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READING HALL "THE DOORS OF WISDOM" 2024

DIVINE UNIVERSAL HISTORY OF JESUSCHRIST

CREATION OF THE UNIVERSE ACCORDING GENESIS

HISTORY OF ALASKA.

CHAPTER XXVI.

SECOND PERIOD OF THE RUSSIAN AMERICAN COMPANY’S OPERATIONS. 1821-1842.

 

 

At the end of the twenty years for which the exclusive privileges of the Russian American Company were granted, we find this powerful monopoly firmly established in the favor of the imperial government, many nobles of high rank and several members of the royal family being among the shareholders. The company already occupied nearly all that portion of the. American continent and the adjacent islands south of the Yukon River now comprised in the territory of Alaska. The country north of Cook Inlet and Prince William Sound, and the Alexander Archipelago north of Dixon Sound, was also universally acknowledged as belonging to Russia, though her right was not established by treaty until some years later. With an imposing list of permanent stations represented as forts and redoubts, with a long list of tribes converted to Christianity and brought under subjection, the directors now sought to obtain, not only a renewal of the favors already granted, but important additions to their privileges.

Aware that such a request would be made, the government had instructed Captain Golovnin to inquire into the condition of the settlements during his cruise in the Kamchatka. His report was by no means favorable. “Three things are wanting,” he says, “in the organization of the company’s colonics: a clearer definition of the duties belonging to the various officers, a distinction of rank, and a regular uniform, so that foreigners visiting these parts may see something indicating the existence of forts and troops belonging to the Russian sceptre—something resembling a regular garrison. At present they can come to no other conclusion than that these stations are but temporary fortifications erected by hunters as a defence against savages.” The captain expresses almost unqualified condemnation of the treatment of creoles and hired laborers, but concludes his report with the following words: “I consider it my duty to remark that these abuses occurred before Lieutenant Hagemeister’s accession to office. Though he has but recently assumed control, and their entire abolition cannot yet be expected, the measures which he has already adopted for improving the condition of natives and promyshleniki promise complete success in the near future.”

It was of course to be expected that Golovnin, being a naval officer, should condemn Baranof’s administration, and speak in favor of Hagemeister. Some of his suggestions were adopted, but notwithstanding his adverse criticism, an imperial oukaz was issued, in September 1821, granting exclusive privileges to the company for another period of twenty years.

This document was introduced by the following words, which are in strong contrast with the tenor of the captain's report: “The Russian American Company, under our highest protection, having enjoyed the privileges most graciously granted by us in the year 1799, has to the fullest extent justified our hopes and fulfilled our expectations, in extending navigation and discovery as well as the commerce of our empire, in addition to bringing considerable immediate profit to the shareholders in the enterprise. In consideration of this, and desiring to continue and confirm its existence, we renew the privileges given to it, with some necessary changes and additions, for twenty years from this time; and having made for its guidance certain rules, we hereby lay them before the governing senate, with our orders to promulgate the same, to be submitted to us for signature.”

In the new charter, the text of which included twenty paragraphs, the jurisdiction of the company was established over all the territory from the northern cape of Vancouver Island, in latitude 51° N., to Bering Strait and beyond, and to all islands belonging to that coast as well as to those between it and the coast of eastern Siberia, also to the Kurile Islands, where they were allowed to trade as far as the island of Ourupa, to the exclusion of other Russian subjects and of foreigners. It was granted the right to all that existed in those regions, on the surface as well as in the bosom of the earth, without regard to the claims of others. Communication could be carried on by sea between the colonies and adjoining regions belonging to foreign powers, but only with the consent of their rulers.

Considering the vast territory controlled by the company, and the large numbers of its inhabitants, the government saw fit to confer certain rank and official standing on the company’s servants. The chief manager was to be placed on the same footing as the governors of Siberia; government officials of the military, naval, and civil service were allowed to enter the company’s service, retaining half their former pay, and without losing their turn for promotion; all officials in the company’s employ, not previously invested with rank, were to be promoted to that of collegiate assessor after two years’ service in the colonies; all servants of the company were exempt from conscription, and all officials and agents from the payment of taxes. Employes were granted the right of complaining to the senate for injustice or abuse on the part of the company, the complaint to be made within six months after the occurrence; right of appeal to the senate from the decision of the company’s authorities was also given, the appeal to be made within the same period.

If the company’s shares should fall fifty per cent in market value, the government was to assume the responsibility and sell them at auction. The right to change the relations of the company was given to the larger assembly of the shareholders, subject to appeal to the senate, and permission was granted to the board of directors to despatch vessels from Kronstadt to the colonies with cargoes of Russian and foreign commodities free of duty, and also to ship goods to the colonies on government vessels at low rates. Finally, all military, naval, and other officers were enjoined to aid the company, and to insist on the strict observance of these rights by Russian subjects and foreigners. Most of the privileges contained in the oukaz of 1799 were also renewed in the charter of 1821.

The regulations appended to this charter were very voluminous, referring to the treatment of the natives, the obligation of the company to maintain churches and schools at its own expense, and to provide for the importation of supplies in sufficient quantity, the rights and privileges of creoles, and the rights and duties of shareholders and of the company’s officials. It was provided that the chief manager must be selected from the naval service, and rank not lower than captain of the second class; the assistant manager must also be a naval officer; the board of directors, each of whom must hold not less than twenty-five shares, was to consist of four members, to be elected by the assembly of shareholders, and all the transactions of the company were to be subject to the supervision of the minister of finance, to whom detailed reports were to be submitted.

