READING HALL "THE DOORS OF WISDOM" 2024 |
CREATION OF THE UNIVERSE ACCORDING GENESIS |
HISTORY
OF ALASKA.
CHAPTER XXV.
CLOSE OF BARANOF’S ADMINISTRATION.
1819-1821.
In 1815 an expedition to Alaska was fitted out by the
imperial government in conjunction with the Russian American Company, and
Hagemeister, whose voyage in the Neva has been mentioned, was placed in
command. A vessel, renamed the Kutusof was purchased
at Havre for £6,000 sterling, and in July of the following year was ready for
sea, when Lozaref returned to Kronstadt in the Suvarof. On his arrival, the directors resolved to
delay the departure of the expedition until after the decision of the naval
court of inquiry, held to investigate the charges made against him by the chief
manager. When the judgment was made known, the directors added to Hagemeister’s
instructions a clause authorizing him to assume control in place of Baranof, if
he should find it necessary.
The Suvarof arrived
at Novo Arkhangelsk on the 23d of July, and her consort, the Kutusof, on the 20th of November, 1817. Both vessels
had been detained at Lima, whence the former had sailed direct for Alaska,
while the latter visited other Peruvian ports, and also Bodega and San
Francisco, where large quantities of provisions were purchased. For these
supplies Baranof expressed his thanks, but complained bitterly of the company’s
refusal to listen to his renewed request to be relieved, declaring most
emphatically that he was no longer able to bear the burden of his
responsibility. Hagemeister meanwhile did not choose to reveal the extent of
the powers conferred on him, but began at once quietly to investigate the state
of affairs in the colonies and the exact status of the company’s business.
During the whole winter he kept his orders concealed from Baranof, who, though
almost prostrated with disease, labored assiduously in surrendering the affairs
of the company. He was now failing in mind as well as in bodily health, one of
the symptoms of his approaching imbecility being his sudden attachment to the
church. He kept constantly about him the priest who had established the first
church at Novo Arkhangelsk during the preceding summer, and urged by his
spiritual adviser, made large donations for religious purposes.
Hagemeister was impressed with the great responsibilities
that awaited him, and hesitated long before consenting to assume the burden. At
last he saw a way out of the difficulty. Yanovsky, the first lieutenant of the Suvarof had become enamored of Baranof’s daughter,
the offspring of a connection with a native woman, and had obtained his consent
to become his son-in-law. Hagemeister’s consent was also necessary, and this
was granted on condition that Yanovsky should remain at Novo Arkhangelsk for
two years and represent him as chief manager.
At last, on the 11th of January, 1818, Hagemeister
suddenly laid before Baranof his orders, and three days later despatched the Suvarof to
St Petersburg with a report of his proceedings. This surprise prostrated the
deposed autocrat. The fulfilment of his long-cherished desire came upon him too
suddenly. He could not in reason have expected a successor until the next ship
arrived from St Petersburg. Whatever may have been Hagemeister’s motive, the
effect certainly was to shorten the days of Baranof, who deserved more
consideration. After displaying his instructions, the former at once gave a
peremptory order that all the books and property should be immediately
delivered to the company’s commissioner, Khlebnikof.
Making a supreme effort, Baranof rose from his bed on the day of the Suvarof’s
departure and began the transfer of the company’s effects, a task which was not
completed for several months. The property at Novo Arkhangelsk alone was
estimated by Khlebnikof at two and a half millions of roubles. In addition to two hundred thousand roubles’ worth of furs shipped on the Suvarof,
there still remained in the storehouses skins to the value of nine hundred
thousand roubles. The buildings were all in excellent
condition, as were the sea-going vessels. In all the complicated accounts of
this vast business, Khlebnikof failed to find a
single discrepancy. The cash accounts, involving millions, were in perfect
order; in the item of strong liquors there was a small quantity not accounted
for, but this had been caused by the hospitalities extended to naval officers
and other visitors. Among the many who had been with him for long years,
Baranof knew no one to whom he could intrust the
irksome duty which now fell to his lot, but labored from morning to night,
overcoming his weakness with stimulants. At length the task was finished, and
in September 1818 he delivered a full statement of the company’s affairs to his
son-in-law. “I recommend to your special care,” he said, “the people who have
learned to love me, and who under judicious treatment will be just as well
disposed toward those who shall watch over them in the future.”
