READING HALL "THE DOORS OF WISDOM" 2024 |
CREATION OF THE UNIVERSE ACCORDING GENESIS |
HISTORY
OF ALASKA.
CHAPTER XXVII.
THE RUSSIAN AMERICAN COMPANY’S LAST TERM. 1842-1866.
At the request of the directors, and after a careful
investigation into the condition of the colonies, the imperial council al St
Petersburg decided, on the 5th of March, 1841, to renew the charter of the
Russian American Company for a further period of twenty years. “In the variety
and extent of its operations,” declare the members of the council, “no other
company can compare with it. In addition to a commercial and industrial
monopoly, the government has invested it with a portion of its own powers in
governing the vast and distant territory over which it now holds control. A
change in this system would now be of doubtful benefit. To open our ports to
all hunters promiscuously would be a death-blow to the fur trade while the
government, having transferred to the company the control of the colonies,
could not now resume it without great expense and trouble, and would have to
create new financial resources for such a purpose.” This opinion, together with
a charter defining the privileges and duties of the company, was delivered to
the tzar and received his signature on the 11th of October, 1844.
The new charter did not differ in its main features
from that of 1821, though the boundary was of course changed in accordance with
the English and American treaties. None of the company’s rights were curtailed,
and the additional privileges were granted of trading with certain ports in
China, and of shipping tea direct from Shanghai to St Petersburg. The board of
managers, through its agent the governor of the colonies, was recognized as the
supreme power, though appeal could be made to the emperor through the minister
of finance. A colonial council was established, consisting of the deputy
governor and four naval officers, or officials of the company, with criminal
jurisdiction in all but capital cases. Much indulgence was shown to naval,
military, and civil officers, who while in the company’s service received
half-pay, and did not forfeit their right of promotion, their time of service
being counted double.
The sale of fire-arms, ammunition, and spirituous
liquor to the natives was still forbidden; and this prohibition was followed by
an order from the governor that no intoxicating drink should be sold in the colonies.
It is related that when this order was read to the servants of the company many
of them could not refrain from tears. The temperance cause had but few
advocates in Russian America. One of the men, named Markof,
who in 1845 sailed from Novo Arkhangelsk for San Francisco, thus relates his
experience: “How easily and willingly the labor of getting the ship under way
was performed! Each sailor had it in his mind that he could enjoy himself for
his trouble in the first tap-room in California. In the evening we could only
see the outlines of our former home, traced in black, indistinct shapes against
the darkening sky. ‘The devil must have planted these cursed sea-otters in
these out-of-the-way regions, said one of the sailors; ‘as far as we can see land
up and down the coast, not a single rum-shop is to be found.’ ‘Yes,’ answered
another, ‘but I remember Father Baranof. There was a time when a camp-kettle
was set out brimming full, and he would shout, “Drink, children!” and he would
join himself in a merry song. Those were better days,’ continued he, with his
eyes fixed on the waning land; ‘but now what times have we! We can do nothing
but work, and when that is done, we promenade, or smoke in the barrack. What a
life!’ ‘You see,’ replied his comrade, ‘in this country we all have to join the
temperance society.’ ‘What is that?’ ‘I don’t know exactly: it is some kind of
a sect. I belonged to it once, but it is so long ago I forget. I can make no
reckoning of time when I get no drinks to count by; but I remember we all had
to pay a beaver skin apiece.’ ‘A beaver skin apiece! That is a big price to pay
for the privilege of drinking nothing but water. I’ll have nothing to do with
any such sect. There was that German Mukolof; he
joined the sect, and in a few weeks he was dead. God knows where he is
now’—crossing himself: ‘I don’t think there is much room for Dutchmen in
heaven; so many Russians go there.’”
As soon as war between England and Russia became a
certainty, representatives of the Russian American and Hudson’s Bay companies
met in London to consult on the exigences of the case. It was agreed that both
companies should petition their governments for a convention of neutrality,
that should include the Russian and English possessions on the north-west coast
of America, the parties being allowed to trade freely with each other,
while-forbearing to furnish aid to the squadrons of Russia or of the allies.
