CREATION OF THE UNIVERSE ACCORDING GENESIS |
CHAPTER
XIV.
ORGANIZATION
OF MONOPOLY.
1787-1795.
The idea of a subsidized monopoly of
trade and industry, to embrace all Russian discoveries and colonies on the
shores of the north Pacific, first arose in the fertile brain of Grigor
Shelikof, whose original establishment on Kadiak Island has been the subject of
a preceding chapter. Once seized with this conception, Shelikof hastened
forward the execution of it with all the ardor of his nature. He hurried from
Kamchatka to Okhotsk and Irkutsk, travelling without intermission in the dead
of winter until he reached the capital of eastern Siberia and delivered to General
Jacobi, the governor general, a detailed account, with maps, of the countries
he had visited, and plans of the fortifications erected. He then asked of the
governor general instructions for the management of the people thus added to
the Russian empire, and aid toward obtaining from the empress a recognition of
his labors.
Unlike
his predecessors, Shelikof was not satisfied with a single hunting season on
the island of Kadiak, but, as we have seen, proceeded at once to the establishment
of permanent settlements. After the presentation of his report to General
Jacobi, the clever trader asked permission to send a few ships to Chinese
ports, in case of an interruption to the overland trade with Kiakhta. The
permission was not granted at that time. Meanwhile Golikof, Shelikof’s partner,
had profited by a temporary sojourn of the empress at Kursk, and had presented
to her a chart of Shelikof’s voyage. Her Majesty inquired into the company’s
achievements, and finally granted Shelikof permission to come to St Petersburg
and present himself at court with Golikof.
Shortly
after this the empress asked Jacobi his opinion as to the best means of
establishing the Russian dominion on the islands of the eastern ocean, and on
the coast of America, and also as to the best mode of governing the savage
tribes and ameliorating their condition. In answer Jacobi forwarded a lengthy
report in which he approved the proposed despatch of a fleet from the Baltic to
protect navigation in the Pacific, and mentioned that he had forwarded to the
regions in question thirty copper shields, bearing the imperial coat of arms
and the inscription, “Country in possession of Russia,” intended, as he says,
“for the better assertion of Russia’s rights, founded upon discovery.” The
shields were intrusted to navigators of the Shelikof and Golikof Company.
Jacobi also recommended that the collection of tribute from the natives should
be abolished and replaced by a voluntary tax. He pointed out the disadvantages
to both traders and natives resulting from the tribute system, and suggested
that by impressing the savages with a sense of the power of the empress and her
tender care for all, even her most distant subjects, and by allowing them to
deliver to government agents a voluntary contribution or tax, much good might
be accomplished. According to Jacobi’s opinion, the collection of tribute
hastened the extermination of fur-bearing animals.
With
regard to the proposed amelioration Jacobi said that there could be no doubt of
the truth of Shelikof’s report, and that it would be but a just recognition of
what the Shelikof Company had done for the commerce of Russia, and for the
country at large, to grant them the exclusive right of hunting and trading in
the islands and territories discovered by their vessels. He even added that it
would be unfair to allow newcomers to enjoy the present peace to which
Shelikof had reduced Kadiak. Without regard for the claims of any who had
preceded them, they alone should be rewarded, because they had a larger force
and conquered without exterminating.
He
further argued that unless the Shelikof Company was afforded special
privileges the successes gained by the founders of the first settlement on the
islands would be neutralized by the unrestrained actions of lawless
adventurers. Cruelty would increase, and the natives would submit to no such
infliction after the enjoyment of peaceful intercourse with Shelikof. In
conclusion Jacobi implored his imperial mistress to intrust the management of
the latest additions to her domain to a man who “was known to have many times
set aside his love of gain in the interest of humanity.” What Jacobi himself
Avas to receive in case of Shelikof’s success the governor general does not
say. The hundreds who had done more and suffered more than these who would now
have it all to themselves, to them he denied every right or reward.
The
empress ordered the imperial college of commerce, through its president, Count
Chernyshef, to examine in detail all questions connected with the fur-trade in
those parts, and the means of advancing the interests of Russia in the eastern
ocean. The committee appointed in pursuance of this order presented a long
report in March 1788, which seemed to have been wholly impressed with the ideas
of Jacobi. After reviewing the apparent merits of the case and the policy of
the proposed measure, the committee finally recommended that the request of
Shelikof and Golikof for exclusive privileges be granted, and that the
enterprise be subsidized with a loan of two hundred thousand rubles from the
public treasury, without interest, for a period of twenty years, the capital
to be returned in instalments. The outlay, it was added, would likewise be
repaid tenfold in the form of taxes and import and export duties.
In
pursuance of this report an imperial oukaz was issued September 28, 1788,
granting the company exclusive control over the region actually occupied by
them, but no further, thus leaving rival traders free sway in adjoining parts.
