The Story Of Sitka
Clarence Leroy Andrews
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11 chapters
The Story of Sitka
The Story of Sitka
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 TO MY MOTHER THIS VOLUME IS AFFECTIONATELY DEDICATED THE AUTHOR Copyright 1922 By C. L. ANDREWS Seattle, Wash. Lovers’ Lane, Sitka....
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SITKAForeword
SITKAForeword
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
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CHAPTER IDISCOVERY
CHAPTER IDISCOVERY
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
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CHAPTER IISETTLEMENT
CHAPTER IISETTLEMENT
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
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CHAPTER IIIPROGRESS OF THE COLONY
CHAPTER IIIPROGRESS 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. O
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CHAPTER IVNATIVES
CHAPTER IVNATIVES
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
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CHAPTER VCHURCHES AND SCHOOLS
CHAPTER VCHURCHES 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 B
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CHAPTER VISOCIAL LIFE
CHAPTER VISOCIAL 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 upo
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CHAPTER VIITRADE AND INDUSTRY
CHAPTER VIITRADE 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
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CHAPTER VIIISITKA UNDER UNITED STATES RULE
CHAPTER VIIISITKA 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 c
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CHAPTER IXWHAT TO SEE
CHAPTER IXWHAT 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 mid
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