The first step taken by the board of directors, after obtaining their second charter, was the. election of a successor to Hagemeister, or rather his representative Yanovsky, who, having married Baranof’s daughter, was not considered free from the taint thrown upon the latter’s fame by Golovnin. M. N. Mouravief, a captain in the navy and a scion of an old family belonging to the Russian nobility, was the one selected, and his appointment being confirmed, he sailed for Novo Arkhangelsk during the year 1821. He at once took measures to reconstruct the garrison, to repair the fortifications of all the settlements, and to erect new buildings wherever they were required.

Mouravief at once saw the absurdity of Baranof’s policy in keeping the Kolosh at a distance from Novo Arkhangelsk. Up to this time they had been compelled to live on the islands north and south of the settlement, and this arrangement, intended to insure the safety of the Russians, had only served to increase the danger of hostile attack. Away from all communication and supervision, they had been at liberty to plot mischief at leisure, while they were kept informed of all that occurred in the garrison by the females of their tribe, whose intercourse with the promyshleniki was never interrupted. The result was, that murder and robbery were committed with impunity on detached parties of laborers and fishermen. Mouravief, taking advantage of the presence of the well armed ship which brought him to the colonies, summoned the chiefs of the Sitkas, and told them that they might return with their people to their former village adjoining the fort. The permission was gladly accepted, and the removal effected within a few days. Meanwhile the palisade separating the native huts from the company’s precincts had been strengthened, and a heavy gate built, through which no savage was allowed to enter without a permit. On certain days, they might, at a stated hour, visit the enclosed space for the purpose of disposing of game, fish, furs, and other commodities. Before sunset the streets were patrolled by an armed guard, and all the natives kept out from that time until daylight; sentries were doubled and kept vigilant by a half-hourly, exchange of signals. These regulations were found so satisfactory that they were continued by Mouravief’s successors, and to a certain extent even by the American troops who took charge of the territory after its transfer in 1867.

The chief manager, or governor as he was now styled, also issued orders that the garrisons should be placed under strict discipline at all the outlying stations; but only in Kadiak could this be done, for at other points the force was too small to allow of military organization. He then made a tour of inspection through the colonies, visiting all the stations except those at Atkha and Atoo, and on his return divided the colonies into districts. The Sitka district included the mainland of Russian America from Mount St Elias as far as latitude 54° 40'., together with the islands along the adjacent shore. The Kadiak district embraced the coast and the islands on the gulfs of Kenai and Chugatsch, the Alaska peninsula as far south as Shumagin Island, the Kadiak, Ookamok, Semidi, and all adjacent islands, the shores of Bristol Bay, and the coast between the mouths of the Nushagak and Kuskokvim rivers. In the Mikhailof district were included the basins of the Kvichak and Kuskokvim rivers, and the coast lying between Norton Sound and Bering Strait. The Unalaska district comprised all of the Alaska peninsula not included in the district of Kadiak, and the Lissiev, Sannakh, and Prybilof islands. The Atkha district consisted of the Andreanofsky group and the Blishie, Krissie, and Commander islands, and the Kurile district of the islands of that name lying between Ourupa and the Kamchatka peninsula.

Soon after Mouravief’s arrival, the colonies were once more threatened with starvation, a danger which was due to the following incidents: In the summer of 1821 supplies were despatched from Kronstadt in the Rurik, which had been placed at the company’s disposal at the conclusion of Kotzebue’s voyage, and in the Elizaveta, a Hamburg ship. The command of the Rurik and of the expedition was given to Master Klotchkof. The Elizaveta was intrusted to Acting Master Kisslakovsky. While rounding the Cape of Good Hope, the two craft met with a hurricane, during which the Elizaveta lost several sails and sprung a-leak, whereupon both vessels were headed for Simon Bay. On again putting to sea, after repairs had been made at great expense, it was found that the ship still leaked, and it was thought best to return to port, sell the Elizaveta, and transfer her crew to the Rurik, which arrived at Novo Arkhangelsk in November 1822. As most of the supplies had been given in payment for repairs, the governor detained her in the colonies, having no other vessel at his disposal fitted for a long voyage in search of provisions.

When informed of this disaster, the directors at once ordered the purchase of a ship of four hundred tons in New Bedford, Massachusetts. The craft was renamed the Elena, and placed under command of Lieutenant Chistiakof, who had before made the voyage from Kronstadt to Novo Arkhangelsk. A few days before the vessel was ready for sea a general assembly of shareholders was held, at which one of the directors stated that, as several rich cargoes had recently been despatched to the colonies, goods and provisions must have accumulated there in great quantity, and that there was no necessity to despatch another vessel round the world. The majority of the shareholders present adopted this view of the matter, and the expedition was abandoned for the time.

Thus in the year 1823 it became known throughout the settlements that supplies need not be expected from home during that and the following year. At the same time a despatch was received from the company’s commissioner in California, stating that, on account of a failure of crops and for other reasons, it would be impossible to forward the usual quantity of bread-stuffs from that country. The colonies were now in evil case, and starvation, or at best the prospect of living for a time on seal flesh, appeared to be inevitable, for already the storehouses were almost empty. Mouravief at once sent an urgent appeal to the managers, and meanwhile despatched Lieutenant Etholen to the Sandwich Islands in the brig Golovnin for a cargo of provisions, the Rurik being then engaged in the intercolonial trade. Calling at San Francisco on his voyage, Etholin succeeded, notwithstanding the dearth, in bartering furs for a large quantity of wheat at moderate rates. Proceeding thence to the Sandwich Islands, where he found the price of most commodities extremely high, he purchased at a fair price an American brig named the Arab, with her cargo of provisions and trading goods, the captain agreeing to take his craft to Novo Arkhangelsk. Both vessels arrived safely, and in time to prevent any serious suffering among the colonists. A few months later the stock of provisions was further increased by the cargo of the Rurik, which was sent to the Sandwich Islands with the crew of the Arab, after calling at California ports during the voyage, and returned with a moderate supply.