The powers at war, considering this a small matter, and wishing to keep their
hands free in other quarters, consented to sanction the agreement. A few
English cruisers appeared at the entrance of Sitka Bay at various times, but
finding no vessels of war in port, nor any evidence of a violation of the
agreement, inflicted no damage. The company suffered some loss, however, by the
bombardment of Petropavlovsk in 1854,6 and through its destruction in the
following year, on which occasion the allies burned the government buildings,
plundered the Greek-catholic church, broke all the windows in the town, and
captured a vessel belonging to the Russian American Company. A part of the
allied forces then sailed for Ourup, and bombarded
the Russian settlement on that island, burned all the buildings, seized the
furs and papers belonging to the company,7and hoisted the union-jack, the
tricolor, and a sign-post declaring that they took possession of the territory
on behalf of England and France. These proceedings were sufficiently
disgraceful—the most disgraceful affair, perhaps, of the whole war, if we
except the Sinope massacre; but yet more disgraceful was the conduct of the
English government which sanctioned them, on the ground that the convention of
neutrality extended only to the north-west coast of America, and not to all the
company’s territory.
Though no attack was made, during the war, on the
Alaskan settlements, the Russians suffered more severely about this date from
outbreaks among the natives than at any time since the Sitka massacre. In 1851
the fort at Nulato was surprised by Indians, and most of the inmates butchered.
Among the victims were the commandant Derzhavin and Lieutenant Barnard, an
English naval officer on board the Enterprise, despatched in search of Sir John Franklin and his party. In that year Barnard was sent to
investigate the truth of certain rumors as to the murder of a party of his
countrymen near Lake Mintokh, and in his blunt
English fashion announced that he intended to send for the chief of the Koyukans, named Larion, who was then holding festival at
his village a few leagues distant. But, as Dall remarks, this man was not
accustomed to be sent for. When the Russians desired to see him, they
respectfully requested the honor of his presence. Now Larion was a great chief,
and also a shaman, and his ire was thoroughly roused at the insult. Moreover,
there was another cause of provocation. One of his daughters had for some time
been living with Derzhavin as a concubine. This was perfectly legitimate and
seemly according to the native and even the Russian code of morals; but a
second daughter had recently found favor in the eyes of the commandant, and
when the shaman demanded, in person, the surrender of at least one of his
children, Derzhavin coolly answered that he had at the fort a visitor, who must
also be provided with a concubine. After his departure perhaps one of the
damsels might be restored.
A council was called, and Larion swore that the salmon
should have blood to drink before they went back to the sea. At this moment a
dog-sled appeared in sight on the Yukon, by the side of which walked a Russian
and a Nulato workman. Soon afterward the sled was drawn up on the bank for the
purpose of cooking the midday meal, and while the Nulato was searching for
water, a party of Indians stole up stealthily behind the Russian, and stunning
him with a blow on the head, beat in his skull with their clubs. His flesh was
then cut in strips, roasted, and devoured, and the Koyukans set forth at once for Nulato. Half a mile from the fort were three large
buildings, in which were many Nulato families. These were set on fire, and
their occupants were either smothered in the smoke or fell beneath the knives
and arrows of the savages, one man only making his escape to the mountains, and
a few women being spared to serve as slaves.
The Koyukans then advanced
on the fort, where most of the inmates were yet asleep, and all were unconscious
of the impending danger. Derzhavin, who had just risen, was stabbed in the back
and fell dead without a struggle. Barnard, who was reading in bed, grasped his
gun and fired two shots, but each time the barrel was struck upward and the
balls lodged in the ceiling, whereupon he was stabbed in the stomach, his
intestines protruding from the wound. The workmen, who lived in a separate
building in which were two Russians and a few creoles, had now taken the alarm
and barricaded the door. Muskets were fired at the savages, but without effect,
and were answered by a flight of arrows. At length one of them fell, whereupon
the entire party at once took to flight, carrying with them their booty and
prisoners. A new fort surrounded with a stockade was built two or three years
later on the spot where it now stands, and within a hundred yards of it is a
cross that marks the resting-place of Barnard and Derzhavin.