Assistance from the public treasury was refused because of foreign wars. The
empress was made to say: “As a reward for services rendered to the country by
the merchants Shelikof and Golikof by discovering unknown countries and
nations, and establishing commerce and industries there, we most graciously
confer upon them both swords and gold medals, the latter to be worn around the
neck, with our portrait on one side, and on the reverse an explanatory
inscription that they have been conferred by order of the governing senate for
services rendered to humanity by their noble and bold deeds.” By the
same oukaz all former laws for the collection of tribute from the Aleuts were
revoked.
While
this was but a half-way measure toward his ambitious schemes Shelikof had to
content himself for a time. He returned to Irtkutsk, there to fit out two
vessels, one for the Aleutian isles, and one for the Kuriles, and to plan for a
more complete victory, by which to become master of all Alaska.
Two
important documents were issued in 1787 by the commander of Okhotsk, which
indicate that the authorities by no means placed implicit faith in the humanity
of the Shelikof Company or its servants. Both papers bear the same date, June
15th; and one is directed to navigators and traders, while the other is
intended as a reassuring proclamation to the native chiefs as representatives
of their people. The first sets forth that in view of many complaints of
ill-treatment of Aleuts having reached Okhotsk, traders and navigators are
enjoined to treat with the utmost kindness all Aleuts who have acknowledged
themselves Russian subjects, and not to carry them away from home without their
free consent. The document concludes as follows: “The highest authorities have
already been informed of all your former outrages committed upon the islanders,
but they must cease henceforth, and you must endeavor to act in conformity
with the wishes of our most gracious empress, who is anxious to give protection
to every inhabitant of her dominions. Do not believe or flatter yourselves
that your former deeds will escape punishment, but be convinced that sooner or
later every transgression of the laws of God or our monarch will meet with its
due reward. I trust that these prescriptions will be observed at once, and you
must not forget that it is the first duty of every faithful Russian subject to
report any transgression of the laws which comes under his observation. To this
I append my own signature and the seals of the province of Okhotsk and of the
district of Nishekamchatsk, this 15th day of June 1787. Grigor Kozlof-Ugrenin,
colonel and commander of the province of Okhotsk.”
The
second document is at once characteristic of the empress and important in
itself. I reproduce it in full in a note.
“To the Chiefs and People inhabiting the Aleutian Islands in the North-eastern
Ocean, subjects of the Russian Empire: The Mother of her country, the great and
wise Empress of the Imperial throne of All the Russias, Ekaterina Alexeievna,
having always at heart the welfare of her faithful subjects, extends her
especial protection and attention to those nations who have but lately become
subjects of the Russian Empire, and has deigned to instruct the present
Governor-general of Irkutsk, Major-general and Cavalier Klichke, to send to our
islands, by way of Kamchatka, and to the Kurile Islands, Russian medals, which
have been forwarded to you. They were sent to you as proof of the motherly care
of the Empress; and it was ordered that these medals should be given to those
islanders who are already under control of the Russian crown, while at the same
time it was intended to issue them also to such as wished to enter the Russian
Empire hereafter. These medals will be distributed at every place where the
Russian trading-vessels can land in safety, and thus they will protect you
against ill-treatment not only by Russian hunters, but at the hand of our
allied powers who may visit your shores. From the latter you may feel entirely
safe, for even if any foreign vessel should attempt to appropriate your islands
to its own country, the sight of these medals of the Russian Empire would
disperse all such thoughts, and if any disputes should arise they will be
settled by friendly negotiations with these powers. As far as the Russian
vessels are concerned that visit your islands for the purpose of trade and
hunting the fur-bearing animals, I have already received through the hands of
my officials at Kamchatka and Okhotsk several complaints, the first through
Sergeant Alexei Buynof, the second from the son of the chief of the Andreianof
Islands, Izossim Polutof, and the third from the Aleut of the Lissievski
Islands, Toukoutan Ayougnin; from which complaints I have learned to my sorrow
of the inhumanities inflicted upon you by our Russian trading-ships, of which
the government up to this time had received no information; it was thought that
no actual violation of the laws had taken place in those distant regions. But
now your petitions have been forwarded by me to the highest authorities and I
trust that you will before long receive full satisfaction. In the mean time I
ask you to be content and not to doubt the kindness and justice of the great
Empress of All the Russias who is sure to defend and protect you, knowing your
sincere submission to her sceptre. You must show this order to all Russian vessels
that visit you and it will protect you in so far that every inhabitant of your
islands may remain in his village, and cannot be compelled to go to any other
island unknown to him. But if one of you goes abroad with his free consent, he
will be provided with food and clothing until the time of his return, and the
food shall be such as he has been accustomed to. If you believe that you have
been ill-treated by any people belonging to the Russian Empire, or if you have
suffered compulsion or injury at their hands, I advise you to take notice of
their name and that of their ship, and what company of merchants they belong
to, and in due time you can forward your complaints upon the matter, and upon satisfactory
proof such men will be punished according to their offences and you will get
satisfaction. Information has also reached me to the effect that the hunters
receive from you furs of good quality as tribute, but change them and forward
poor skins to the Empress; therefore I advise you to mark such skins with
special signs and tokens, making cuts or brands which cannot be easily changed,
and if it is done in spite of these precautions the offenders will be punished
very severely. Furthermore I assure you of the continued protection and care
of all the inhabitants of your islands by her most gracious Imperial Majesty
and her supreme government, as well as of the best wishes of the Commander of
the Province of Okhotsk and the district and township of Nishnekamtchatsk.
