web counter

READING HALL "THE DOORS OF WISDOM" 2024

DIVINE UNIVERSAL HISTORY OF JESUSCHRIST

CREATION OF THE UNIVERSE ACCORDING GENESIS

 

HISTORY OF ALASKA.

CHAPTER XVIII.

THE FOUNDING OF SITKA. 1798-1801.

 

The news of the final organization of the Russian American Company, the granting of its privileges by the emperor, and of his own appointment as chief manager, reached Baranof at a time when he was plunged in despondency. Nearly every undertaking of the preceding seasons had failed. He had lost numbers of men, both Russians and natives, during the long voyages to distant hunting-grounds. A spirit of revolt was still alive, especially among those who had transferred their allegiance from former oppressors. At every point eastward of Kadiak where he had endeavored to open trade he had found himself forestalled by English and American ships, which had raised the prices of skins almost beyond his limited means. In his attempts to hunt with his Aleuts, he had also been unfortunate, whole parties having been surprised and slaughtered by the warlike Thlinkeets. One of his sloops built at Voskressenski Bay foundered during her first voyage, while others had been injured on the shoals lining the mouth of Copper River, and he had just returned to Pavlovsk, in the damaged sloop Olga, intending to repair the vessels as best he might, in order to carry out during the following spring his cherished plan of locating a permeant settlement in the vicinity of Norfolk Sound.

He landed, suffering the agonies of inflammatory rheumatism and depressed in spirit, only to meet with upbraidings and complaints on the part of his subordinates, who were on short rations, owing to the non­arrival of the supply-ship. Certain leaders of the malecontents openly refused obedience unless provisions were first given them. Sick and dejected, he was unable to address them as he was wont to do, and retired to his wretched little cabin and to bed, when a little later the cry was heard, “A ship in the offing!” Once more inspired with life and hope, the sick man rose from his couch and climbed the mountain overlooking the settlement of St Paul. It was true; a large vessel, the brigantine Elizaveta, commanded by Bocharof, was standing in under full sail, and soon was lying at anchor in the roadstead, with Baranof on board. She had sailed from Okhotsk the preceding autumn, and had wintered on one of the westernmost Aleutian Isles, where the passengers and crew had lived on what they could gather; so that the cargo remained intact, and plenty reigned once more in the half-famished settlement. Fifty-two laborers and mechanics were now added to Baranof’s force; and though the season was far advanced, a small party was at once despatched to Prince William Sound to complete another sloop.

The winter of 1798-9 was passed by the colonists at Kadiak in cheerful content, for they were busy in preparing for the great movement to the eastward in the following spring, and the letters written by Baranof at this juncture bear evidence of his confidence. Early in March the new sloop Konstantin arrived at Kadiak from Prince William Sound, and was supplied with sails and rigging from the stores brought by Bocharof. On the 10th of April, Baranof set sail with the two vessels, manned by twenty-two Russians and accompanied by a fleet of nearly two hundred canoes. The course was along the coast of the Kenai peninsula to Prince William Sound, where the expedition was joined by Baranof’s most trusted assistant, Kuskof, with one hundred and fifty additional canoes which had wintered on Nuchek Island.

Misfortune attended Baranof’s enterprise from its inception. On the 2d of May, while weathering Cape Suckling on the coast opposite Kayak, thirty of the canoes, containing two men each, were swallowed by the heavy seas into which even a moderate breeze raises these shallow waters. In a letter to his friend Delarof, Baranof tells of his further troubles: “While we were still mourning the loss of our hunters, night came on, and as I saw further indications of storm, I ordered all the canoes to make for the shore, accompanying them in person in my own bidarka. In the darkness we underestimated the distance, and when at last we reached the sandy beach, exhausted from continued paddling, we threw ourselves upon the sand overshadowed by dense forests. No sooner had we closed our eyes, than the dreaded war-cry of the Kolosh brought us again to our feet. The greatest consternation prevailed among the naturally timid Aleuts, who were filled with such dread of the well-known enemy as to think it useless to make any resistance. Many of them rushed into the forest, into the very hands of their assailants, instead of launching their canoes and putting to sea. I had only two Russians with me, and we fired our guns into the darkness wherever the cries of the Kolosh were loudest; but when our ammunition was expended, we did not know what execution we had done. A few of the native hunters who had been presented with fowling-pieces also made a feeble show of resistance; but what saved us from total destruction was the intervening darkness, which prevented our assailants from distinguishing friends from enemies. After an unequal contest, lasting over an hour, the Kolosh retired to the woods, while I and my assistants endeavored to rally our scattered men. By shouting to them in the Aleutian tongue, we succeeded in gathering the survivors, still hidden in the woods and among the driftwood lining the shore, and before morning departed from the inhospitable beach, leaving thirteen canoes, the owners of which had been killed or carried into captivity. The rising sun showed us the sloops in the offing, and we lost no time in seeking their welcome protection.”