In the following year a party of Kolosh destroyed the
buildings at the hot springs near the Ozerskoi redoubt.
The inmates were stripped of all that they possessed, even to their shirts, and
in this plight made their way across the mountains to the capital. In 1855 the Andreief station, south of Fort Michaielovsk,
was destroyed by Indians, two of the company’s servants being slaughtered. In
the same year an attack was made on Novo Arkhangelsk. The Sitkan Kolosh,
without apparent provocation, fell upon a sentry who was guarding the
wood-piles of the company and wounded him with spears. The governor demanded
the surrender of the guilty individuals, but was answered with threats. Two
cannon-shot were then fired, whereupon the savages made a rush for the fort and
began to chop down the palisade. A sharp fire of musketry and artillery was
opened on them, but without effect. Some tried to force themselves through the
embrasures; others broke in the door of a church, built outside the stockade
for the use of natives, and returned the fusillade from the windows. If the
Kolosh had been in possession of a few pieces of cannon, it is not improbable
that there might have been a repetition of’ the Sitka massacre. For two hours
they stood their ground, but after losing more than a hundred of their number,
were forced to capitulate and give hostages to the Russians. A strict
surveillance was thenceforth kept over the independent native tribes, and no
serious émeutes occurred.
After his return from the colonies, Tebenkof, who succeeded Etholen as governor, published, in 1852, an atlas, in which the results were exhibited
of all the explorations of the previous twelve years, together with many of
former periods. To mention the discoveries of all the exploring parties that
were despatched during the company’s third term would
serve but to tax the reader’s patience. More interesting are the operations of
the scientific corps that sailed from Stuart Island on the 17th of September,
1865, under the auspices of the Western Union Telegraph Company.
It was intended by the managers to build an overland
line to Europe through Alaska, across Bering Strait, and through Siberia by way
of the Amoor River. The cooperation of the Russian government was obtained, and
a party of explorers organized for making preliminary surveys on the American
continent and in Siberia. Captain C. S. Bulkley was appointed to superintend
the expedition, and for this purpose proceeded to Novo Arkhangelsk in the
spring of 1865. A steamer, three barks, and other craft were purchased for the
use of the members, and with the permission of the secretary of the treasury
several revenue officers participated in the enterprise. One vessel sailed for
British Columbia, the intention being to penetrate from the head waters of the
Frazer River to those of the Yukon; another to Novo Arkhangelsk, a third to
Fort Mikhaielovsk, and a fourth to the mouth of the Anadir River in Siberia. In the following year explorations
were continued; but in 1867, a few months after the first pole was raised, the
company, after having incurred an expense of three millions of dollars,
abandoned the enterprise and recalled its explorers, finding that the line
could not compete with the Atlantic cable. The details of their operations do
not concern the purposes of this volume, but we have some interesting
descriptions, which will be mentioned later, of the condition of the Russian
settlements, especially in the work of Dall, who was appointed director of the
scientific corps.
I shall venture also to give a brief extract from a
statement made in 1878 by Ferdinand Westdahl, who was employed to survey Norton
Sound and other points for the purpose of determining their exact position on
the company’s chart, and had not then heard of his recall: “We lay at
Unalakleet until February, when we went into the field and continued to work on
the line, putting up some 30 miles—the posts only—for we had no wire. The
country is a complete bog. If you dig down on the hills there two feet, you
strike ice. We dug three holes with crowbars. In many places we found snow 15
feet in depth to leeward of a hill. Our poles were on an average 15 feet long,
but on the leeward side we had to make them 24 feet long. We should have made
them all 24 or 30 feet long, but that the timber was too short. We dug them
three feet into the ground, which consists of frozen dirt. In summer when the
surface thawed, we found many of them, which we supposed to be very firmly
erected, entirely loose.
