CHAPTER XXXIII.
ALASKA AS A CIVIL AND JUDICIAL DISTRICT.
1883-1885.
The little that is to be said as to the action of congress
concerning Alaska during the opening years of the present decade, and for
several previous years, may be summed up almost in ten words. Appropriations
were made for the salaries and expenses of agents at the fur-seal grounds, and,
as will presently appear, these salaries and expenses were voted with no niggard
hand. Yet, during the long period that had now elapsed since the purchase of
Russian America, petitions without number had been presented to congress,
asking for some form of civil government. At one time the few Russian residents
still remaining in Alaska were about to petition the tzar to secure for them
the privileges and immunities of citizens of the United States, as guaranteed
by the treaty. On another occasion the commander of a Russian man-of-war,
stationed on the Pacific coast, had determined to visit Sitka in order to
inquire into the condition of his countrymen, to whom had been granted neither
protection nor civil rights of any description. Each year the president of the
United States called attention to the matter, and almost every year resolutions
and bills were introduced in the senate for this purpose, but without result.
Most of them were tabled; a few were passed to committee, and all were
rejected. It was admitted that, as an abstract proposition, the Russians and
creoles of this Ultima Thule were entitled to protection; but abstract justice
was now somewhat out of date in congressional circles. Moreover, there were
many conflicting interests to be considered, some parties desiring that
settlement should be encouraged, and others wishing to retain as much of the
mainland as possible for a stock-farm, and being therefore opposed to any
legislation that would cause an influx of settlers, as was the case some thirty
years ago with the Hudson’s Bay Company in Vancouver Island and New Caledonia.
Meanwhile the outside world knew nothing of Alaska. During this interregnum, if
we may believe Major Morris, dozens of letters were addressed to the “United
States Consul at Sitka,” and many governors of states and territories sent
copies of their thanksgiving proclamations to the “Governor of Alaska
Territory,” years before that country enjoyed the presence of any such
official.
At length, on the 4th of December, 1883, Senator
Harrison introduced a bill to provide a civil government for Alaska, which,
with some amendments, passed both houses, receiving the president’s signature
on the 17th of May, 1884. Thus, after many years of waiting, this long-mooted
measure took effect.
By the provisions of what we will call the organic
act, Alaska was organized as a civil and judicial district, its seat being
temporarily established at Sitka. A governor was to be appointed, who should
perform generally such duties as belonged to the chief magistrate of a
territory, and make an annual report to the president of his official acts, of
the condition of the district with reference to its resources, industries, and
population, and of the administration of civil government therein, the
president having the power to confirm or annul any of his proceedings. A
district court was to be established, with the civil and criminal jurisdiction
of United States district and circuit courts, the judge to hold at least two
terms in each year—one at Sitka, beginning the first Monday in May, and the
other at Wrangell, beginning the first Monday in November—together with special
sessions as they might be required for the despatch of business, at such times and places as were deemed necessary. The clerk of
the court was to be ex officio secretary and treasurer of the district,
recorder of deeds, mortgages, certificates of mining claims, and contracts
relating to real estate, and also registrar of wills. A marshal was to be
appointed, having the general authority and powers of United States marshals,
with the right of appointing four deputies, who were to reside respectively in
the towns of Sitka, Wrangell, Unalaska, and Juneau, and to perform the duties
of constables under the laws of Oregon.
There were also to be appointed four commissioners,
one to reside in each of the four towns above mentioned, and having the
jurisdiction and powers of commissioners of United States circuit courts, together
with those conferred on justices of the peace under the laws of Oregon. They
were also to have jurisdiction, subject to the supervision of the district
judge, in all testamentary and probate matters, and for this purpose their
courts were to be opened at stated terms as courts of record. The general laws
of Oregon, as they were then in force, were to be the law of the district, so
far as they were applicable, and did not conflict with the provisions of the
act or with the laws of the United States. But the district court was to have
exclusive jurisdiction in all equity suits, in all capital criminal cases, and
in those involving questions of title to land or mining rights. In civil cases,
issues of fact might be determined by a jury at the request of either party,
and appeal lay from the decision of the commissioners to the district court, in
cases where the amount involved was $200 or more, and in criminal cases where
the sentence was imprisonment, or a fine exceeding $100.