As in this instance, the colonies had frequently been relieved from want by trade with foreigners; and indeed, this was too often the only means of averting starvation. Even between 1818 and 1822, when supplies were comparatively abundant, goods, consisting mainly of provisions, were obtained by traffic with American and English masters to the value of more than three hundred thousand roubles in scrip. The supplies shipped by the company were never more than sufficient for the actual needs of the settlements, and if a ship were lost, her cargo was seldom replaced. The Aleuts were, of course, the principal sufferers, often perishing during their hunting expeditions from hunger and exposure. But what mattered the lives of the Aleuts? It were better that hundreds of them should perish for lack of food than that the shareholders should suffer from want of dividends

The governor’s appeal was, however, too urgent to be neglected, and, on the 31st of July, 1824, the Elena sailed from Kronstadt with a cargo of supplies, arriving at Novo Arkhangelsk a year later the ship was again placed in charge of Lieutenant Chistiakof, who was directed to relieve Mouravief, the latter returning home on board the same vessel.

It is probable that the only reason for Mouravief’s recall was some slight disobedience of orders, coupled with the failure of the hunting expeditions sent out by his direction. About the close of the year 1822 the Russian sloop of war Apollon had arrived at Novo Arkhangelsk, with instructions that all trade with foreigners should cease, and for two years the interdict remained in force. Willing as he was to obey even this ill-advised order, he was sometimes compelled to enter into transactions that were necessary to the very existence of the Ross colony, to which he must now look for supplies in case of need. Of sea-otter, the catch during the four years of Mouravief’s administration was little more than fifteen hundred skins—a grievous contrast with the condition of this industry in the days of Baranof, who, it is related, could estimate, almost exactly, the number of furs which could be collected in each section of his hunting grounds.

Not satisfied with prohibiting foreign trade, the Russian government issued an order forbidding the approach of any foreign vessel within thirty leagues of the coast. In 1822 the sloops-of-war Kreisser and Ladoga arrived in the colonies from St Petersburg, having been sent out to enforce the provisions of the oukaz, and remained in colonial waters for two years.

The shareholders soon began to see the folly of their senseless agitation against traffic with foreigners; receipts fell off to an alarming extent, and it became evident that something must be done to avert the dissolution of the company. At a general meeting, one of the directors, named Prokofief, laid before them the report of Mouravief in relation to the evil effects of the imperial order, and stated that a famine would have ensued in all the colonies if the governor had obeyed the spirit as well as the letter of his instructions. He pointed out to them how much Baranof owed to his unfettered intercourse with foreign traders in developing the resources of the colonies. He also showed them the enormous expense of expeditions sent direct from Kronstadt, and the advantage of purchasing goods from foreign skippers who came to the company’s ports at their own risk and expense. His appeal was successful, and a resolution was adopted by the assembly petitioning the government to reopen to foreign vessels the port of Novo Arkhangelsk. The request was granted, and the consequence was that under Chistiakof’s management there was a great improvement in the company’s affairs.

While the company’s business was thus progressing satisfactorily, a cloud arose in the diplomatic horizon, which at one time threatened the very existence of the colonies. As soon as the arbitrary measure of Russia became known to English and American north­west traders, protestations and complaints were forwarded to their respective governments. The matter was discussed with some heat in the United States congress, causing voluminous diplomatic correspondence. In the mean time some traffic was carried on under protest, and the matter was finally settled by the Anglo-Russian and Russo-American treaties of 1824 and 1825, when the eastern and southern boundaries were then established as they remain to the present day, the limit of Russia’s territory being fixed at latitude 54° 40'. The clause relating to the boundary between the Portland Canal and Mount St Elias furnishes an instance of the absurdity of legislation by diplomates in regard to regions of which they were entirely ignorant. At some time in the future this work will have to be undone, and another line agreed upon, as it is impossible to follow in reality the wording of the treaty.

The convention between the Russian and English governments was concluded in February 1825. The commissioners on the part of Russia were the same as those who concluded the American treaty, while Great Britain was represented by Lord Stratford Canning, a privy councillor. The third article contains the boundary clause which was subsequently inserted in the Russo-American treaty at the cession of Alaska, and is thus worded: “The boundary line between the possessions of the high contracting powers on the coast of the mainland and the islands of north-western America is established as follows: beginning at the southernmost point of the islands named Prince of Wales, which point is situated in latitude 54° 40' n. and between the 131st and 133d degrees of western longitude, the line extends north along a sound known as Portland Canal, to a point on the mainland where it crosses the 56th degree of north latitude. Hence the boundary line follows the chain of mountains running parallel with the coast to the point of intersection with the 141st degree of longitude west from Greenwich, and finally from this point of intersection on the same meridian to the Arctic Sea, forming the boundary between the Russian and British possessions on the mainland of north­western America.”

It was further provided in these conventions that citizens of the United States and subjects of Great Britain should have the right of free navigation, fishery, and trade in the Alaskan waters for a period of ten years, but that the trading-posts of either contracting power could not be visited by subjects or citizens of the other without the consent of the officer in command; that at the end of ten years this right might be abrogated by Russia; that in the mean while arms, ammunition, and spirituous liquors were in no case to be sold to the natives, and that British subjects should always have the privilege of passing to and fro on rivers and streams flowing into the Pacific and cutting the strip of coast already described.