Nearly forty years had now elapsed since Baranof had
left his native land; nearly thirty since he had first landed at Kadiak. He was
ill requited for his long and faithful service. To him was due, more than to
all others, the success of the Russian colonies in America; by him they had
been founded and fostered, and but for him they would never have been
established, or would have had, at best, a brief and troubled existence. Here,
amid these wintry solitudes, he had raised towns and villages, built a fleet of
sea-going ships, and laid a basis of trade with American and Asiatic ports. All
this he had accomplished while paying regular dividends to shareholders; and
now in his old age he was cast adrift and called to render an account as an
unfaithful steward. He was already in his seventy-second year. Where should he
betake him during the brief span of life that yet remained?
Bitter as was the humiliation which Baranof suffered,
he could not at once tear himself away from the land which he loved so well. He
resolved first to pay a visit to Kadiak, meet once more the tried friends and
servants who were yet living there, and take a last glance at the settlements,
where first he had planted his country’s flag. He would then bid good-by to
all, and join his brother at Izhiga, in Kamchatka,
the only one of his kin that now survived. Finally, his old acquaintance,
Captain V. M. Golovnin, who about this time had
returned to Novo Arkhangelsk, urged him to return to Russia, where he could
still be of great service to the company by giving advice to the managers on
colonial affairs. The prospect of continued usefulness and perhaps the hope of
receiving reward for past services, then much needed by the ex-manager, decided
him to accept this advice. The period of general leave-taking preceding his
departure was a severe ordeal. He was frequently found in tears, and the
symptoms of disease increased as he was submitted again and again to the trial
of bidding farewell to the men 'with whom he had been intimately associated for
more than a generation, and to the children who had learned to love him from
their infancy.
At length, on the 27th of November, 1818, he embarked
on the Kutusof, and as the vessel entered the
waters of the sound, he gazed for the last time on the settlement which was
entirely of his own creation. After touching at Umata,
the vessel arrived on the 7th of March at Batavia, where she was detained for
thirty-six days. No more unfortunate choice could have been made for so
prolonged a visit than amidst the pestilential climate of that Dutch colony.
Tired of the confinement of his cabin, the ex-manager insisted upon living on
shore, spending his whole time in the hostelry just outside the settlement;
thence he was carried almost lifeless on board the ship, which now put to sea;
on the 16th of April, 1819, he breathed his last; on the following day his obsequies
were performed, and in the strait of Sunda the waters of the Indian Ocean
closed over the remains of Alexandr Andreievich Baranof.
With all his faults, and they were neither few nor
small, it must be admitted that in many respects Baranof had no equal among his
successors. “I saw him in his seventieth year,” writes his biographer, Khlebnikof, “ and even then life and energy sparkled in his
eye... He never knew what avarice was, and never hoarded riches. He did not
wait until his death to make provision for the living, and gave freely to all
who had any claims upon him. Some said that he had large deposits in foreign
banks, but no proof of this was to be found when he died. He always lived on
his means, and never drew his balance from the company while he was in their
service. From Shelikof he had received ten shares, and by the Shelikof Company
he was allowed twenty shares more. Of these he gave away a considerable portion
to his fellow-laborers Banner and Kuskof, who were
rather poorly paid. There are not a few now living in the colonies whom he
helped out of difficulty, and many a remittance he sent to Russia to the
relatives of persons who had died, or were by misfortune prevented from
supporting those dependent upon them. An example of this occurred in the case
of Mr Koch, who was sent out to relieve him but died
on the way. He had assisted him formerly both with money and influence, and
after his death sent large remittances to his family.”