This attack by the natives, added to the loss at sea, had so reduced the force, that Kuskof advised a return to Prince William Sound; but Baranof was not to be thus thwarted. He pressed forward, travelling along the coast, chiefly by night, and daring to camp only on prominent points, where there was least danger of surprise. At last, on the 25th, the expedition entered the sheltered basin of Norfolk, or Sitka Sound. The towering heights were still covered with snow, almost to the water’s edge, and the weather was stormy; rain, snow, and sleet alternating with furious gusts of wind. The landing was accomplished at a point still known as Old Sitka, about six miles north of the present town of that name. A large crowd of natives had assembled to watch the movements of the new-comers. A Sitkan chief, Katleut, or Katlean, whom Kuskof had met during his hunting expedition of the preceding summer, approached Baranof and demanded to know his intentions, telling him at the same time that a Boston ship was anchored a short distance to the southward, and that her captain had purchased many skins.

Baranof replied in a lengthy harangue, reciting the long-stereotyped European falsehood, that the emperor of all the Russias, who was the lord of that country, had sent him to establish a settlement for trade, and to assure his new subjects of his fatherly care and protection. At the same time he asked for the grant of a small piece of ground for the erection of buildings, and for which he offered to pay in beads and other trading goods. The barter was concluded, and Katleut even asserted that he could force the other chiefs into the agreement. A few hours afterward the sound of Russian axes was heard in the virgin forest, the crash of falling timber was echoed from the sides of Verstovoi, and all was bustle and high determination. The site bordered a shallow stream alive with salmon. One half of the company were employed in building, while the remainder were sent to hunt sea-otter in the vicinity. On the following day the chief manager received a visit from the Boston ship, which proved to be the Caroline, in charge of Captain Cleveland, who stated that he had only ten men before the mast, and that on account of the fierce character of the natives he had found it necessary to take great precautions. He had placed a screen of hides round the ship with the exception of the stern, whence trade was carried on with the natives, who could not see the deck, or know how few men he had. Two pieces of cannon were placed in position, and on the taffrail was a pair of blunderbusses on swivels.

The savages who then inhabited the neighborhood of Norfolk Sound were among the most treacherous and repulsive of all the Alaskan tribes. “A more hideous set of beings in the form of men and women,” writes the captain, “I had never before seen. The fantastic manner in which many of the faces of the men were painted was probably intended to give them a ferocious appearance; and some groups looked really as if they had escaped from the dominions of Satan himself. One had a perpendicular line dividing the two sides of' the face, one side of which was painted red, the other black; with the hair daubed with grease and red ochre, and filled with the down of birds. Another had the face divided with a horizontal line in the middle, and painted black and white. The visage of a third was painted in checkers, etc. Most of them had little mirrors; before the acquisition of which they must have been dependent on each other for those correct touches of the pencil which are so much in vogue, and which daily require more time than the toilet of a Parisian belle.”

From the ship Enterprise, which arrived at Kadiak from New York on the 24th of April, 1800, the chief manager heard that hostilities had broken out in Europe, that Spain had formed an alliance with France, and that a Spanish frigate was to be sent to Russian America. The news was received with no little anxiety. At this time all the storehouses at Three Saints were full of choice furs, which Baranof now caused to be concealed in the adjacent islands. “Truly,” he writes, “if the terrible emergency should arise, and the enemy come upon us, they cannot take much more than our lives, and these are in God’s hands. It would take more than mortal eyes to discover where our precious skins are concealed.”