The news of these treaties, which was not received until after Chistiakof had taken command, aroused a storm of remonstrance on the part of the Russian American Company. The imperial government was besieged with petitions to abrogate the clauses granting free trade and navigation to Americans and Englishmen for a period of ten years. It was represented as a most flagrant violation of the rights granted by the imperial government, the result of which would inevitably be the dissolution of the company. The most active promoter of this agitation was Admiral N. P. Mordvinof, a shareholder of the company, who, in a letter to the minister for foreign affairs, defended the sanctity of the company’s privileges, pointing out that the vague wording of some of the treaty clauses would lead to many misunderstandings. During the lifetime of Alexander, no attention was paid to these complaints; but after Nicholas had ascended the throne, negotiations were inaugurated with the British and United States governments for an abolition of the treaty. The first proposals met with a firm refusal in both countries, but to appease the share­holders a supplementary oukaz was issued, stating that the privileges of navigation and trade extended to foreigners would be confined to the strip of coast between the British possessions and the 141st meridian. The standpoint of Russia on this question was communicated to all the representatives of that nation abroad, and as the north-west trade was then in its decline, no further complications ensued, and no attempt was ever made to apply the provisions of the convention to the islands and coasts of western Alaska.

While the directors of the company were loud in their remonstrance against foreign encroachment, they did not hesitate themselves to establish settlements in regions to which they had no valid claim, A committee established by the company at Petropavlovsk in November 1830 ordered that an expedition be sent to the Kurile Islands. A settlement on Ourupa Island, abandoned in 1805, bad been rebuilt in 1828, and during that and the following year furs to the value of eight hundred thousand roubles had been obtained. In 1830 a ship was despatched from Novo Arkhangelsk with a party of hunters, well supplied with provisions and material, to form a colony on Simusir Island. The natives were not numerous, numbering in 1812 only sixty-seven souls for the entire group, and the Russians found no difficulty in annexing their territory to the possessions of the company.

During the second term of the Russian American Company’s existence, several important expeditions were undertaken. Within the colonies, explorations were continued by Mouravief, the principal one being under command of Khramchenko, Etholen, and Master Vassilaief, who sailed from Novo Arkhangelsk in the brig Golovnin and the schooner Baranof, in June 1822, and remained absent for two years. A detailed survey was made on this occasion of the coasts from Bristol Bay westward to the mouth of the Kuskokvim. Norton Sound was also explored along its eastern and northern coast, the deep identation on the north shore being named Golovnin. Many prominent points were definitely located with the help of astronomical observations, but the coast between Stuart Island and the Kuskokvim was again neglected, as it had been by all previous explorers. To this expedition we owe the only charts now existing of the coast between Bristol Bay and Cape Newenham.

In 1826 the Russian government despatched an exploring expedition in command of Captain Lütke, who arrived at Novo Arkhangelsk in June of the following year. After remaining in port for a month, the captain proceeded to Unalaska and the Prybilof Islands, making also a careful survey of the northern coast of the Alaska peninsula, naming the various points, and finally visiting St Matthew Island and Petropavlovsk before proceeding south for the winter. Two other vessels belonging to the expedition, the Krotky and the Moller, sailed in 1828, the former commanded by Hagemeister, the latter by Captain Staniukovich. Both officers made important surveys of the coasts of Bering Sea, which was visited about the same time by Captain Beechey in the ship Blossom.

In 1829 Chistiakof ordered an inland exploration to the north of the Nushagak River, in charge of Vassilaief, the creole Alexander Kolmakof being one of the party. The expedition was organized on Kadiak Island, and crossing the peninsula ascended the Nushagak to the region of the lakes, and thence reached the Kuskokvim. Kolmakof on this occasion selected the site for a trading-post, built by him two or three years later; and in 1841 a redoubt was constructed and named after him, near the junction of the Kvigin and Kuskokvim rivers. The furs brought back were fox and sable of fine quality, and the establishment of a permanent station in the interior was determined. On his return, Vassilaief laid before the governor a plan for establishing communication with Norton Sound by way of the route which he had discovered. On the Kuskokvim he had met with natives living on the lower Yukon and the shores of Norton Sound who assured him that the transit from one river basin to the other was short and easy of accomplishment.

In 1830 the brig Chichagof was despatched northward in charge of midshipman Etholen, with instructions to explore Norton Sound and proceed thence to Bering Strait, touching at St Lawrence, Asiak, and Ookivok islands. Ookivok the midshipman found to be an entirely barren island; and “one wonders,” he writes in his report, “how people could ever settle upon it, but the countless number of walrus around its shores soon solves the riddle. The savages who hunt these animals receive in exchange from the inhabitants of the mainland all the necessaries of life, and gain their subsistence easily.” At St Lawrence Etholen found five native villages, the inhabitants of which also lived chiefly by hunting walrus. On his return to Novo Arkhangelsk, he reported that it would be beneficial to the company’s trade to establish a fort on or near Stuart Island at the entrance of Norton Sound.

On the arrival in the colonies of Baron Ferdinand P. von Wrangell, who was appointed Chistiakof’s successor, explorations were made on a larger scale. After examining the reports of Vassilaief’s and Etholen’s expeditions, Wrangell came to the conclusion that communication between Bering Bay and Norton Sound could be established overland. For this purpose he ordered Lieutenant Tebenkof to proceed to the latter point in the sloop Ourupa. Tebenkof erected a fortification with the consent of the natives, who promised to trade with the Russians, and gave to the settlement and to the island on which it was founded the name of Mikhaielovsk. When the necessary buildings had been completed preparations were begun for the inland explorations included in the governor’s instructions.