One of the officers of the sloop-of-war Kamchatka, in
which vessel Golovnin arrived at Novo Arkhangelsk, a
short time before Baranof s departure, thus relates his impressions: “We had just
cast anchor in port, and were sitting down to dinner when Baranof was
announced. The life and actions of this extraordinary man had excited in me a
great curiosity to see him. He is much below medium height. His face is covered
with wrinkles, and he is perfectly bald; but for all that he looks younger than
his years, considering his hard and troubled life. The next day we were invited
to dine with him. After dinner singers were introduced, who, to please the late
manager, spared neither their own lungs nor our ears. When they sang his
favorite song, ‘The spirit of Russian hunters devised’ he stood in their midst
and rehearsed with them their common deeds in the New World. I must add here a
word as to his mode of life. He rises early, and eats only once during the day,
having no certain time for his meal. It may be said that in this respect he
resembles Suvarof, but I believe Baranof never
resembled anybody, except perhaps Cortes or Pizarro. His former condition had
caused him to adopt a custom of which he could never wean himself—that of
keeping around him a crowd of madcaps, who were greatly attached to him, and
ready, as the saying is, to go through fire and water for him. To these people
he often gave feasts, when each one could drink as much as he pleased, and this
explains the enormous consumption of rum which Baranof was in no condition to
buy, and had to procure at the company’s expense.”
It is probable that the words which Washington Irving
puts into the mouth of Astor’s agent, when he “found this hyperborean veteran
ensconced in a fort which crested the whole of a high rocky promontory,” are
but too near the truth. “He is continually giving entertainments by way of
parade,” says Mr Hunt, and if you do not drink raw rum, and boiling
punch as strong as sulphur, he will insult you as
soon as he gets drunk, which will be very shortly after sitting down to table.
“As to any temperance captain,” continues Irving, “who
stood fast to his faith and refused to give up his sobriety, he might go
elsewhere for a market, for he stood no chance with the governor. Rarely,
however, did any cold-water caitiff of the kind darken the door of Baranof; the
coasting captains knew too well his humor and their own interests; they joined
in his revels; they drank and sang and whooped and hiccupped, until they all
got ‘half-seas-over,’ and then affairs went on swimmingly.
“An awful warning to all ‘flinchers’ occurred shortly
before Hunt’s arrival. A young naval officer had recently been sent out by the
emperor to take command of one of the company’s vessels. The governor, as
usual, had him at his ‘prosnics,’ and plied him with
fiery potations. The young man stood on the defensive, until the old count’s
ire was completely kindled; he carried his point and made the greenhorn tipsy,
willy nilly. In proportion as they grew fuddled, they grew noisy; they quarrelled in their cups; the youngster paid Baranof in his
own coin, by rating him soundly; in reward for which, when sober, he was taken
the rounds of four pickets, and received seventy-nine lashes, taled out with Russian punctuality of punishment.
“Such was the old grizzled bear with whom Mr Hunt had to do his business. How he managed to cope with
his humor, whether he pledged himself in raw rum and blazing punch, and
‘clinked’ the can with him as they made their bargains, does not appear upon
record; we must infer, however, from his general observations on the absolute
sway of this hard-drinking potentate, that he had to conform to the customs of
his court, and that their business transactions presented a maudlin mixture of
punch and peltry.”
Before taking final leave of Baranof, I will give one
more quotation from a manuscript in my possession, from the dictation of one
formerly in the service of the Russian American Company, who arrived at Novo
Arkhangelsk in 1817, for the purpose of rejoining his father, who had been sent
to the Ross colony. “On the day after our arrival, Mr Baranof sent for me. He was a small man, of yellow complexion, and with very
little hair on his head. He spoke to me very kindly, and promised to send me to Mr Kuskof as soon as any of
the company’s ships were going in his direction. Then he told me I could stay
at his house and help the woman who was his housekeeper. He had several women
about his house, young and old, and one daughter about seventeen years of age,
for whom he kept a German governess. The mother had been a Kolosh woman, but
she died before I came to Novo Arkhangelsk.
“Baranof was often sick, and sometimes very cross, but
his daughter could always put him in good humor by playing on the piano. I have
seen him send every one out of the house in a heavy snow-storm when his anger
was roused, but half an hour later he sent messengers to call back the women
and servants, and gave each one an order on the store for whatever they wished.