Several other American vessels, among them the brig Eliza, under Captain Rowan, visited the bay dur­ing the summer, and absorbed the trade, while the Russians were preparing to occupy the field in the future. During the preceding winter the relations between the colonists and the natives had been peaceable, but there was much suffering on account of insufficient food and shelter. A fort was erected, and named after the archangel Michael, in “the hope that the great champion of the Lord would protect the promyshleniki, nevertheless, soon after the establishment of the settlement misfortune again reduced Baranof’s force. On the 18th of July, he received news from an Aleutian party which had camped for the night on the tortuous passage connecting Norfolk Sound with Chatham Strait, that a number of the men had died from eating poisonous mussels. The passage was thereafter named Pogibshie, or Destruction Strait, which name has subsequently been changed by Americans to Peril Strait.

While Baranof was thus engaged in establishing his new colony, a block-house and stockade had been built by Polomoshnoi at Yakutat, or Bering Bay, for the reception of the Siberian convicts, or agricultural settlers, as they were called. The site for this settlement had been chosen by mistake. After his first visit to Prince William Sound, Baranof had recommended the country bordering on Comptroller Bay as probably adapted to agricultural pursuits. Cape Suckling, the western point of this bay, had been erroneously called Cape St Elias, the name applied to the south point of Kayak Island by Bering, and in his recommendation Baranof spoke of the country about Cape St Elias. Subsequently the bay of Yakutat had been visited by Purtof and Kuskof; and as this affords the only good harbor on that part of the coast, and is overshadowed by the peak of St Elias, the proposed settlement had been located there in a desolate region of ice and rock, entirely unfit for occupation by man. Polomoshnoi only obeyed orders in locating the block-house there, but as soon as the buildings were completed, he returned to Kadiak to remonstrate ever, by Baranof’s representative, and sailed for his destination on the brig Orel, laden with provisions for the new settlement, in charge of Talin, a naval officer in the service of the company, but one who, like all of his profession, was little disposed to heed the chief manager’s instructions, and when his vessel was lying in Norfolk Sound had threatened to hang Baranof from the mast-head if he dared to show himself on board. While beating against head winds, the ship was wrecked on the island of Sukluk (Montague), and Polomoshnoi, with five men, perished.6

 

Yakutat Bay Settlement.

 

From other parts of the country news of disaster had also reached Baranof. The year before his departure for Norfolk Sound he had been informed that two of the company’s establishments, at Ilyamna and Kadiak, had been surprised, and all the Russians stationed there, twenty-one in number, massacred. The outbreak appears to have been caused, as usual, by the cruelty of the settlers, for all the native servants were spared.

Notwithstanding occasional misfortunes, Baranof’s management of the affairs of the company appears to have met with the approval of most of the directors, though he himself was dissatisfied with his position. In answer to a letter from Larionof, in 1799, he remarks: “The lowest and most insignificant official in the service of the company pretends to know more about the business of this section than its head, and expresses his opinion on everything. They write about us, but nobody ever thinks of asking, How do they live there, and what are they doing?” When writing to his friend Delarof, he mentions that he had never failed to earn for the shareholders a dividend, and that its amount for 1795 was 22,000 roubles. He also refers to his request to the managers of the company to send from Russia some one to relieve him. As we shall see, this request was repeated several times during a period of nearly twenty years before a successor finally reached the colonies, though two were appointed meanwhile, but were shipwrecked on the way. There can be no doubt that the chief cause of his dissatisfaction was the unpleasant relations with the naval officers and the intrigues of the mission­aries, though his failing health and the condition of his finances were additional reasons.

Believing the Sitka settlement to be now firmly established and safe from hostile attacks, Baranof returned to Kadiak in the autumn of 1800. But prior to his return he made an official visit to various set­tlements, an account of which I give in his own words.

Writing to Larionof, the agent at Unalaska, in July of this year, he says: “On Kenaï Bay at Ilyamna Lake the rebellious tribes have killed three of our men since Lebedef’s people departed. Our establishments on the gulf of Kenai have been broken up three times, and a conspiracy has been discovered to destroy all places occupied by Russians, and to kill them as well as the natives of Kadiak in their employ; and we have not been able as yet entirely to suppress the spirit of rebellion. But the saddest news of all, and the most disastrous to us, is of the wreck of the Feniks, and the loss of the whole cargo and all on board. For two months portions of the wreck have been cast on the beach in various localities, but the exact place of the disaster remains unknown.