A native of the colonies, a creole named Andrei Glazanof, who had been instructed in the use of astronomical instruments, and was familiar with various dialects of the Innuit language, was selected to take charge of the expedition. The plan first adopted was to proceed to the mouth of the river Pastol, making the portage across a low divide to the Yukon; but rumors being heard of hostile intent on the part of the natives in that region, it was found impossible to secure a guide. Three natives were therefore secured to guide the party to the banks of the Yukon in a north-easterly direction, and on the 30th of December, 1833, the explorers left the road with two sleds, each drawn by five dogs, and a small quantity of provisions and trading goods, the men carrying their own guns, knapsacks, and clothing. They travelled on the ice, following the coast in a northerly direction until reaching the village of Kigikhtowik, whence on the following day they struck eastward. After crossing several ranges of hills with great difficulty, Glazanof arrived on the banks of the Anvik. His progress was much impeded by the condition of the ice on the rivers, and within two weeks his provisions were exhausted. In the hope of finding natives, his party proceeded up the Anvik into the mountains, but finding it impossible to reach their hunting-grounds, was forced to return, subsisting on a small quantity of frozen fish taken from the Indian caches. On the 17th of January the explorers stumbled on a subterranean dwelling occupied by a native couple and their three children. Here they were treated to an ample meal of rotten fish, and found an opportunity to mend their broken sleds and snow-shoes.

A week later Glazanof and his men, now completely exhausted, arrived at the mouth of the Anvik, where they found a native village, the inhabitants of which, at the first sight of the Russians, began to prepare for defence, but a messenger being sent forward unarmed, succeeded in persuading them as to Glazanof’s peaceable intentions, whereupon a cordial invitation was extended to the way-worn travellers to rest and recuperate their strength. One of the subterranean dwellings was vacated by its occupants to accommodate the guests, and after taking due precautions, Glazanof proceeded to the kashim, or council-house, a large structure containing several hundred people. He addressed the multitude, and less by his eloquence probably than by a judicious distribution of tobacco, succeeded in gaining their friendship. Presents of fish blubber, bear meat, and other food were laid before him, and he was told that if he had other wants they should be at once supplied. Here the party remained for some time, in friendly intercourse with the natives, and finally proceeded down the Yukon, as their new friends dissuaded them from attempting the portage route to the Kuskokvim.

The subsequent explorations of Glazanof and his party were confined to the delta of the Yukon, the dense population of which astonished the Russians. His diary, which has been preserved, is full of the most minute observations of the topography and ethnology of this region, which modern investigations prove to be remarkably accurate. At one mouth of the Yukon, named the Kashunok, he met with two natives from the Kuskokvim, who had been baptized by Kolmakof in the year 1832. They described the ceremony to the other natives, who were so much pleased with it that they requested Glazanof to baptize them also; but he declared that he had no authority to do so. A large number of these Indians agreed to accompany the Russians on their return to Mikhaielovsk, on condition that the guides who had accompanied them thus far be left as hostages; but having acquired a good hold on the people, Glazanof resolved to push on to the Kuskokvim, which he reached on the 19th of February. Here he was met by a party of natives returning to their homes from the Yukon. They told him that they had intended to visit Kolmakof, but that he had returned to the Nushagak, leaving behind his interpreter Lukin.  On the following day the expedition proceeded up the Kuskokvim, and on the 21st arrived at the village called Kvigym Painagmute, where they found Lukin in a log house built by Kalmakof. Glazanof was now informed of a portage route along a tributary of the Kuskokvim, from which it was possible in one day to reach a stream emptying into Cook Inlet, but he tried in vain to obtain guides to lead him in that direction. The natives assured him that several parties of their countrymen had been killed by the inhabitants of the intervening mountains, and Lukin confirmed these sensational reports, stating that he himself had failed in a similar attempt. Glazanof then resolved to proceed alone, but being unacquainted with the country and having lost his compass, shaped his course too much to the north, and found himself involved in a network of lakes and streams without provisions, and in a country destitute of animal life at that season of year. His men were reduced to the most cruel straits, and obliged to eat their dog-harness, boots, and seal-skin provision bags. Finally, after wandering about until the 19th of March, they once more found themselves upon the banks of the Kuskokvim, and soon afterward met Lukin, who had returned from a journey into the mountains. Accompanied by him, and several friendly natives who furnished them with ample supplies, Glazanof’s men at last regained the banks of the Yukon, and thence crossed over to the Mikhaielovsk settlement.

In 1838, after Wrangell had been relieved from office, an expedition was fitted out by the Russian American Company to explore the arctic coast of America eastward from Kotzebue Sound. A creole named Alexander Kashevarof, a native of Kadiak, who was thoroughly conversant with various Innuit dialects, was appointed to command the force, the party, which was composed mainly of creoles and Aleuts, being taken northward on the brig Polyfem. The skipper, who was a Russian, Chernof by name, was instructed to pass through Bering Strait, to proceed thence north­eastward as far as possible, and to land Kashevarof with one bidar and five three-hatch bidarkas at the furthermost point reached by the vessel. The Eskimos living on the coast opposed Kashevarof’s progress, and as he advanced slowly through the shallow sea washing the arctic shore, hostile bands began to gather in rapidly increasing numbers, until, when still a hundred miles west of Cape Beechey, the creole found himself compelled to turn back before an armed body outnumbering the explorers twenty to one. On his return journey, he was attacked at various times, but finally regained Norton Sound, where he found Chernof awaiting him.