Then he would send for liquor and order a feast to be prepared, and call for
his singers to amuse him while he was eating. After his meal he was apt to get
drunk on such occasions, and would try to make all around him drunk. Most of
the people in the house liked to see him in a rage, because they knew that a
carousal would follow. As soon as he began to feel the effect of drink he
always sent his daughter away, but all the other women were required to stay
with him and share in the revelry.
“One night Baranof came into the kitchen for some
purpose, and saw the German governess taking a glass of rum. He was so enraged
that he struck her on the head and drove her out of the house. On the next day
he sent for her, made her some presents, and apologized for striking her. He
said that she might drink now and then, but must never let his daughter see it.
The governess promised to abstain from dram-drinking in the presence of her
pupil, and remained with her until she was married to a young naval officer,
who had arrived from St Petersburg on board a man-of-war”.
Here we have probably a truthful picture of Baranof’s
household during the last years of his residence at Novo Arkhangelsk. At this
period he displayed only too often the darker phase of his character, for the
use of stimulants had now sapped the vigor of his manhood, and in their use
alone could he find temporary relief from his constitutional fits of
melancholy. That he indulged too freely in strong drink has never been disputed
by his friends; but that he was, as some chronicles allege, a cruel and vindictive
man, has never been proven by his enemies. It must be remembered that
drunkenness was then a vice far more common among the Russians than it is
today, and that it is now more prevalent in Russia than in any civilized
country in the world. The aspersions made on Baranof’s character by
missionaries and naval officers have already been noticed. They need no further
comment. When we read the pages of Father Juvenal’s manuscript, and the remarks
of such men as Lieutenant Kotzebue, in whose work he is spoken of as “a monster
who purchases every gain with the blood of his fellow-creatures,” we can but
wish that they had formed a truer estimate of one whose memory is still held in
respect by his fellowcountrymen.
While Baranof was still at Novo Arkhangelsk, and
probably under his direction, a force was despatched by land to make a thorough exploration of the territory north of Bristol Bay,
and to establish a permanent station on the Nushagak River. The expedition formed on Cook Inlet, in charge of one Korasakovsky, who was well acquainted with the natives of
this portion of Alaska. Proceeding to lake Ilyamna, the party descended the
river Kuichak to Bristol Bay, and following the
coast, reached the mouth of the Nushagak, where the
leader left behind him a portion of his command with instructions to build a
fort, while he went on with the remainder to the mouth of the river Tugiak, far to the westward, where the sloop Konstantin was to meet him with a cargo of supplies. After a brief rest, Korasakovsky continued his journey, rounding Cape Newenham,
and finally entering the wide estuary of the Kuskokvim.
It was now late in the season, and hearing from the natives that it was
extremely difficult to procure subsistence during the winter, the leader turned
back. On reaching the Nushagak, he found the fort
nearly completed, and giving it the name of Alexandrovsk, returned to Kadiak
across the Alaska peninsula.
Lieutenant Yanovsky, who was one of the party,
forwarded a special report of this expedition to the board of managers at St
Petersburg, with a recommendation that during the following summer the
settlement should be transferred from the Nushagak to
the Kuskokvim, or that a new post be established at
the latter point.
During the presence of Hagemeister and Yanovsky in the
colonies, occurred the first visit of a French vessel to Norfolk Sound. In 1816
a merchant of Bordeaux fitted out a ship named the Bordelais for a
voyage to the farther north-west, intending to compete with the English and
American traders. The vessel sailed in October 1816, with a complement of
thirty-four men and three officers, in charge of Camille Roquefeuil,
a naval officer. In May of the following year, while taking in water and
provisions at Lima, Roquefeuil met the commanders of
the Kutusof and Suvarof,
then on their way to the Russian colonies, and when the Frenchman arrived at
Novo Arkhangelsk, on the 5th of April, 1818, he was well received by
Hagemeister, with whom he made a contract to hunt sea-otter on joint account in
the channels of the Alexander Archipelago, Hagemeister agreeing to furnish him
with thirty bidarkas.