Alaska was created a land district, with a United
States land-office, to be located at Sitka. The commissioner residing at that
point, the clerk, and the marshal were to hold office respectively as
registrar, receiver of public moneys, and surveyor-general of the district. The
laws of the United States relating to mining claims, and the rights incident thereto,
were to be in full force, subject to such regulations as might be made by the
secretary for the interior. Nothing contained in the act, however, was to be so
construed as to put in force within the district the general land laws of the
United States.
The governor, judge, district attorney, clerk, marshal,
and commissioners were to be appointed by the president, and to hold office for
four years, or until their successors were appointed. The salaries of the
governor and judge were to be each $3,000 a year, and of the district attorney,
clerk, and marshal each $2,500 a year. The commissioners were to receive the
fees usually pertaining to their office, and to justices of the peace in
Oregon, together with such fees for recording instruments as are allowed by
that state, and, in addition, a fixed salary of $1,000 a year. The deputy
marshals were to receive salaries of $750 a year, besides the usual fees of
constables in Oregon.
The attorney-general was directed at once to compile
and cause to be printed, in pamphlet form, so much of the laws of the United
States as was applicable to the duties of the several officials. The secretary
for the interior was ordered to select two of the officials to be appointed
under the act, who, with the governor, should constitute a commission “to
examine into and report upon the condition of the Indians residing in said
territory, what lands, if any, should be reserved for their use, what provision
shall be made for their education, what rights of occupation by settlers
should be recognized,” and other matters that might enable congress to
determine the limitations and conditions to be imposed when the land laws of
the United States should be extended to the district. He was also required to
make temporary provision for the education of all children of school age
without regard to race, until a permanent school system should be established,
and for this purpose the sum of $25,000 was appropriated. Finally the
manufacture, importation, and sale of intoxicating liquors, except for
medicinal, mechanical, and scientific purposes, were forbidden, under the
penalties provided in the revised statutes of the United States.
As a land purchase, Alaska had thus far proved a paying
investment, though still undeveloped; and yet it was but a phantom of a
government which congress now somewhat reluctantly bestowed upon it, a
government without representative institutions, or the privilege of sending a
delegate to congress. Meanwhile Russians, creoles, and Americans, who, year by
year, had become more dissatisfied with the shadow of republican
administration, expressed their contempt in no measured phrase for the dilatory
action of the national legislature. Thankful for small mercies, however, they
still waited and hoped, believing that south-eastern Alaska would, even in
their generation, contain settlers enough to warrant the erection of a
territory, though phantom rule might yet prevail in the unpeopled solitudes of
the north. At least one step was gained, now that the drear interregnum of
military occupation or revenue-cutter rule, in the land which the
attorney-general declared to be Indian territory, had given place to the
semblance of civil law.
As to the condition, training, and proposed reservations
for Indians mentioned somewhat neatly in the text of the act, it is probable
that the natives would be only too glad to be left alone as severely in the future
as they have been in the past. Considering that they received no portion of the
purchase money of their native soil, and, as yet, have reaped no benefit from
that purchase, save the art of manufacturing hootchenoo,
it would appear that this favor might at least be conceded. After the close of
the military occupation, Indian outbreaks were of rare occurrence, as I have
already mentioned, and in almost every instance were provoked by the misconduct
of the white population. What will be the result should they be placed on
reservations, and under such treatment as seems in store for them, is a
question that the future may solve. At present they are the most contented of
all the native tribes under American domination.