“I set out in person in July, first for the gulf of Kenaï, to subdue the rebellious tribes, and the remnant of the Lebedef Company, who had killed over a hundred people between them, and had divided themselves into several bands of robbers. Many of them threatened our men on the Kaknu River, which station they had occupied after the breaking-up of the Lebedef Company, but fortunately the leaders of the conspiracy dispersed upon my arrival, and though the combination was not entirely dissolved, I succeeded in obtaining several hostages for the safety of our agent in command, Vassili Malakhof, but in the more distant settlements there is still a strong inclination to warfare and plunder. I remained there until the 15th of August, making necessary arrangements to insure the safety of the place by strengthening its fortifications. I also selected a more convenient site for the fort, made a plan in accordance with the local facilities, and left its execution to the agent Malakhof; and after collecting all the furs at the station, consisting chiefly of those of small land-animals, I proceeded to Fort Alexandroffsk at the entrance of the gulf. Here I furnished the agent Ostrogin with further instructions, and sailed again on the 30th of August, shaping my course for the redoubt at Voskressenski Bay. Thence I proceeded to Nuchek Island, where I made a searching investigation of everything, and established the fort St Konstantin upon a new site. I also had several interviews with the natives, and placed my assistant Kuskof in command of that region.”

“Concerning the new settlement at Sitka,” the manager says, for I cannot do better than permit him to continue his story, “I thought there would be no danger with proper protection from the larger vessels, though the natives there possess large quantities of fire-arms and all kinds of ammunition, receiving new supplies annually from the English and from the republicans of Boston and America, whose object is not permanent settlement on these shores, but who have been in the habit of making trading trips to these regions. It is to be hoped that the fruits of the discoveries of Russian navigators may not be enjoyed by European or other companies, depriving us of our hard-earned advantages. I trust that God in his justice will allow us to enjoy the fruits of our enterprise, and as, with his help, I, an ignorant subject, have been able to add something to the vast dominion of his imperial Majesty, we must hope that we shall find the means to preserve our new possessions intact, and make them profitable.

“At the settlement of Yakutat I found nothing but trouble and disorder in every department. This was partly owing to the old difficulties between Polomoshnoi and your brother Stepan, who was appointed assistant manager in 1796. During the first winter thirteen of the twenty-five hunters and seven of the settlers died of scurvy, besides women and children. Polomoshnoi had written a whole ream of trash and nonsense which he forwarded to Kadiak, the whole report containing only what one settler had said of another, what the settlers had said of the hunters, and the threats made by the latter against his life. In conclusion, he asked to be relieved. The wish was complied with, and Nikolai Moukhin, who was thought to possess considerable administrative ability, was sent as his substitute. I had all the property forwarded to Yakutat on behalf of the settlers transferred to him, though it was almost impossible to obtain any clear statement with regard to it from the confused mass of papers left by Polomoshnoi. His reports spoke of many acts of cruelty and abuse committed by the hunters, and he had even gone so far as to appoint a commission to investigate the charges; but as the members of the commission were all ignorant settlers who were interested in the case, they did nothing beyond getting up a voluminous pile of testimony which amounts to nothing but empty words. Several times I was on the point of solving all difficulties by disbanding the settlement; but better thoughts prevailed, and remembering the importance of the success of this experiment to the company and to the country at large, I did my best to restore order and reconcile the parties involved.