Signed the 15th day of June 1787, by Grigor Kozlof-Ugrenin.’
Three
copies still extant of the original document bear the following signatures:
‘Have read the original. Master Gavril Pribylof.’ ‘Have read the copy. Master
Potap Zaikof.’ ‘Have read the copy. Foreman Leontiy Nagaief.’
When
Kozlof-Ugrenin issued his two manifestoes he had not met La Pérouse and the
other officers of the French north-western expedition, for the Boussole and Astrolabe did not reach the bay of Avatcha until September, 1787. La
Pérouse and M. de Lesseps, his Russian interpreter, testily to the excellent
character of Ugrenin, who appears to have been actuated by a sincere desire to
improve the condition of all the inhabitants, Russians and savages, of the vast
province under his command. At that time the government of that region was
organized as follows: Since Cook’s visit to Kamchatka the country had been
attached to the province of Okhotsk, under one governor, Colonel
Kozlof-Ugrenin; under him Captain Shmalef was superintendent of the native
Kamchatkans; Lieutenant Kaborof commanded at Petropavlovsk, with one sergeant
and 40 Cossacks; at Nishnekamtchatsk there was a Major Eleonof, while at
Bolsherctzk and Verklmeikamchatsk only sergeants were in command. The income
derived from Kamchatka by the government was out of all proportion to the
expenditure involved. In 1787 the tribute collected from the natives amounted
to 300 sable-skins, 200 gray and red foxes, and a few sea-otters, while nearly
400 soldiers and many officers were maintained in the country.
The
new order of things established by Kozlof did not cause any immediate change in
the demeanor of the Russian promyshleniki, and it is doubtful whether the
humane document addressed to the natives was ever read or translated to one of
them. According to the testimony of Sarychef and Sauer, matters had not
improved much when they visited the country several years later. Yet upon the
few individuals who were then planning for a monopoly of the fur-trade in the
Russian possessions on the American coast, the hints contained in the documents
quoted were not lost. They recognized the fact that such boons as they craved
from the government could be obtained only by the adoption of a policy of humanity
and obedience to the laws, wholly different from the ruthless transactions of
private traders. Shelikof, the shrewdest of all the plotters, had, as we have
shown, originated this policy, and he lived long enough to see that so far as
his plans were concerned it worked to perfection. Ilis instructions to
Samoilof, to whom he left the command of his colony on returning to Okhotsk,
were admirably calculated to impress the reader with a sense of the wisdom,
humanity, and disinterestedness of the writer, ordering as they did the good
treatment of the natives, their instruction in Russian laws, customs, and
religion, the establishment of schools for the young, and the promotion of
discipline and morality among the Russians as an example to the aborigines.
Much of this was intended chiefly for the sake of effect, since the company
by no means intended to expend any particular efforts for the advancement of
the natives. The secret instructions to the same agent, though mainly verbal,
contained clauses which indicated how far philanthropy was supposed to further
the predominant aim, the advancement of the company. For a time rival traders
must be tolerated, but as soon as sufficient strength was acquired they should
be excluded from the districts occupied by the Shelikof men.
Limited
as were the plans with regard to actual execution, Samoilof lacked the
qualifications to carry them out, or to grasp the real object of their framer,
and Shelikof knew it. As soon as he returned from Kadiak, therefore, he began
to look about for a proper person, and his choice fell on Alexander Baranof, a
merchant then engaged in trade on the Anadir River. Shelikof’s first proposals
to Baranof were declined principally because his own business was moderately
prosperous and he preferred independence. One of the partners of the company,
Eustrate Delarof, a Greek, was then selected to manage affairs in the colony,
but his powers were more local and confined than those Shelikof had intended to
confer upon Baranof. Delarof’s administration at Kadiak won him the good-will
of all under his command, both Russians and natives, and he received well
merited praise from all visitors, Spanish, English, and Russian. In all
reports concerning Delarof, prominence is given to his justice to all, and his
kindness to the natives; but just and amiable men are not usually of the kind
chosen to manage a monopoly. In this instance Delarof was too lenient to suit
his avaricious and unscrupulous partners. Shelikof never lost sight of Baranof,
and when the treacherous Chukchi with whom he was trading robbed him of his
goods and reduced him to poverty, it did not require much persuasion to induce
him to enter the service of the Shelikof Company at a compensation of ten
shares, equivalent to about one sixth of the net proceeds. A mutual agreement
was drawn up between the company and Baranof on the 18th of August 1790, and the instructions already issued to Samoilof and Delarof were in the main
confirmed. Operations must be extended also along the coast southward, and
steps might be taken to obtain supplies from other quarters besides Siberia.