“The men were very contented. They were of course
exposed to severe cold, and we had the thermometer as low as 68° below zero,
but we did not suffer in the least. We were dressed in furs like Indians, and
slept in open camps. For rations we had only beans and graham flour. We also
obtained sealoil from the Indians, and sometimes
frozen fish. This was just the kind of food that we needed in such a climate.
When we started forth on journeys, we used to cook an entire sack of beans into
bean soup. Before it was entirely cold, we would pour it into a bag, let it
freeze, and take it with us. When we camped at night, we took out an axe,
chopped off a little, made our fire, and our supper was ready immediately.”
In 1860 the general administration of the Russian
American Company submitted to the minister of finance a draught of a new
charter, together with a request that the privileges be renewed for a further
term of twenty years, to commence from the 1st of January 1862.18 In the
following year Captain Golovnin was sent to Novo
Arkhangelsk, with instructions to make a thorough investigation into the
condition of the company’s affairs and report thereon to the government. His
report was in the main favorable, though suggesting many changes and containing
much adverse criticism. It was followed by a reply from the creole Kashevarof, exposing abuses which had hitherto been kept
secret; and the statements of the latter being indorsed by Baron Wrangell, the
government refused to renew the charter, except on such conditions as the
company was not willing to accept. In 1865 meetings of the imperial council
were held at which these conditions were determined, and in the same year they
were approved by the president and submitted to the general administration.
Some of them were extremely unpalatable, especially those requiring that the
Aleuts and other dependent tribes be exempt from enforced labor, and that all
the inhabitants of Russian America be allowed to engage, without distinction or
restriction, in whatever industry they preferred except that of fur-hunting.
After much intrigue, some concessions were obtained from government, and a
subsidy was even promised, but no satisfactory arrangement was made, though
negotiations were continued almost until the transfer of the territory to the
United States.
During the debates which occurred in congress on the
purchase question, and in the comments of the press on the same subject, it has
frequently been stated that, in 1866, the charter of the Russian American
Company was about to expire. It had already expired oil the 1st of January
1862, and about two years later Prince Maksutof, an
officer appointed by the imperial government, took charge of the company’s
affairs. That the renewal of the charter was contemplated, however, appears in
the following extract from a decision of the imperial council, confirmed by its
president, the grand duke Constantine, on April 2, 1866: “The company is
allowed to increase its working capital by the issue of new shares, but at the
final settlement of the company’s business, within twenty years hence or later,
all claims must be satisfied at the company’s expense, without assistance from
the government.”
Though the abuses mentioned by Kashevarof were no doubt sufficiently culpable, it would seem that the treatment of the
natives was somewhat less severe than during the two first terms of the
company’s existence. The number of Aleuts, which in 1840 had decreased, it will
be remembered, to 4,007, was in 1860 about 4,400, the entire Indian population
subject to the company having increased during the same time from about 5,400
to over 7,600. Meanwhile the Russian population had increased to 784, and the
creoles mustered nearly 1,700, the whole population of the colonies being about
12,000, a gain of more than 58 per cent since the census of 1841.
The increase in the native population was due in part
to their being better fed and housed than in former years. Though except for a
scant crop of vegetables raised chiefly at Kadiak, nearly all food supplies,
with the exception of fish and game, were imported, the company not only
supplied fair rations of flour, fish, sugar, tea, and other provisions to its
servants, but sold flour to them at a small fixed price, and often at a heavy
loss. Fish was of course the staple food, and was supplied to servants free of
charge, those who received less than 1,000 roubles a
year being allowed to draw each day their dole of bread and fish, of pease or gruel twice a week, of salt beef on holidays, and
of game when it was plentiful, from the public kitchen; while married men could
receive an equivalent in money. The Aleuts and others employed on hunting
expeditions also received a liberal supply of food and warm clothing, and were
allowed higher rates for their furs.