In the same year, Malakhof ascended the Yukon River as far as the present site of Nulato, where he built a small block-house. In want of provisions, and with only two men, he was obliged temporarily to abandon the building and repair to Mikhaielovsk for supplies. During his absence the Indians living in the neighborhood burned the building.

In 1842 Lieutenant Zagoskin of the imperial navy Set forth for Norton Sound and Mikhaielovsk, purposing to make an inland exploration of the northern territory. His work was confined chiefly to the middle course of the Kuskokvim, and the lower course and northern tributaries of the Yukon, especially the Koyukuk, which he followed to its head waters and to the divide which separates it from the streams running into Kotzebue Sound. At Nulato he was assisted by Derzhavin in building a new fort. Zagoskin’s exploration was performed conscientiously and well. Wherever we find mistakes, we may ascribe them to his imperfect instruments and to local obstacles. He gathered most valuable trading statistics for the company, and ingratiated himself with all the tribes with which he came in contact. His expedition was not completed until 1844, when he returned to Russia to superintend the publication of his notes.

It had been Wrangell’s desire to explore the arctic coast of the Russian possessions, but complications constantly arising with the Mexican authorities in California required his personal attention. Figueroa, then governor of California, had addressed to him several letters, demanding the abandonment of the Ross settlement. The latter always had the excuse that he was not authorized to treat on so weighty a subject; but when the end of his term was approaching, he received news of Figueroa’s death, and resolved to proceed homeward by way of Mexico, in order to negotiate with the authorities at the capital of the new republic, visiting on his way the Ross settlement. In the harbor of San Blas he met with the company’s ship Sitka, having on board his successor, Captain Kuprianof. To him he surrendered his office, and soon afterward proceeded to Mexico. His negotiations with the Mexican government on behalf of the Ross colony and their failure are related in connection with my History of California.

During Wrangell’s administration a serious dispute arose with the Hudson’s Bay Company, which was then extending its operations over the whole north-west, establishing forts at every available point on river and sea-coast, and which a few years later entirely outbid the Russian American Company in the trade of the Alexander Archipelago. Taking advantage of the clause in the Anglo-Russian treaty of 1825, providing for the free navigation of streams crossing Russian territory in their course from the British possessions to the sea, the English company had pushed forward its trading-posts to the upper course of the Stikeen, and in 1833 fitted out the brig Dryad for the purpose of establishing a permanent station on that river. Information of this design had been conveyed to Wrangell during the preceding year, and he at once notified the managers at St Petersburg, asking them to induce the imperial government to rescind the clause under which the Hudson’s Bay Company intended to encroach on Russian territory. As a further motive for this request, he reported that the English company had violated the agreement to abstain from selling fire-arms and spirituous liquor to the natives. The emperor granted the petition, and the British and United States governments were duly notified of the fact. Both protested through their ministers at St Petersburg, but in vain; the reply of the Russian foreign office being that the objectionable clause would terminate in the following year. Without waiting to be informed of the success or failure of his application, Wrangell despatched two armed vessels, under command of Lieutenant Dionysi Zarembo, to the mouth of the Stikeen. Here the latter established a fortified station on a small peninsula,  the neck of which was flooded at high water, and named the fort St Dionysi.

These warlike preparations remained unknown to the officials of the Hudson’s Bay Company, and when the Dryad approached the mouth of the Stikeen, the men crowding her deck were surprised by a puff of white smoke and a loud report from the densely wooded shore, followed by several shots from a vessel in the offing. The brig was at once put about, but anchored just out of range, whereupon a boat was sent from shore carrying Lieutenant Zarembo, who, in the name of the governor of the Russian colonies and the emperor of Russia, protested against the entrance of an English vessel into a river belonging to Russian territory. All appeals on the part of the Hudson’s Bay Company’s agents were ineffectual. They were informed that if they desired to save themselves, their property, and their vessel, they must weigh anchor as once, and after a brief delay the Dryad sailed for Fort Vancouver.

The authorities of the Hudson’s Bay Company lost no time in sending reports of this affair to London, accompanied with a statement that the loss incurred through this interference with their project amounted to £20,000 sterling. The British government immediately demanded satisfaction from Russia, but the matter was not finally settled until 1839, when a commission met in London to arrange the points of dispute between the two corporations, and in a few weeks solved difficulties which experienced diplomates had failed to unravel in as many years. The claim of the Hudson’s Bay Company was waived on condition that the Russian company grant a lease to the former of all their continental territory lying between Cape Spencer and latitude 54° 40'. The annual rental was fixed at two thousand land-otter skins, and at the same time the English company agreed to supply the colonies with a large quantity of provisions at moderate rates. The abandonment of the Ross colony, whence the Russians obtained most of their supplies, was now merely a question of time, and the agreement appears to have given satisfaction to both parties, for at the end of the term the lease was renewed for a period of ten years, and twice again for periods of four years.

On the 1st of June, 1840, a salute of seven guns was fired as the British flag was hoisted from Fort St Dionysi, or Fort Stikeen, as it was renamed by Sir James Douglas, who then represented the Hudson’s Bay Company, and during a previous visit had appointed John McLoughlin, junior, to the command. Having arrived at Novo Arkhangelsk on April 25th of the same year, Sir James says, that “he had held daily conference with the governor in a frank and open manner, so as to dissipate all semblance of reserve, and establish intercourse on a basis of mutual confidence. The question of boundary was settled in a manner that will prevent any future misunderstanding... They wish to sell Bodega for $30,000, with a stock of 1,500 sheep, 2,000 neat-cattle, and 1,000 horses and mules, with important land fenced in, with barns, thrashing-floor, etc., sufficient to raise 3,000 fanegas of wheat. They of course cannot sell the soil, but merely the improvements, which we can hold only through a native. We concluded to write to Mr McLoughlin on this subject, so that he may write to Mr Etholen in reply in the autumn by the steam vessel, or appoint an agent to settle with the commandant at Bodega.” What might have been the result if England, with her powerful navy and all­grasping policy, had now gained a foothold in California on the eve of the gold discovery!