In considering the other provisions of the Harrison
bill, it must be admitted that in one respect they were most liberal. For the
salaries of the government officials of Alaska, with its handful of white
inhabitants, there was appropriated, in 1884, the sum of $20,500, while for
each of the territories of Washington, Wyoming, Idaho, Montana, and New Mexico
the appropriation for the same purpose was less than $14,000. Moreover, there
were appointed, ostensibly for the protection of the seal fisheries of Alaska,
four government agents, whose joint salaries and expenses amounted for this
year to $13,350, the chief agent receiving a larger stipend than fell to the
share of the governor; and to enable the secretary of the treasury to use
revenue steamers “for the protection of the interests of government,” was voted
a further sum of $15,000. But outside of the seal islands the government had no
interests to protect, for, as we have seen, apart from the rent and royalty
paid for these islands, the income derived from the entire district was
altogether inappreciable.
Thus we have, as the expenses of the so-called
government of this district, an appropriation for the year of 1884 of about
$50,000, or nearly four times the amount voted for any territory in the union,
and this for the salaries and allowances of less than a score of officials,
four of whom receive the lion’s share for keeping watch over the Prybilof Islands, and whose operations have as yet resulted
merely in finding of one slight
discrepancy in the tale of skins, and that due to the mistake of one of the
agents. After all, it is a far-away country, and government could well enough
afford to be liberal. Nevertheless, why it is that the services of four highly
paid agents and of a revenue-cutter should be at all needed in counting the
tale of skins has never yet been explained. It would appear that such
surveillance is wasted on a company which has paid within the past fifteen
years about the sum of $5,000,000 into the United States treasury, and that,
too, when it is directly against the interests of the company to slaughter more
than the prescribed number of fur-seals. Concerning the duties of these agents,
however, the statute is singularly reticent. Alaska has been usually regarded
by government servants as a place in which to save money, wear out old clothes,
and as there were no amusements, no newspapers, and but a single monthly mail,
to study fortitude in the endurance of their high honors, and to show
themselves indeed patriots on small pay.
The appropriation of $25,000 for educational purposes
has thus far been of no practical benefit, for, as with the one of double that
amount made some years before, it seemed no one’s business to administer it. No
public schools were established as contemplated by the provisions of the act,
and up to the close of 1884 neither reports nor suggestions had been made as to
the disposition of the fund. In July 1884 a further sum of $15,000 was
appropriated by congress for the support and education of Indian children of
both sexes at industrial schools. In this matter action was at length taken,
though of a somewhat negative character. Through Mr Kendall, the presbyterian board of missions at Sitka applied for a portion of
the fund. On the recommendation of the commissioner for Indian affairs, the
application was granted, and a contract was made with the society to provide
for and educate one hundred children at the rate of $120 a year per capita,
such contract to be annulled at two months’ notice.
Within less than a decade more has been done by this
society to advance the cause of education in Alaska than was otherwise
accomplished during all the years of American domination. Were it not for the
efforts of the board of missions, there would probably have been no efficient
school, and perhaps no school of any kind, in the territory, apart from those
maintained by the Alaska Commercial Company.
It is claimed that the natives are quick to learn and
eager to be taught, not from any moral sense, for, excepting perhaps the
Chinese, there is no living nation in which the moral idea is so utterly
dormant, but because they appreciate the practical benefit of an education. At
the school maintained by the Alaska Commercial Company at St Paul Island, one
of the pupils displayed such zeal and ability that he was sent at the expense
of the company to complete his education at the state normal academy in
Massachusetts, and after completing his five years’ course with credit, was
placed in charge of the schools at the Seal Islands.
In the autumn of 1884 the officials who had been
appointed by the president reached their several stations. John II Kinkead,
ex-governor of Nevada, who had formerly resided at Sitka as merchant and
postmaster, was chief magistrate; Ward McAllister, district judge; E. W.
Haskell, district attorney; Andrew T. Lewis, clerk of court; M. C. Hilly er,
marshal; and as commissioners, John G. Brady at Sitka, Henry States at Juneau,
George P. Ihrie at Wrangell, and Chester Seeber at Unalaska.
