June 20th,
+1885, when Mr. John G. Held was added to the roll and in the month of
+October, 1885, Willoughby Clark, John F. Maloney, R. D. Crittenden, and
+John G. Brady were admitted." Alaska Bar Association and Sketch of the
+Judiciary, by Arthur K. Delaney.]
+
+[Footnote 30: The first church in Alaska was built at Kodiak (Paulovski)
+in 1795, the next at Unalaska soon after, and the third at Sitka in
+1817.]
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: MAP OF SITKA--OCTOBER, 1867]
+
+ A. Battery No. 1.
+ B. Battery No. 2, Vralaskian Battery.
+ C. Blockhouse No. 1.
+ D. Blockhouse No. 2.
+ E. Blockhouse No. 3.
+ 1. Warehouse.
+ 2. Shop and Store.
+ 3. Subsistence Storehouse.
+ 4. Tannery for Furs.
+ 6. Barracks, three stories.
+ 7. Office Building, two stories.
+ 8. Governor's House.
+ 9. Wash and Bath House.
+ 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 22, and 23. Dock Yard and Buildings.
+ 16. School Building.
+ 18. Market for Indians.
+ 19. Lime Kiln.
+ 20. Unfinished Barracks.
+ 25. Bakery, Joinery, etc.
+ 61. Officers' Lodgings, two stories.
+ 66. Laundry.
+ 74. Sawmill.
+ 75. Tannery.
+ 76. Unfinished Bath House.
+ 77. Water Flour Mill.
+ 96. Aleutian Dwellings.
+ 102. Bishop's House, two stories.
+ 103. Hospital, two stories.
+ 116, 117. Arbors on Public Gardens.
+ 118. Powder Magazine.
+ 121. School Building for Indians.
+ 122. Observatory on Japonski Island.
+ 123. House for Observer, Wharf, Garden, Hotbeds, etc.
+ Cathedral of St. Michael.
+ Church of the Resurrection (Koloshian Church).
+ 129. Hulk and Movable Bridge.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Story of Sitka, by C. L. Andrews
+
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