Alexandr
Andreïevich Baranof was born in Kargopol, eastern Russia, in 1747. At an early
age he went to Moscow, and was engaged as clerk in retail shops until he
established himself in business in 1771. Not meeting with success he emigrated
to Siberia in 1780, and undertook the management of a glass factory at Irkutsk.
He also interested himself in other industries, and on account of several communications
to the Civil Economical Society on the subject of manufactures he was in 1789
elected a member of the society. It was a humdrum life of which he soon tired,
and after acquainting himself with the resources and possibilities of the
country, he set out eastward with an assortment of goods and liquors which he
sold to the savages of Kamchatka and the adjoining country. At first his
operations were successful, but when in 1789 two of his caravans were captured
by Chukchi he found himself bankrupt, and yielded to Shelikof’s importunate
offers to go to America. He had a wife and children at his home in Kargopol,
Russia, but during his subsequent residence of almost thirty years in the
colonies he never saw his family again though he provided amply for them.
Alexander
Baranof was no ordinary man, and never throughout his whole career did Shelikof
display clearer discrimination and foresight than in the selection of this
agent. He was a man of broad experience, liberal-minded and energetic, politic
enough to please at once the government and the company, not sufficiently just
or humane to interfere with the interests of the company, yet having care
enough, at what he decreed the proper time, for the conventionalities of the
world to avoid bringing discredit on himself or his office. Notwithstanding
what certain Russian priests and English navigators have said, he was not the
lazy, licentious sot they would have us believe. That he was not burdened with
religion, was loose in morals, sometimes drunk, and would lie officially
without scruple, there is no doubt; yet in all this he was conspicuous over his
accusers in that his indulgences were periodical rather than continuous, and
not carried on under veil of that conventional grace and gravity which cover a
multitude of sins.
He
was frequently seized with fits of melancholy, due partly to uncongenial
surroundings, and would at other times break out in passionate rage, during
which even women were not safe from his blows. This exhibition, however, was
invariably followed by contrite generosity, displayed in presents to the sufferers
and in a banquet or convivial drinking bout with singing and merriment, so that
his fits came to be welcomed as forerunners to good things. His hospitality
was also extended to foreigners, though with them he observed prudent
reticence. The poor could always rely upon his aid, and this benevolence was
coupled with an integrity and disinterestedness at least far above the usual
standard among his associates.
Compare
him with Grigor Shelikof, who certainly did not lack broad vision and activity,
and Baranof was the abler man. Both belonged to the shrewd yet uncultured and
somewhat coarse class which then formed the main element even among the rich
men in Siberia. In vital deeds Baranof the agent rises superior to Shelikof the
principal, belongs more to history, as one who in executing difficult plans
shows himself often a greater man than he who conceived them. Indeed, if for
the next two or three decades Baranof, his acts and his influence, were absent,
Russian American history for that period would be but a blank. Among all those
who came from Russia, he alone was able to stem the tide of encroachment by
roving traders from the United States and Great Britain. He was any day, drunk
or sober, a match for the navigator who came to spy out his secrets.
As
for the natives his influence over them was unbounded, chiefly through the
respect with which his indomitable courage and constant presence of mind
impressed them. And yet the savage who came perhaps from afar expressly to
behold the famed leader, was not a little disappointed in his insignificant
appearance as compared with his fierce and bushy bearded associates. Below the
medium height, thin and sallow of complexion, with scanty red-tinged flaxen
hair fringing a bald crown, he seemed but an imp among giants. The later habit
of wearing a short black wig tied to his head with a black handkerchief, added
to his grotesque appearance.
On
the 10th of August 1790, Baranof sailed from Okhotsk on the ship Trekh
Sviatiteli, commanded by Master Bocharof, who was then considered the most
skilful navigator in those waters. When only a few days from port it was
discovered that the water-casks were leaking. The ship’s company was placed on
short allowance, but disease made its appearance, and it was thought impossible
to sail direct to the settlement at Kadiak as had been the intention. On the
28th of September the vessel was turned into the bay of Koshigin, Unalaska, to
obtain a supply of fresh water, but on the 30th, when about to leave again, a
storm threw the ship upon the rocky shore. The men escaped with belongings, but
only a small part of the cargo was saved. Within five days the wreck broke in
pieces, and a messenger was sent to Kadiak to report the loss, but failed to
reach that place.
Thrown
upon his own resources, Baranof distributed his men, fifty-two in number, over
the island to shoot seals and sea-lions and dig edible roots, the only food the
island afforded during the winter. The leader labored with the men and lived
with them in the underground huts which they constructed. The dried salmon and
halibut obtained occasionally from the Aleuts were a luxury, and on holidays a
soup was made of rye flour of which a small quantity had been saved. The winter
was not wholly lost to Baranof, who seized this opportunity to study the
people, both Russians and natives, with whom he had thrown his lot for so many
years to come, and whom he was to rule without a shadow of actual or apparent
support from the government. It was here that he formed plans which were
afterward of great service to the company.