On the 7th of June the Bordelais arrived off
the north-west side of Prince of Wales Island, where the vessel was moored a
short distance from shore, the anchorage being selected by the advice of a
Kaigan. On the 9th a reconnoissance was made, but
neither people nor sea-otters were seen. On the following day a fleet of
twenty-nine bidarkas, each provided with a rifle, a pair of pistols, and two
daggers, went forth to hunt, the long-boat serving as escort. The catch was one
sea-otter. On the same day four canoes came alongside with a few skins and some
fish, and the Kaigan, being discovered in secret consultation with his
countrymen, was driven out of the ship. The company’s agent proposed that the
Aleutian hunters should camp on shore under the guns of the ship. To this Roquefeuil consented, detailing a guard for their
protection. They hunted with but little success for a few days longer, the
entire catch being but twenty sea-otter, while only ten were obtained by
barter.
On the morning of the 17th a large number of natives
came to the beach, offering to trade; but at noon all disappeared, and remained
out of sight the following day. Roquefeuil now
resolved to recall his Aleuts; and landing toward evening to observe the state
of the tide, passed by their camp and walked to the head of the cove. On his
way he was accosted by an Indian, who was apparently unarmed. A few minutes
later a musket-shot was heard, followed immediately by a volley. The captain
instantly turned back, but seeing the Aleuts running toward the beach without
offering resistance, he hid himself in a thicket which lined the shore, and
made signals for a boat to come off to his rescue. As soon as his signal was
answered, he stripped and swam off toward the ship, holding his watch between
his teeth. As the boat approached, the savages opened fire on her, and wounded
four out of a crew of seven, but Roquefeuil was
finally rescued. Meanwhile the sailors returned the fire, and a lieutenant was
sent with two sail-boats to rescue the survivors. Seven men were lifted out of
their torn and sinking bidarkas, two of them being at the point of death, four
severely wounded, and from a small hole in the rocks crept forth seven others,
who all escaped unhurt. On the 19th a strong party was sent on shore to search
for more survivors, but without success. Most of the bidarkas were recovered, a
few muskets were picked up near the beach, and nineteen Aleuts lay dead within
the encampment, the only traces of the fight being a few discharged pistols and
broken spears.
On Roquefeuil’s return to
Novo Arkhangelsk, Hagemeister offered him an opportunity to retrieve his losses
by joining one of the Russian hunting parties then engaged among the islands,
but the crew refused to receive on board any more Aleuts, or to engage a second
time in the dangerous service of escorting them. The captain resolved,
therefore, to confine himself to trading; and after repairing damages, he again
sailed for the Alexander Archipelago. Hoping to deceive the savages, and
capture some of their chiefs, to be held for ransom, he had painted his ship
and changed the rigging; but his trouble was in vain; the ruse did not deceive
the Kaigans, and not a canoe came near his craft.
Roquefeuil then sailed for San Francisco to procure a cargo of grain with which to
settle his indebtedness to the company. There he was detained by the
authorities for more than a month, but finally obtained Governor Sola’s
permission to trade, chiefly through the intervention of Golovnin,
who was then at the same port. Returning once more to Novo Arkhangelsk, he
found that Hagemeister was willing to accept a small cash payment in behalf of
the relatives of the Aleutian hunters, and after landing his bread-stuffs, took
his final leave on the 13th of December. We may presume that he was not very
deeply impressed with the advantages of the fur trade on the upper north-west
coast.
The end of the period for which the company’s charter
had been granted was now approaching. Anxious to make all possible progress,
both in discovery and exploration, the directors ordered expeditions to be despatched in various directions, and at the same time new
buildings were erected in nearly all the settlements. Two attempts had already
been made to explore the head waters of the Copper River, but in both instances
the leaders had been killed by the Atnas. From the Nikolaievsk redoubt another expedition was despatched, under command of Malakhof,
for the purpose of exploring the country north of Cook Inlet. From
Petropavlovsk the company sent the sloop Dobroie Namerenie (Good Intent) to explore the
Arctic coast. This craft sailed in 1818, but was delayed at the mouth of the Anadir River, and did not return till three years later. No
report of the expedition is extant, but the voyage was continued at least as
far as East Cape.