On the 1st of October, 1884, some three weeks after
his arrival, Governor Kinkead made his report to the president. On the 15th of
September the commander of the United States naval forces relinquished to him
all civil authority, his duties in that direction being now at an end. The
complete organization of the civil government was delayed for a time by the
absence of the district judge and the commissioner for Sitka, the former being
detained at San Francisco through illness. Meanwhile the board of Indian
commissioners assumed judicial authority, settling disputes to the satisfaction
of the parties interested. The governor expressed the opinion that mining bade
fair to rank foremost among the resources of the territory, and that within the
next decade the output of precious metals in Alaska would form no unimportant
factor in the finances of the general government. This industry has languished,
he says, mainly for the reason that no title to mining lands, other than that
of force, has thus far been recognized. For the same reason the grazing and
agricultural capabilities of the territory, which he considered full of
promise, were yet undeveloped. He urged that timber tracts, building-lots,
agricultural areas, and mining lands be made subject to legal titles, for, without
such titles, the progress of settlement must be slow and uncertain.
He recommended, also, that mail facilities be
increased. There should be at least semi-monthly communication with Port Townsend, and a
monthly mail-steamer should run between Sitka and Unalaska, touching at several
intervening ports. The distance between these ports is twelve hundred miles,
but as there is no direct communication, persons wishing to avail themselves of
the district court tribunal established at the capital must travel by way of
San Francisco, and return by the same route, the entire journey being nearly
eight thousand miles. The districts of Kadiak and Kenaï, which were altogether
ignored in the organic act, should be placed under the protection of the civil
authority; for in those districts were several hundred Russians and creoles,
who were peaceable, industrious, and eager to share in the benefits of American
progress.
The customs service could not be efficiently carried
on with the means then at command. For this purpose it was necessary that at
least one revenue-cutter should be constantly employed in cruising among the
channels and inlets of the coast. At this time illicit traffic prevailed in
many portions of the territory. The boundary line between the Portland canal
and Mount St Elias should be speedily and definitely settled by a joint survey
of the British and American governments, for several of the highways leading
into British Columbia lie partly within the limits of Alaska, among them being
the one leading to the Stikeen River mines.
On the subject of education the governor remarked that
Alaska was entirely without schools for white children, the missionary schools
being attended only by natives. The former were growing up in total ignorance,
though their parents were most anxious to give them education, and would gladly
pay for the services of teachers.
Finally, with regard to traffic in spirituous liquor,
he stated that the military commander of the division of the Pacific had the
right to grant permits for its introduction into the territory. Whether, or to
what extent, the commander exercised that power, he was not aware; but, with or
without permission, a very large quantity of liquor found its way into Alaska.
The law forbade its introduction, except for certain purposes, but did not
forbid its sale after it was introduced, and liquor was openly sold in all the
principal settlements; though, on account of the severe penalties enforced by
the naval and customs authorities, little of it was disposed of among the
natives. The utmost vigilance on the part of officials could not entirely
prevent this traffic, for countless devices were practised whereby the law was evaded; but in order to regulate it, the governor
suggested the appointment of an executive council, with full power to act in
the matter. He also recommended that saloon-keepers, tradesmen, and others
should contribute, by a license, tax, or otherwise, to the support of
government, paying at least enough to maintain the police and to keep the
streets and sidewalks in repair.
It will be observed that, while the governor made some
excellent suggestions as to what congress ought to do, he said nothing about
what he himself intended to do. As ruler of a country so vast in extent, and
containing such varied and conflicting interests, he was necessarily intrusted with discretionary powers. He appears to have
fully understood the needs of the country, and had he continued in power, it is
not improbable that he might have made some effort to supply them. He did not
remain long enough in the territory, however, to frame any important measures,
or at least to carry them into effect, although it was provided in the organic
act that he should reside within the district during his term of office.
A few weeks after the inauguration of President
Cleveland, Kinkead was requested to send in his resignation, A. P. Swineford of
Michigan being appointed in his stead on the 9th of May, 1885.