Spring
coming, three large bidars were made in which to push on to Kadiak, with two of
which Bocharof was to explore and hunt along the northern coast of the Alaska
peninsula. Twenty-six men were assigned to this expedition while Baranof took a
crew of sixteen in the third boat, leaving five at Unalaska to guard what had
been saved from the cargo and rigging of the wrecked ship. Toward the end of
April 1791 the three bidars put to sea, and on the 10th of May they separated in Issanakh Strait,
at the southern end of the peninsula. After an absence of five months Bocharof
rejoined his comrades at Kadiak by a portage route across the peninsula,
bringing not only furs but a number of good charts. During his whole journey
Baranof was prostrate with fever; nevertheless he insisted that the party
should not only advance but explore, being unwilling to lose the calm weather
so essential for a safe passage from island to island or from cape to cape
along the coast of the mainland. He arrived at Three Saints, Kadiak, the 27th
of June.
Baranof
at once assumed command of all the establishments of the Shelikof-Golikof
Company, relieving Eustrate Delarof. At this time the company was in actual
possession of Kadiak and a few of the smaller adjacent isles; the principal
settlement being still at the bay of Three Saints. The superficial pacification
of the natives by Shelikof had been completed by Delarof so far as Kadiak and
vicinity were concerned, though they remained in their primitive condition. The
opinion of all but Delarof was that they could be held in subjection only by
force of arms or fear, and that upon the first sign of weakness or relaxation
of vigilance on the part of the Russians they would rise and destroy them. As
much system had been secured as lay in the power of one right-minded,
intelligent man, surrounded by an unruly band of individuals but little if any
above the criminal class. I have said of Delarof that he was strict in his
sense of justice and of fair administrative ability. The contemplation of this
amiable Greek’s character affords a pleasant relief from the ordinary conduct
of the Russians in America. Had there been more such men, I should have less to
record of outrage, cruelty, and criminal neglect; had Delarof been bad enough
to please his directors Baranof might have remained at home.
From
his head-quarters at Kadiak, Delarof had despatched expeditions to the
mainland, at the entrance of Cook Inlet, or the gulf of Kenai, as the Russians
always persisted in calling it, and there he had established a permanent
station which he named Alexandrovsk. Otherwise the whole of this inlet was occupied
by Lebedef-Lastochkin, who also held the islands discovered by Pribylof. The
people of the Alaska peninsula had not yet permitted any Russians to settle
among them, and were held to be hostile. The adjoining Prince William Sound
was also occupied, and on the Aleutian isles three private trading companies
were still doing business, under the management of Orekof, Panof, and Kisselef
respectively.
Thus
on every side rival establishments and traders were draining the country of the
valuable staple upon which rested the very existence of the scheme of
colonization. To the east and north there were Russians, but to the south-east
the ships of Englishmen, Americans, and Frenchmen were already traversing the
tortuous channels of the Alexander archipelago, reaping rich harvests of
sea-otter skins, in the very region where Baranof had decided to extend Russian
dominion in connection with company sway. Although they could not expect to
succeed so well further north, here these traders had every advantage. They
enjoyed comparatively easy communication with home points; they were skilled
navigators, and came in large well equipped vessels laden with goods far
superior to anything the Russians could afford to bring by sled or on the backs
of horses across Siberia. They could also be more lavish with their low-priced
articles since they were under no expense in maintaining permanent forts or
establishments or a large retinue of servants. As occasional visitors only,
without permanent interests in the land, they could deal out fire-water, risk
occasional cheatings and open acts of violence, while Baranof, with his few men
of permanent residence, among warlike tribes, must be constantly on his guard
against acts provocative of hostilities.
It
was necessary that he should bestir himself to widen the operations of the
company ere the field was exhausted, and this had been his determination, but
he did not' as yet possess the necessary vessels, men, and supplies to do much.
The loss of the Trekh Sviatiteli was indeed a formidable hindrance; skin
boats alone could well be used, and to these the men had more than one
objection, the risks of sea voyages, and the disadvantages in point of defence,
carrying capacity, and convenience. These objections were the more serious in
view of the greater stubbornness and hostility of the mainland tribes as
compared with the docile Aleuts. Another trouble was that for several years no
supply-ships had arrived from Siberia, and the Russian hunters and laborers were
reduced to the necessity of sharing the scanty subsistence of the natives.
Dissatisfaction was therefore general among the employes, including the natives,
and this together with the sight of want among the conquering race served to
rouse the insolence and hostility of tribes around.
Some
of these troubles Baranof managed to overcome by his own energy and strength
of will; for others he must obtain the cooperation of the company. Among other
measures he urged Shelikof most eloquently to labor for a consolidation of the
various trading companies, and thereby to secure to the new corporation the
large number of valuable sea otter skins then scattered throughout the small
rival establishments of the mainland. At the same time he approved of a
suggestion made before his departure to build ships in America, and urged that
no delay be allowed in forwarding material to him from Kamchatka. He saw the
advantage to the company of exhibiting vessels built in their colony and the
necessity of making himself independent of the vessels forwarded at long and
irregular intervals from the Asiatic ports. This would ensure not only supplies
but the means of cruising down the coast.