At the beginning of the company’s third term, rules
were established for the preservation of fur-bearing animals by a system of
alternation at the various hunting-grounds, those which were threatened with exhaustion
being allowed to lie undisturbed for a period of ten years. The increase which
occurred after this regulation in the number of fur-seals was remarkable,
especially at the Prybilof group. In 1851, 30,000
could be killed annually at St Paul Island alone, and in 1861 as many as
70,000, without fear of exhausting the supply. Between 1842 and 1861 shipments
of furs from the colonies included about 25,600 sea-otter, 338,600 fur-seal,
161,000 beaver, and 129,600 fox skins. It will be observed that these figures
show a considerable decrease from the quantity forwarded during the period
1821-1842. This was caused mainly by the encroachments of foreign traders, and
especially of American whaling-vessels, whose masters often touched at various
points in the Russian possessions during their voyage, and paid much higher
prices for furs than those fixed by the company’s tariff. Another reason was
the growth of intertribal traffic, clothing worn by the natives far in the
interior and made up by Aleutian women being bartered for small skins, oil, and
bone.
In 1826 Chistiakof wrote to
the directors, asking that an experienced whaler be sent to the colonies. No
further steps were taken in the matter until 1833, when an American named
Barton arrived at Novo Arkhangelsk, under a five-years contract to engage in
this industry, and to instruct the natives in harpooning and in rendering oil.
He met with little success, for the method employed by the Aleuts of shooting
the whales with spears or arrows, and waiting until the carcass was washed
ashore, was found easier and less dangerous. Moreover, the company had neither
funds nor vessels to spare for the active prosecution of this industry, as
trade with California and the Hawaiian Islands was now on a large scale, and severely
taxed the company’s resources. For several years, therefore, the
whale-fisheries were left in the hands of foreigners, since without the
cooperation of the Russian government the directors had no power to prevent
their intrusion.
In 1842 Etholen transmitted
a report from Captain Kadlikof, commanding the
company’s ship Naslednik Alexandr,
wherein the latter stated that he had spoken an American whaler north of the
Aleutian Islands, and had learned from the captain that he had sailed together
with 30 other whalers for Bering Sea. He also mentioned that, the preceding
year, he had been in the same waters with 50 other vessels, and that he alone
had killed 13 whales, yielding 1,600 barrels of oil. Upon this report Etholen based a request that the imperial government should
send armed cruisers for the preservation of Bering sea as a mare clausum. Etholen’s efforts were assisted by the board of
managers, but did not meet with immediate success, the minister for foreign
affairs replying that the treaty between Russia and the United States gave to
American citizens the right to engage in fishing over the whole extent of the
Pacific Ocean. Etholen, however, would not allow the
matter to rest, but continued his correspondence on the subject, urging that so
lucrative an industry should be placed in the hands of Russians, instead of
being left entirely to Americans.
The government at length referred the matter to a
committee, composed of officials of the navy department, who reported that the
cost of fitting out a cruiser for the protection of Bering Sea against foreign
whalers would be 200,000 roubles in silver, and the
cost of maintaining such a craft 85,000 roubles a
year. To this a recommendation was added that if the company were willing to
assume the expenditure, a cruiser should at once be placed at their disposal.
Though the directors would not consent to this outlay, complaints of the doings
of American whalers were forwarded from time to time, referring chiefly to the
practice of landing on the Aleutian Islands and other portions of the coast for
the purpose of trying out blubber, on which occasions a wanton destruction of
fuel took place, causing great hardship to the inhabitants, who depended
entirely on the scant supplies of drift-wood. It was not until 1850 that an
armed corvette was finally ordered to cruise in the north Pacific.