The efforts made by the company at the same time to
explore the Asiatic coast south of Kamchatka, and especially the mouths of the
Amoor, do not properly fall within the scope of this volume, but serve to show
that the monopoly was straining every nerve to obtain a renewal of its
privileges.
After reorganizing the affairs of the colony and
visiting the different settlements, Hagemeistor sailed on board the Kutusof for Kronstadt, where he arrived on the 7th
of September, 1819. Calling at Batavia, he purchased an assortment of goods to
the amount of two hundred thousand roubles, and the
value of his cargo of furs was estimated at a million. The vessel was at once
refitted, and again despatched to the collonies about a year later under command of Lieutenant Dokhturof, who subsequently became famous in Russian naval
annals. Arriving at Novo Arkhangelsk in October 1821, after calling at several
Californian ports, she returned the following year with another cargo of furs
valued at over a million.
As we have now come to the close of the first term for
which the privileges of the Russian American Company were granted, I will give
a brief account of its operations during this period, or so much of them as can
be obtained from the records which have come down to us. The original capital
of 723,000 roubles was increased by the subscriptions
of new shareholders to 1,238,740 roubles; and the net
earnings between 1797 and 1820, the first years including the operations of the
Shelikof-Golikof Company, were 7,685,008 roubles. Of this sum about 4,250,000 roubles were distributed as dividends, and the remainder added to the capital, which
amounted in 1820 to about 4,570,000 roubles.
Meanwhile, furs were sold or exchanged for other commodities at Kiakhta to the amount of 16,376,696 roubles,
and at Canton through foreign vessels to
the amount of 3,648,002 roubles. Of the company’s
transactions elsewhere we have no complete records.
Notwithstanding the large shipments of furs made
during the first twenty years of the company’s existence, the yield had greatly
diminished since the first years of Baranof’s administration. In the gulf of
Kenai, where Delarof had obtained 3,000 skins during his first year’s hunting,
the catch decreased, until in 1812 it amounted only to 100. In Chugatsch Bay, where seal had before been plentiful, the
yield fell off in the same year to 50 skins. Between that point and Novo
Arkhangelsk sea-otter abounded when the Russians first took possession, but
five years later they had almost disappeared. In Otter Bay, Queen Charlotte
Island, and Nootka Sound they were still plentiful, but the Americans absorbed
most of this trade, bartering fire-arms and rum with the Kolosh in return for
skins, of which they obtained about 8,000 a year, while the Russians tried in
vain to compete with them.
In Novo Arkhangelsk, which had now become the
commercial centre of Russian America, there were, in
1818, 620 inhabitants, of whom more than 400 were male adults. Of the servants
of the company, 190 were at that time engaged on shares, and 101 on fixed
salaries. The income of the chief manager was 7,800 roubles a year; that of the head clerk from 3,000 to 4,000, of a trading skipper about
the same, an assistant clerk or priest 600, and an Aleutian or creole hunter
from 60 to 150 roubles. The total sum paid yearly at
Novo Arkhangelsk on account of shares, salaries, premiums, and pensions, was
about 120,000 roubles.
It will be seen that, with a few exceptions, the
company’s servants had little chance to enrich themselves during their sojourn
in the farther north-west. Moreover, the necessaries of life often became so
scarce that they were beyond reach of most of the colonists. There were some
exceptions, however. Bread; for instance, was usually sold to married men, at
least after Hagemeister’s arrival, at cost, and in sufficient quantity. To
laborers goods were issued from the stores, on a written order from the chief
manager, and charged to their accounts once a month or once in three months. On
these occasions they received a present of a small quantity of flour or other
provisions.
CHAPTER XXVI.
SECOND PERIOD OF THE RUSSIAN AMERICAN COMPANY’S
OPERATIONS.
1821-1842.
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