In the exploration of the interior of Alaska and the
survey of its coasts, bays, and rivers, considerable progress has been made
during recent years, considering the immense area to be explored. Numerous
expeditions have been undertaken in addition to those mentioned in a previous
chapter, and many charts have been published, some of them valuable, and others
so utterly worthless that the captain who should follow them would run his
vessel at various points into the mountains of the mainland. Reports without
number have been made by navigators as to the difficulties encountered among
these intricate channels and dangerous harbors, but no reliable charts of the
entire coast have as yet been made.
In the summer of 1883 Lieutenant Schwatka and six
others traversed the upper Yukon by raft from its source to Port Selkirk, a
distance of about five hundred miles, their object being to gather information
as to the Indian tribes of that region, and for geographical exploration. The
middle Yukon, as far as the junction of that river with the Porcupine, and the
lower Yukon, extending from this point to the delta, had already been explored,
as we have seen, by the servants of the Russian American Company, who
occasionally ascended the stream from the direction of St Michael sometimes
possibly as far as the present site of Port Reliance, and thence made their way
partly overland to the Lynn canal. In the summer of 1883 the lieutenant set
forth to explore the river from its source to its mouth, the basin of the upper
Yukon being, as he thought, a terra incognita.
Leaving Chilkat on the 7th
of June with thirteen canoes towed by a steam-launch belonging to the Northwest
Trading Company, he passed through the Lynn canal and the Chilkoot Inlet,
arriving at the mouth of a swift-running stream, some ninety feet in width,
called by the Indians the Dayay. Here he took leave of the launch, and at this
point, as he claims, his exploration commenced, though in fact he was on ground
perfectly familiar to the Russians, even in the days of Baranof. Reaching the
head of navigation on the 10th, the canoes were unloaded and their three or
four tons of freight packed on the backs of seventy Indians, the party
reaching, the same night, the head waters of the stream, under banks of snow,
and at the foot of a pass about three thousand feet in height, which the
lieutenant named Perrier Pass, and where, he says, “long finger-like glaciers
of clear blue ice extended down the granite gulches to our very level.”
The ascent was a difficult one and not unattended with
danger. In places the mountain side appeared almost perpendicular, and a few
stunted juniper roots protruding through a thin covering of snow afforded the
only support. The footsteps of the guides were turned inward and planted deep,
thus giving a firm hold, and the remainder followed in their tracks, some of
them using rough alpen-stocks, for the least slip
would have dashed them down the precipitous slope hundreds of feet into the
valley below. Arriving at the summit without mishap, the party found themselves
in a drifting fog, such as many of my readers may have observed hanging in
summer for days at a time over Snowdon or Ben Nevis, both of which mountains
are but three or four degrees south of the point where they now stood.
Descending the pass, the lieutenant afterward came in sight of two large lakes
connected by a channel about a mile in length, and which he named lakes
Lindermann and Bennett.
On the shore of the latter he built his raft, some
fifteen by forty feet, with decks fore and aft, space being left for oars at
the bow, stern, and sides, so that when laden it could be pulled in still water
at a rate of more than half a mile an hour. Behind the forward deck was hoisted
a nine-foot mast, a wall-tent serving for a sail, and for a yard its
ridge-pole, while the projecting logs that supported the deck were used as
belaying-pins. In this strange craft, built in the ice-cold water of the lake,
the lieutenant launched forth on the morning of the 19th of June on his exploration
of the upper Yukon.
The outset of the voyage was by no means propitious.
The wind at first blew gently from the south, and hoisting sail, he made from
two to three miles an hour; but the wind freshened into a gale and the gale
increased to a cyclone, threatening to carry away the mast, while the waves
swept the frail bark fore and aft, deluging ah on board, so that rowing became
impossible.