Without
having seen or met any of the English or American traders then operating in the
Sitka region he conceived the plan of obtaining from them not only provisions
but trading goods, and asked Shelikof for authority to do so; he knew that in
the Pribylof Islands, then recently discovered, he had a treasury from which he
might draw the means to purchase whatever he wanted of the foreign traders, and
that he would thus be enabled to buy from them with one class of furs the means
of battling with them on their own ground for the purchase of sea-otter skins,
then the most valuable fur in the market. This plan of operation, though
temporarily delayed, was finally adopted and successfully carried out under
Baranof’s supervision.
Knowing
that his letters in some form would fall under the eye of the government,
Baranof worded his communications with great care, and with respect to the well
seeming plan to introduce missionaries he wrote to the directors of the
company: “Send me a well informed priest, one who is of a peaceable disposition,
not superstitious, and no hypocrite.” With the same view of impressing upon the
authorities the humane disposition of the company’s traders, he requested
Shelikof to' send him numerous articles not included in the invoices of the
firm, but suitable as gifts to the natives, at the same time explaining that he
wished to conquer the savages with kindness. He asked to have the articles
purchased and forwarded at his own expense so that “should he give them all
away, the company would suffer, no loss, while, on the other hand, any profit
made on the consignment should be transferred to the firm.”
During
the autumn and winter of 1791 Baran of made himself thoroughly acquainted with
the wants and capabilities of his new domain under the intelligent guidance
and instruction of Delarof, who returned to Okhotsk in 1792, and at the same
time severed his connection with colonial matters. The latter took passage in
the ship Sv Mikhail, which had been in the colonies ever since
Shelikof’s first arrival, taking with him Bocharof as navigator, many of the
promyshleniki whose term of contract had expired, and all the furs collected by
him during his administration.
The
new manager soon recognized the desirability of removing the principal
settlement of the company from Three Saints to Pavlovsk harbor, on the north
side of Kadiak, in latitude 57° 36' according to Captain
Lissianski’s observations. The reasons lay partly in the better harbor, and
chiefly in the abundance of forests at the latter place, facilitating the
erection of necessary buildings and fortifications.
In
the spring of 1792, however, Baranof was gratified by the appearance of a
chief from the northern side of the peninsula, whom Bocharof, during his voyage
of exploration the preceding year, had presented with a medal bearing the
Russian coat of arms. The savage dignitary, who was at the head of one of the
most populous tribes of the peninsula, brought with him quite a large
following, including six hostages. He assured Baranof that his people desired
to live in friendship with the Russians. In return he asked the latter to
protect him against certain tribes living farther north in the interior of the
country. As a proof of his sincerity, the chief offered to locate himself and
all his family in the immediate vicinity of one of the company’s establishments.
The proposition was evidently the result of fear of his neighbors rather than
good feeling toward the Russians, nevertheless it was cheerfully accepted as
the first indication of the possibility of a better understanding with the
independent natives of the peninsula. An alliance of this kind was especially
desirable on account of the importance at that time placed on the possession
of the portage across the narrow neck of land separating the waters of Iliamna
Lake from the Koiychak River, and with Russians so few in number and scattered
over so broad a region, peaceable relations were essential.
Advantage
was at once taken of the proposal to extend operations in this quarter, and
other expeditions were also despatched, one under Ismaïlof in the only large
vessel left to them, the Sv Simeon, chiefly for seeking new fields.
Baranof himself proceeded to the gulf of Chugatschuik, Prince William Sound,
with two well manned bidars in order to become acquainted with the inhabitants
of that, region: Dreading the Russians
and a possible state of dependence, the forbidding Chugatsches concealed
themselves from Baranof at every point. At last he succeeded in
meeting a few of the tribes, and obtained from them seven hostages. Hereabout
he fell in with the ship Phoenix, Captain Moore, from the East Indies, and
obtained information on foreign traffic in the Alexander archipelago, which
served him greatly in forming plans for future operations. He conceived quite a
friendship for the commander, from whom he received as a ‘present’ a native of
Bengal.