In the mean time Tebenkof took up the matter, and forwarded proposals to the company for the establishment
at various points of whaling stations, provided with whale-boats and improved
appliances, and in charge of experienced American whalers to be engaged by the
company for a term of years. In the year 1850 it was estimated that 300, and in
later years as many as 500 or 600 whalers annually visited the Arctic Ocean,
the Okhotsk and Bering seas, and Alaskan waters, carrying off the stores of
dried fish reserved for hunting parties, and bartering liquor, arms, and powder
with the natives for furs. In 1849 a whaling enterprise was established at Abo
under the name of the Russian Finland Whaling Company, with a capital of
200,000 roubles in silver, one half of which was furnished
by the Russian American Company. The corporation received from the government a
donation of 20,000 roubles, and a premium of 10,000 roubles each for the first four vessels equipped for this
purpose, and was permitted to import material, implements, and stores, and to
export its products, duty free, for a period of twelve years.
During the few years of the Russian Finland Whaling
Company’s existence, six vessels were fitted out, but the losses incurred and
the difficulty in selling cargoes during the war with England and France caused
the enterprise to prove unprofitable. In 1854 the shareholders resolved to go
into liquidation, and were enabled to settle their liabilities in full by a
special grant from the imperial treasury, made on account of losses incurred
during the war. Thus the whale fisheries were again left in the hands of
foreigners, who, before long, caused their entire destruction in the sea of
Okhotsk.
In consequence of the political complications then
arising in Europe, no successor was appointed at the close of Tebenkof’s administration in 1850, until four years later,
when Captain Voievodsky was elected governor. He was
succeeded in 1859 by the mining engineer Furuhelm,
the interval between Tebenkof and Voievodsky’s administrations being filled by the temporary appointment of lieutenants
Rosenburg and Rudakof, who managed the company’s
affairs during the first years of the Russo-Turkish war.
Notwithstanding some unfavorable features and the
interruption to trade caused by the war of 1853, there was a considerable
increase in dividends during the company’s last term, the amount disbursed
being about 10,210,000 roubles, a gain of nearly 17
per cent over the sum distributed in the previous twenty years. At the close of
the term the fixed and working capital of the company amounted to more than
13,600,000 roubles. The receipts from all sources
exceeded 75,770,000 roubles, of which amount over
23,755,300 was required for the support of the colonies, and nearly 11,366,000 roubles for the general administration, including, among
other items, pensions and rewards to officials and servants.
The entire amount received from sales of tea, which,
as in former years, was mainly purchased at Kiakhta and marketed in Russia, exceeded 27,000,000 roubles.
The profits on these transactions were greatly reduced when, on the application
of a few Moscow manufacturers, a rule was established that the company’s agents
should be required to accept Russian manufactured goods in part payment; the
more so as these were always of inferior quality. Between 1835 and 1841 the
company’s profits on each chest of tea were from 187 to 300 roubles;
in 1845 it was less than 23 roubles. The loss fell
entirely on the company, or more probably on the company’s servants. Two years
after permission was given to send cargoes of tea from Shanghai to Russia,
annual shipments were made of 4,000 chests; and yet cloths manufactured at Moscow
could be bought cheaper at Shanghai than in the former city.
The discovery of gold in California was of course
followed by a marked revival of trade with that country. One cargo of almost
worthless goods, that had been in the company’s storehouses for years, was diposed of in San Francisco at fabulous rates. Other
ventures were less successful, though most of them were profitable.3In 1851 a
party of San Francisco capitalists, among whom were Messrs Sanderson and J. Mora Moss, made a contract with Rosenberg for 250 tons of ice
to be shipped from Novo Arkhangelsk at $75 per ton. The shipment was made in
February 1852, and in October of the same year the price was reduced to $35 per
ton, and the quantity forwarded increased to 1,000 tons, a contract to this
effect being made for three years. Later the price was further reduced and the
quantity again increased. Between 1852 and 1859 there were shipped from Novo
Arkhangelsk 13,960 tons, and from Kadiak 7,403 tons. The ice was procured from
two lakes, one of them near Novo Arkhangelsk and the other on Wood Island, near
Kadiak, five buildings being erected for its storage with a total capacity of
12,000 tons. Rails were laid to connect the ice-houses with the wharves, these
being the first tracks constructed in Russian America.
CHAPTER XXVIII.
ALASKA AS A UNITED STATES COLONY.
1867-1883.
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