On the following afternoon the party reached the
northern end of Lake Bennett, and thence, without special adventure, made their
way, by the route known as the Indian portage, to a point which Schwatka terms
the grand canon of the Yukon, where are rapids some five miles in length, in
places shoal and dangerous even for the navigation of a canoe. At first the
waters pour in troubled foam between basaltic pillars, about seventy feet
apart, then widen into a basin filled with eddies and whirlpools, and again pass
through a second canon, almost the counterpart of the first. Thus the river
flows onward for several miles, after which it narrows almost into a cascade,
less than thirty feet wide, and with waves running five feet high. So swift and
turbulent is the stream at this point, that, as the lieutenant relates, its
waters dash up the banks on either side, falling back in solid sheets into the
seething caldron below.
Stationing a few men below the cascade to render
assistance, as the raft shot past them, Schwatka turned its head toward the
outlet of the grand canon of the Yukon, through which he passed.
The party had now overcome their greatest difficulties.
Repairing the raft, on the 5th of July they passed the mouth of the Tahkeena River, and thence, without further incident worthy
of note, voyaged down the stream to Fort Selkirk, completing the journey mainly
by raft down the middle and lower Yukon, and thence proceeded to St Michael,
where they were met by the revenue-cutter Corwin.
In 1884 and 1885 several expeditions were undertaken
by order of General Miles, then in charge of the department of the Columbia, which
includes Alaska. In February of the former year Doctor Everette set forth from
Vancouver Barracks for the purpose of exploring a portion of the Yukon, and the
section of territory near the head of Copper River. Procuring Indian guides at
Juneau, he proceeded to Chilkat, and there remained
for three months, studying the language of the tribe. Thence, reaching the head
waters of the Yukon by way of the Lynn canal and the Dayay River, following
about the same route as was taken by Schwatka’s party in 1883, he voyaged down
the stream, in a boat of his own construction, as far as the first fur-trading
station. Here he awaited the arrival of the steamer from the Bering Sea, and
being abandoned by his pack Indians, and unable to obtain a supply of
provisions for winter use, he had no alternative but to complete his journey
onboard that vessel, arriving at St Michael during the autumn, and reaching
San Francisco on the 29th of August, 1885. .
Thus, as he claims, Doctor Everette made a running
survey of the entire stream, from which, and from the information furnished by
fur-traders, he prepared charts of the river, of his route, extending over
twenty-six hundred miles, of the Yukon Lake system, of the greater portion of
the Tennanah River, of the entire Kuskokvim River, and of many smaller streams in a region which had not yet been explored
except by fur-traders, together with itineraries on a tabulated scale,
accompanying the charts and showing every point of interest between Chilkat and St Michael. The doctor also states that he
collected statistics concerning all the explorations made on the Yukon since
the year 1865, together with a mass of information setting forth the name,
occupation, date of arrival and departure of every missionary, miner, and
trader who had been on the Yukon since the date of the transfer. Finally, he
collected the dialects of all the leading tribes in Alaska, from Chilkat through the interior to St Michael, thence north to
Kotzebue Sound, and from that point south ward to the Aleutian Archipelago.
In the summer of 1885 the Corwin was again employed
in explorations on the Alaskan coast, and it was proposed that her trip should
extend as far northward as Kotzebue Sound. At Chatham Inlet Lieutenant Caldwell
was sent to explore the Kowak River as far, if
possible, as its head waters, and a second expedition, in charge of Engineer
Lonegan, was ordered to explore the Noyataz. In the
spring of 1885 Lieutenant Stoney, Ensign Purcell, Engineer Zane, Surgeon Nash,
and some ten others, set forth to explore the Putnam River on board the
schooner Viking, a steam-launch, having been built for that purpose at Mare
Island. Procuring Indian guides and dogs at St Michael, where they arrived
after a tedious voyage caused by light and contrary winds, they proceeded to St
Lawrence Bay, and there obtained a supply of furs and warm clothing. The season
was an open one, St Michael being clear of ice at the end of May, and it was
hoped that at least two hundred and fifty miles of the stream could be explored
before the expedition went into winter quarters about the 1st of October, after
which the work of exploration was to be carried on by means of sledges. When
the launch could proceed no farther she was to be employed in conveying
provisions for the winter camp, and her engines and boilers were afterward to
be used in running a saw-mill, by which timber could be cut for the
construction of frame houses. In May 1886 Captain Stoney proposed to descend
the river, returning to San Francisco in the autumn of that year.