Almost as soon as the Hudson’s Bay Company’s men had established themselves at Fort Stikeen, hostilities were commenced by the natives. In 1840 an attempt was made to scale the stockade; in 1841 the Indians destroyed the aqueduct which supplied the fort with fresh water, and the beleaguered garrison only saved themselves by seizing one of their chiefs, whom they held as hostage. In the following year a more serious attack was threatened, which would probably have been carried out successfully but for the timely arrival of two armed vessels from Novo Arkhangelsk in charge of Sir George Simpson, the governor of the company’s territories, whose statement I will give in his own words.

“By daybreak on Monday the 25th of April, we were in Wrangell’s Straits, and toward evening, as we approached Stikeen, my apprehensions were awakened by observing the two national flags, the Russian and the English, hoisted half-mast high, while, on landing about seven, my worst fears were realized by hearing of the tragical end of Mr John McLoughlin, jun., the gentleman recently in charge. On the night of the 20th a dispute had arisen in the fort, while some of the men, as I was grieved to hear, were in a state of intoxication; and several shots were fired, by one of which Mr McLoughlin fell. My arrival with two vessels at this critical juncture was most opportune, for otherwise the fort might probably have fallen a sacrifice to the savages, who were assembled round it to the number of about two thousand, justly thinking that the place could make but a feeble resistance, deprived as it was of its head, and garrisoned by men in a state of complete insubordination.”

A few days later Simpson returned to Novo Ark­hangelsk, in order to discuss with Etholen, who in 1840 had relieved Kuprianof as governor, the difficulties constantly arising between the Russian and Hudson’s Bay Company’s agents with regard to trade on the Alexander Archipelago. Though Etholen was unyielding in other matters, he was quite willing to join Simpson in his efforts to suppress traffic in spirituous liquors among the Kolosh, and an agreement to this effect was signed by the representatives of both companies on the 13th of May, 1842. The evil was felt in all parts of the archipelago, and nowhere more than at the capital.

“Some reformation certainly was wanted in this respect,” writes Simpson, “for of all the drunken as well as of all the dirty places that I had visited, New Archangel was the worst. On the holidays in particular, of which, Sundays included, there are one hundred and sixty-five in the year, men, women, and even children were to be seen staggering about in all directions. The common houses are nothing but wooden hovels huddled together without order or design in nasty alleys, the hot-beds of such odors as are themselves sufficient, independently ,of any other cause, to breed all sorts of fevers. In a word, while the inhabitant do all that they can to poison the atmosphere, the place itself appears to have been planned for the express purpose of checking ventilation.”

The Indian villages in the neighborhood of Novo Arkhangelsk had suffered severely a few years before, when during Kuprianof’s administration the small-pox epidemic appeared for the first time among the natives of Alaska. The disease broke out in 1836, among the Kolosh tribes near the southern boundary, and was probably introduced by Indians from the British possessions. During the first year the settlement of Tongass suffered most severely, two hundred and fifty dying in a settlement numbering nine hundred inhabitants. From Tongass the contagion rapidly spread over all the Kolosh settlements of the Alexander Archipelago. The filthy dwellings of the Kolosh fostered the germs of the disease, and the mortality was appalling, fifty to sixty per cent of the population being swept away. From the outlying settlements the scourge was introduced to Novo Arkhangelsk, and here as elsewhere a large portion of the native population perished, while the promyshleniki, almost as filthy as the natives in their habits, escaped with comparatively small loss. Kuprianof did all in his power to check the epidemic, enforcing vaccination wherever it could be enforced, and keeping the whole medical staff of the company in the field, surgeons, stewards, and medical apprentices. Dr Blaschke, a German, who was in charge of the medical service, stated officially that three thousand natives died before any vaccination was attempted, and that for an entire year its effect was barely perceptible.

In 1838 the doctor proceeded to Unalaska in the Polyfem, then en route to the Arctic. The disease broke out on that island immediately after his arrival, and it was some time before the superstitious Aleuts could be made to understand that Blaschke had come among them to cure and not to kill. They consented to vaccination only after a most peremptory order had been issued by the commander of the district. All the villages in the Unalaska district were visited by the vaccinators, and parties were sent on the same errand of mercy to the Alaska peninsula, to Bristol Bay, and Cook Inlet. In nearly every instance the outbreak of the epidemic could be traced to the arrival of persons from sections of the colonies already affected, a circumstance which greatly increased the difficulties with which the medical men had to battle in treating and protecting the natives. From the coast villages the disease spread into the interior, decimating or depopulating entire settlements. From Bristol Bay it advanced northward to the Kuskokvim and the Yukon, and raged fiercely among the dense population of the Yukon delta and Norton Sound. To this day the islands and coasts are dotted with numerous village sites, the inhabitants of which were carried off to the last individual during this dreadful period. In many instances the dead were left in their dwellings, which thus served as their graves, and skeletons can still be found in many of these ruined habitations.