Soon
after his meeting with Moore, Baranof proceeded to Nuchek Island, near the
mouth of Copper River, and encamped within a short distance of the cove where
subsequently the Konstantinovsk redoubt was built. Finding the supply of fish
limited, he concluded to send a bidar manned by Russians and a part of the
Aleut hunters to Sukli (Montagu) Island in search of better fishing-grounds,
capable of furnishing a winter’s supply for his party. On the 20th of June
this expedition set out, and Baranof remained on Nuchek Island with only
sixteen Russians. He had heard rumors of hostile intentions on the part of the
savages, but placed little faith in them. To avoid unnecessary risks, however,
he intended to remove his little force to a small island in the bay, on the day
following the departure of his exploring party. In the middle of the night,
which was very dark and stormy, the sentries gave the alarm. Five of the
sixteen men had been placed on guard, but the darkness was so dense that a
numerous body of armed natives had advanced to within ten paces of the
encampment without being seen. In a moment the Russians had seized their arms
and were firing on the savages. According to Baranof their fire was for a long
time without any visible effect, owing to the wooden armor and shields and
helmets of the savages, which were of sufficient thickness to stop a bullet
fired at some distance. The movements of the enemy seemed to be guided by one
commander, and by shouting to each other they preserved unity of action in the
darkness. Their flint and copper-headed arrows and spears fell thick and fast,
wounding several of the Russians and many of the Aleuts, several of them
fatally. The latter did not even make a show of resistance, but seemed
possessed of the one idea of escaping by water in their bidarkas. As the
assailants had several large war-canoes not many of these attempts were successful.
One small cannon, a one-and-a-half-pounder falconet, was at last brought into
position, and did some execution, at the same time encouraging the Aleuts to
rally around the Russians in their encampment. Fortunately Ismaïlof’s vessel
happened to be at anchor not far off, and a few of those who fled in their
canoes at the beginning of the affray, had in the mean time reached it, and
obtained a bidar full of armed men for the relief of Baranof. The appearance of
this boat caused six large wooden war-canoes to beat a hasty retreat. One
explanation, though not very plausible, of this unexpected attack was that the
Yakutat tribe of Kaljushes had combined with the Aglegmutes to avenge
themselves for injuries received at the hands of the Chugatsches during the
preceding year. Knowing that the Sv Simeon was anchored four versts
away, and ignorant of Baranof’s presence, they had mistaken the Russian
encampment for a Chugatsch village and attacked it in the. dark. When the
mistake was discovered, the savages were induced to persevere in their efforts
by hopes of rich booty, only to pay dearly for the attempt and to
retreat deeply demoralized.
This
affair caused Baranof to change his plans. Instead of wintering in Prince
William Sound as had been his intention, he turned to the gulf of Kenai by the
shortest route. He strengthened his outlying stations there and hastened the
work of fortification and then proceeded to Kadiak. On his arrival at Pavlovsk
harbor, he found that the ship Orel, that is Eagle, had arrived from Okhotsk,
commanded by the Englishman Shields, and laden partly with material for new
ships, though by no means of the description most essential for opening
operations. Although despatched in the autumn of 1791, vessels had been
compelled to winter in Kamchatka. Shields had learned the art of ship-building
in England, but had subsequently entered the Russian military service and obtained
the rank of sub-lieutenant.
At
the same time came orders to proceed at once with ship-building. This placed
Baranof in an embarrassing position, for he had not yet completed the transfer
of the principal settlement from Three Saints to Pavlovsk harbor and there was
urgent necessity to erect at once a number of buildings at the latter place, to
shelter both men and stores during the winter. He was, however, determined to
obey, and while pushing the work at Pavlovsk as much as possible, he lost no
time in selecting a suitable place for ship-building. On Kadiak and Afognak
islands the trees were neither abundant nor large enough, and it was found
necessary to look to some more distant region. During his recent stay in
Prinee William Sound he had observed to the west of it a well protected bay,
which seemed in every way suitable for his undertaking. The place was called
Voskressenski, or Sunday harbor, also known as Blying Sound, and not only
furnished excellent timber, but a considerable rise and fall of the tide
afforded exceptional facilities for building, launching, and repairing
vessels. Shelikof’s orders had been to send Shields back to Okhotsk after
consulting him concerning the work on hand, but Baranof found it necessary to
detain him in order to obtain serviceable plans for his vessel. He wrote to
Shelikof that his complement of men capable of doing any work on the vessel was
so exceedingly small that he could not afford to send away his most valuable
assistant, but would retain him during that and the following season, hoping in
the mean time to receive further shipments of stores and material.
The
necessary buildings, quarters for the men, and storehouses were at once erected
at Voskressenski harbor, and all that winter the mountains of Kenaï
peninsula echoed the vigorous blows of axe-men and the crash of falling trees.
Nearly all the planks were hewn out of the whole log, a waste of time and material
made necessary by the absence of large saws. The iron needed in the
construction had been collected from pieces of wreck in all parts of the
colonies, and though rust-eaten and of poor quality, it was made to serve.
Steel for axes had to be prepared from the same material. In his anxiety to
push the work Baranof even attempted to extract iron from some ore his men had
picked up. He had seen iron-furnaces during his life in Siberia, but found
himself unable to obtain the coveted metal by any such rude processes as he
could devise. For tar he devised a poor mixture of spruce gum and oil. The
English ship-builder regarded with wonder and contempt the primitive dockyard,
and without a purveyor possessed of the indomitable determination and activity
of Baranof, he could never have earned the reputation of constructing the
first ship on the north-westernmost coast of America.