During recent years frequent explorations of the
interior have been made by mining prospectors, especially in the direction of
the Yukon River and its tributaries. In 1878 and 1880 parties left for the head
waters of that stream, and through the influence brought to bear by Captain
Beardslee of the Jamestown were kindly received by the Chilkats, who, being assured that they would not interfere
with their fur trade, guided them through their territory, indications of gold
and large gravel deposits being discovered. In 1882 a band of forty-five
prospectors from Arizona left Juneau for the same point, and returning in the
autumn, reported discoveries of gold, silver, nickel, copper, and coal in the
district between the Lewis and Copper rivers. During this year three
prospectors proceeded to the mouth of Stewart River, which they ascended in
canoes for two hundred miles. They found navigation somewhat easy, there being
stretches of 100 miles where no portage was needed, and none of the portages
exceeding half a mile. During their trip they examined more than a hundred
streams, in all of which gold was discovered, though the ground and even the
beds of streams where was running water were frozen. Hence, they said, it was
impossible to work the deposits; but the fact that one of the party proceeded
to San Francisco to purchase a schooner and load it with miners’ supplies for
that quarter would seem to indicate that this was not the case. Between 1880
and 1883 more than two hundred prospectors visited the Yukon district, the Chilkats keeping control of the travel, and charging six to
ten dollars for each hundred pounds of baggage conveyed over the portage
between the river and the lakes.
The maps of the upper Yukon district made since the
purchase have not changed materially the charts made by the Russians. Among
them is one prepared by a native named Kloh-Kutz for Professor Davidson, which
has been made the basis for an official chart. From the maps and publications
of two doctors of the names of Krause, belonging to the geographical society of
Bremen, who recently explored the neighborhood of the Yukon portages, the coast
survey has gathered information of considerable value.
The Takoo mines, and especially those in the neighborhood
of Harrisburg, or Juneau, and the quartz veins on Douglas Island, have
attracted the most attention within recent years, and are the only districts
that require further mention. The bars and shores of Takoo River have been
searched for miles beyond the Takoo Inlet, and in most of the adjacent streams
fine gold has been discovered, carried down by the glaciers that now lie amid
the ravines and fiords of this region.
In 1879 Professor Muir expressed his belief that
valuable quartz leads would be found on the mainland east of Baranof Island,
and that the true mineral belt would follow the trend of the shore. His
prediction was soon verified. In the following autumn a prospecting party left
Sitka in charge of Joseph Juneau and Richard Harris, and encamping on the
present site of the town of Juneau, followed up a large creek which discharges
into the channel near that point. Here they found rich placers and several
promising ledges. On their return to Sitka, with sacks full of specimens, a
rush was made for this district, and during the winter a camp was established,
which afterward developed into a town, among its inhabitants being a number of
miners from Arizona and British Columbia. From the placers in this neighborhood
it is estimated that about $300,000 had been obtained up to the close of 1883.
The correct figures, however, cannot be ascertained even approximately, for, on
account of the heavy express charges, many of the miners, proceeding to
Wrangell, Victoria, San Francisco, or wherever they pass the winter, carry with
them their own gold-dust. In 1884 the surface deposits showed signs of
exhaustion, and many of the claims were abandoned, though some that were still
partially worked yielded fair returns. Meanwhile prospecting was continued, and
tunnels, run a short distance into several quartz ledges, disclosed a moderate
amount of low-grade gold ore, but nothing that, under existing conditions,
would pay for working.