One of the effects of the small-pox epidemic was a general distress in the outlying settlements, caused by the death of so many heads of families. Large issues of provisions were made to widows and orphans for several years; and when it was reported to Etholen that in the various districts there existed many villages where only a few male youths of tender age survived to take care of the women and children, and where constant aid from the company would be required for some time to come, he framed measures for the consolidation of small villages into large central settlements, where people might help each other in case of distress. His plan was not perfected until 1844, and though it met with violent opposition on the part of the natives who were to be benefited by it, it was finally carried out, and fulfilled the most sanguine expectations of the governor.

Notwithstanding the loss of life that occurred during the years 1836-1839, the population of the colonies amounted, according to a census taken in 1841, to 7,580 souls, a decrease since 1822, when the first regular census was taken, of 706,and since 1819 of 1,439 persons. There were in 1841, 714 Russians or Europeans of foreign birth, 1,351 creoles, and 5,417 Indians. Between 1830 and 1840 the number of Aleuts decreased from 6,864 to 4,007, but the loss was in part compensated by the increase in the Russian and creole population, the fecundity among the latter class being much greater than among the natives, as they received better food and clothing, and were exempt from enforced service on hunting expeditions,

Although the yield of the various hunting-grounds decreased considerably during the second term of the Russian American Company’s existence, it was still on a large scale. Between 1821 and 1842 there were shipped from the colonies over 25,000 sea-otter, 458,000 fur-seal, 162,000 beaver, 160,000 fox skins, 138,000 pounds of whalebone, and 260,000 pounds of walrus tusks. At the time of Simpson’s visit to the colonies in 1842, the catch of sea-otter at Kadiak, Unalaska, and Atkha, then the principal hunting-grounds, did not exceed 1,000 a year. Of course the diminished yield was attended with a corresponding increase in price, six or seven blankets being given for a good sea-otter skin, and thirteen for the best, while as much as two hundred roubles in cash was asked for a single fur of the choicest quality. Moreover, the natives were not slow to better the instruction which had accompanied the progress of civilization in the far north-west. They had learned how to cheat, and could already outcheat the Russians. “One favorite artifice,” relates Simpson, “is to stretch the tails of land-otters into those of sea-otters. Again, when a skin is rejected as being deficient in size or defective in quality, it is immediately, according to circumstances, enlarged or colored or pressed to order, and is then submitted as a virgin article to the buyer’s criticism by a different customer.”

It is somewhat remarkable that the decline in the leading industry of the colonies and the increase in the value of furs was not attended with a corresponding reduction of dividends. Between 1821 and 1841 about 8,500,000 roubles were distributed among the shareholders, or nearly double the sum disbursed during the company’s first term. The directors were, however, often in sore need of funds, and sometimes could only declare a dividend by charging it to the earnings of future years. During this period the gross revenues exceeded 61,400,000 roubles, and in 1841 the capital had been increased to about 6,200,000 roubles, which was represented mainly by trading goods, provisions, material, implements, furs, sea-going vessels, and real estate in Russia, the amount of cash on hand at that date being less than 50,000 roubles.

Large quantities of furs were still exchanged at Kiakhta for teas and Chinese cloths, which were afterward sold at Moscow and at the fair at Nijinei-Novgorod, the remainder of the furs and all the walrus tusks and whalebone being marketed at St Petersburg.

The contract with the Hudson’s Bay Company and the reopening of intercourse with foreigners, though limited to the port of Novo Arkhangelsk, were of great benefit to the shareholders. In 1822 and 1823, when the prohibition against foreign traffic was in force, the company suffered a clear loss of 85,000 roubles in silver, while for the two following years the dividend was the largest paid during the second term, amounting to nearly silver roubles per share. Although furs were bartered with English and American skippers at half or less than half the prices current in Russia, the loss was more than counterbalanced by the cheaper rates at which provisions and trading goods could be obtained. Moreover, the freight charged on the Hudson’s Bay Company’s vessels, accordingly to the terms of the contract, was 50 to 78 silver roubles per ton, while from Kronstadt it was 180 to 254, and by way of Siberia 540 to 630 roubles in silver. Between 1821 and 1840 twelve expeditions were despatched from Kronstadt to the colonies with supplies, and yet more than once the governor was compelled to send vessels to Chile for cargoes of bread-stuffs.

The expense of supporting the colonies, apart from the sums required for the home office, taxes, and other items, increased from about 676,000 roubles, scrip, in 1821, to over 1,219,000 roubles in 1841, and amounted for the whole period to nearly 18,000,000 roubles. The increase was due mainly to the necessity of establishing more stations as seal became scarce near the settlements, and of increasing the pay of employees. “The salaries of the officers,” remarks Simpson during his stay at Novo Arkhangelsk, “independently of such pay as they may have, according to their rank in the imperial navy, range between three thousand and twelve thousand roubles a year, the rouble being, as nearly as possible, equal to the franc; while they are, moreover, provided with firewood and candles, with a room for each, and a servant and a kitchen between two. Generally speaking, the officers are extravagant, those of five thousand roubles and upwards spending nearly the whole, and the others getting into debt, as a kind of mortgage on their future promotion.

“For the amount of business done, the men, as well as the officers, appear to be unnecessarily numerous, amounting this season to nearly five hundred, who, with their families, make about one thousand two hundred souls as the population of the establishment. Among the servants are some excellent tradesmen, such as engineers, armorers, tin-smiths, cabinet-makers, jewellers, watchmakers, tailors, cobblers, builders, etc., receiving generally about three hundred and fifty roubles a year; they have come originally on engagements of seven years; but most of them, by drinking or by indulging in other extravagance, contrive to be so regularly in debt as to become fixtures for life.”

 

 

CHAPTER XXVII.

THE RUSSIAN AMERICAN COMPANY’S LAST TERM. 1842-1866.