“The tribes living in the vicinity of our Sitka settlement at first met us in a very friendly manner, but of late they have displayed some distrust, and when our men had formed a procession during holy week in honor of the emperor, they thought we were preparing for a fight, and seized our interpreter, who happened to be in the native village. The procession was conducted with great solemnity and pomp, and after it had been disbanded, our men went through some military evolutions, all of which had been witnessed by the chiefs of the savages, who listened frowningly to our discharges of musketry and artillery; but all this display did not induce them to give up the interpreter, and some property which they had stolen; and I found it necessary to assure them that we were not afraid of them. Therefore, on the third day I proceeded to the principal village with twenty-two men, landed fearlessly on the beach, and placed two small cannon in front of their houses. Over three hundred armed men surrounded us, but we marched directly to the house where the prisoner was reported to be. We fired a few blank volleys to keep the crowd in awe, and seized a few men who seemed inclined to offer resistance. Our determined attitude held the people in check, and when we had accomplished our object and released the prisoner, they began to ridicule the affair, bandying words with our men, and offering them food. I rejoiced in having accomplished my end without bloodshed, and made up my mind not to allow the slightest offence on their part to pass unnoticed in the future.”

The admixture of business and piety in this despatch is somewhat noteworthy. “With God’s help,” he writes, “our men killed 40 sea-lions and 150 seals during the winter.” Speaking of the hunter Mikhail, whom he had ordered to travel around Kadiak “for the purpose of taking a census of that island, and to make presents to the leading men among the Aleuts of tobacco and other trifles,” he remarks, “ I thought this course of action best, in view of the misfortune which had happened last year, as I wrote to you from Sitka; and with God’s help, he succeeded so well in his mission that the necessary number of men were obtained in all districts, from the first to the last, even to bird-hunting parties.”

Again, in a letter to Larionof, dated March 22, 1801, the chief manager thus expresses his gratitude: “ The All-creator of the world, in his infinite mercy, has overlooked and forgiven our sins, and tempered the cruel blows of misfortune with success in sea-otter hunting. In the three years which have elapsed since the arrival of the last transport, we have collected over 4,000 skins of sea-otters—males, females, and yearlings, besides cubs. The skins secured at Nuchek and Sitka will probably amount to nearly 4,000, with the help of God. On the other hand, the trappers have had but little success, on account of the unfavorable weather during the winter; and, as you see from the statement, only 1,500 skins were obtained from that source, while in former years from 2,000 to 2,500 was the average number.”

Baranof’s complaints of foreign encroachment appear to have been well grounded. Within a few leagues of Sitka the captains of three Boston ships secured 2,000 skins, though paying very high prices, each one trying to outbid the other. For a single skin they gave cloth worth twenty-eight roubles, or three coats of frieze lined with cotton. In the same neighborhood two skins were formerly bartered for cloth valued at ten and a half roubles. “The Americans,” writes the chief manager, “ who have been acquainted with these tribes for two or three years, and have sent from six to eight ships each year, speak of the trade as follows: ‘The American republic is greatly in need of Chinese goods, the Chinese teas, the various silk materials and other products of that country, which had formerly to be purchased for coin, the Spanish silver dollar exclusively, but since these shores have been discovered, with their abundance of furs, they were no longer obliged to take coin with them, but loaded their vessels with full cargoes of European goods and products of their own country, which are easier obtained than coin.’ ” After touching on the political complications that marked the close of the eighteenth century, Baranof continues: “The resources of this region are such that millions may be made there for our country with proper management in the future, but for over ten years from six to ten English and American vessels have called here every year. It is safe to calculate an average of 2,000 skins on eight, or say six vessels, which would make 12,000 a year, and if we even take 10,000 as a minimum, it would amount in ten years to 100,000 skins, which at the price at Canton of 45 roubles per skin would amount to 4,500,000 roubles.”

For the next year and a half, little worthy of record occurred in connection with the affairs of the Russian American Company. A number of agriculturists and mechanics, placed at the disposal of the company by Count Zubof, arrived at Kadiak, together with a reenforcement of missionaries. The chief manager has little to report, save that he has succeeded in bringing into friendly relations with the Russians a number of tribes, among whom, as he supposed, were the Kolosh. The question of boundaries between the Russian and British American possessions had been mooted, however, almost from the time that Spain ceded Nootka to the English, and Baranof feared that his people might be driven from their settlements, although their right of discovery and occupation north of the 55th parallel left little room for dispute. He begs the governor of Irkutsk to intercede with the emperor, more especially in relation to the establishment of an agricultural settlement, for it was useless to select a site until some definite action was taken, and the colony at Cape St Elias was of no benefit.

 

 

CHAPTER XIX.

THE SITKA MASSACRE.

1802.