To
obtain provisions was difficult. The men could not be allowed to hunt or fish,
and no other station was prepared to furnish supplies. Heavy requisitions were
made upon the yukola, or dried fish, of the natives, entailing want and
hardships upon them, while the ship-builders were reduced to the scantiest
allowance to sustain them in their arduous task.
The
lack of canvas was another serious inconvenience. Without a proper suit of
sails the first American ship could never reach the coast of Siberia or
Kamchatka and impress the authorities with the reality of all the Shelikof
Company claimed to have done in the way of improvements and industrial enterprise
in the colonies. It is astonishing to what expense and infinite trouble the
company was willing to go for the sole purpose of effect. A far better ship
could have been built without any serious difficulty and at much less cost
either in Kamchatka or at Okhotsk. The problem of supplying the necessary canvas
was made more difficult by the circumstance that the native hunters, who had
until then been paid for their season’s work with a few beads and glass corals,
refused to accept that currency any longer, and almost unanimously demanded to
be paid in garments made of canvas.
April
1793 saw the new craft far enough advanced to make Shields’ constant
superintendence unnecessary. Baranof, who had no great liking for the foreigner,
seized the opportunity of giving him additional work by ordering him upon a
voyage of discovery in the Orel. Rumors of the existence of unknown islands,
rich in seals and sea-otters, in various parts of the new possessions had been
afloat for some time. Baranof never expressed any belief in these reports, but
in order to get Shields and his four English sailors out of the way for the
summer, he promised the former two shares of the furs obtained from any island
discovered by him, for two years, and to the sailors twenty seaotters each.
With grim, satisfaction the crafty old manager noted the fact that the premiums
offered were never earned, and that the Orel was tossed about by storms and
finally reached Voskressenski harbor in a much damaged condition. In the mean
time the Sv Simeon had arrived with more laborers, provisions, and
tools, and work was resumed with renewed vigor.
At
last in August 1794 the great work was achieved as the first vessel built in
north-western America glided from the stocks into the waters of the Pacific,
under the name of Phoenix. While not so important or difficult a
performance as those of Vasco Nuñez and Cortés, it was one of which Baranof
might justly feel proud. He had made the first practical use of the timber of
what was then termed “the vast deserts of America,” and had used it for a
purpose that might be expected to benefit not only his employers, but his
country.
Most
of the men who assisted Shields had seen only the nondescript vessels of
Siberian traders, many of them half decked, and built usually without an iron
bolt or brace, the planks being lashed together with raw-hide thongs. The
present result was therefore all the more gratifying, crude as it was. The
vessel was built of spruce timber, and measured 73 feet in length, the upper
deck being 79 feet, with a beam of 23 feet and a depth of 13 feet.
Notwithstanding the size, the capacity being only about one hundred tons, it
was provided with two decks and three masts, in order to present an imposing
appearance and do credit to its projectors. The calking above the water-line
was done with moss; and for paint, tar and whale-oil were used. The sails
consisted of pieces and scraps of canvas for which the warehouses and magazines
of the company in Kamchatka and in the colonies had been ransacked. The result
was a number of sheets of different qualities and color, presenting the most
grotesque appearance.
By
the 4th of September the Phoenix was despatched upon her first voyage to
Kadiak, where Baran of hoped to improve upon the outfit. On the way the flimsy
rigging snapped before the first breeze, and the vessel entered Pavlovsk not
with swelling sails, but towed by boats. She was also badly ballasted, and
presented on the whole an appearance far from imposing. Nevertheless joy
reigned in the settlement, and the event was celebrated by solemn mass and
merry feasting.
A
few weeks were spent in refitting and rigging the Phoenix, and on the
20th day of April this firstborn of the Alaskan forests set out upon the
voyage to the shores of Asia, commanded by Shields, the builder. The voyage was
made in about a month, a speed unprecedented in the annals of Russian navigation
in the north Pacific. At Okhotsk the Phoenix was received with volleys
of artillery, the ringing of bells, and the celebration of mass. The ghost of
the great Peter is gratified; for in the flesh the monarch never dreamed of so
early and so significant an achievement resulting from the royal pupilage.
All
the servants of the Shelikof Company then awaiting transportation from this
port, and the soldiers stationed at the ostrog were at once called into requisition
to assist in finishing Baranof’s wonderful three master. She had made her first
voyage without cabin or deck houses, and these were now added, together with
the necessary polishing and painting, and new sails and rigging. From this time
forth until her loss during a dark stormy November night, in the gulf of
Alaska, the Phoenix made regular trips between Okhotsk and the colonies.
Shelikof and his partners did not fail to dwell forcibly and pointedly in their
petitions and reports upon the fact that their company maintained
communication between the colonies and the mother country by means of a
“frigate” of their own construction, built with American timber and launched in
American waters.
This
success Baranof followed up by laying the keels of two other vessels, of
smaller size, forty and thirty-five feet in length respectively, which were
launched in 1795, and named Delphin and Olga.
CHAPTER XV.STRIFE BETWEEN RIVAL COMPANIES. 1791-1794. |