In 1885 the most prominent mine in Alaska, and one of
the most prominent on the Pacific coast, was the Treadwell, or as it is now
usually termed, the Paris lode, at Douglas Island, discovered and recorded in
May 1881, and deeded in November of that year to Mr John Treadwell. The property was afterward transferred to an incorporation
styled the Alaska Mill and Mining Company, of which, in 1885, Mr Treadwell was superintendent, and under whose direction
$400,000 had been expended on the development of the property. The results,
however, fully justified the outlay.
A short time after the company took possession of its
property two tunnels were run into the ledge, and thence and from the surface
ore was extracted and worked in a five-stamp mill, for the purpose of
thoroughly testing the mine. The returns being satisfactory, a third tunnel
was run, at a vertical depth of 250 feet. An uprise of 275 feet at the
foot-wall, having been made to the surface, is now used for an ore chute. The
width of the ledge was found to be 450 feet, the ore-body averaging $8.50 per
ton in free gold and five per cent of sulphurets, with an assay value of $100
per ton. Thereupon the company decided to erect a 120 stamp mill, with a
capacity of 300 tons per day, and with 48 True concentrators and 24 Challenge
ore-feeders, the mill being completed in the summer of 1885. Between June 19th
and September 19th of that year the aggregate yield amounted to $156,000,43
though for various reasons, the principal one being an unusually dry season,
and the fact that during the summer the snow and ice disappeared altogether
from the neighboring mountains, the mill stood idle for one third of this
period. about the close of 1885, or early in the following year, the
superintendent proposed to erect two additional furnaces, and to place electric
lights in the mine, mill, and surrounding works.
Adjoining the Paris ledge, and a continuation of the
same vein, was the Bear ledge, believed to be also a valuable property, though
as yet the latter has been but little developed. Elsewhere among the mountains
that ridge Douglas Island from end to end are quartz lodes innumerable, some of
which seem promising enough to warrant the investment of capital. That the most
permanent mines so far discovered in Alaska should be found on an island—the
island surveyed by Vancouver more than ninety years ago—is somewhat of an
anomaly in mining annals; but Alaska, with her inland seas, her glaciers, her
midnight suns in midsummer, her phantom auroras in midwinter, and her phantom
government at all seasons of the year, is the land of anomalies.
At present it may be said that the mining interests of
Alaska are mainly centred in Douglas Island.
Elsewhere there may be large deposits of ore, but none of them have yet been
extensively worked. Those in northern and central Alaska are too remote to be
made available, and the lodes discovered near Sitka have proved of little value,
the gold-bearing ore being of low grade and the veins broken in formation. In a
country where travel is difficult and the cost of transportation excessive,
only those mines can be made to pay which are situated near the coast, unless
they be exceptionally rich. Moreover, on account of the forests and the dense
growth of moss which hide the surface, Alaska is a very difficult country to
prospect. As a rule, outcroppings are rarely found, and leads are usually
discovered by following float ore and tracing it up stream to the main body.
That the territory will, however, at some future date, contain a not inconsiderable
mining population, is almost beyond a peradventure. Provisions are much cheaper
than in most of the mining districts of British Columbia, and fish and game can
be had for nothing. The main drawback appears to be that in Alaska miners are
not content with such earnings as would elsewhere be considered a reasonable
return for their labor.
Concerning the fisheries of Alaska, a few items remain
to be added to those which have been already mentioned. The cannery established
by Cutting and Company, at Kasiloff River, on Cook
Inlet, in 1882, has been fairly successful, considering the difficulty in
establishing a new enterprise of this description, the pack, after the first
year, averaging some 20,000 cases. The varieties packed are the king salmon,
the silver salmon, and what is known as the red fish, the last being similar to
the red salmon of the Fraser River. The Kasiloff is
not a navigable stream, its source being a lake about twenty miles from its
outlet. Vessels freighted with goods for the cannery, or waiting for the
season’s pack, are compelled to lie in an open roadstead, where there is a
heavy fall and rise of the tide. Notwithstanding this drawback, however, the
firm is satisfied with results so far, considering the depressed condition of
the market. The Alaska Salmon Packing and Fur Company, at Naha Bay, has also
been measurably successful, though in 1885 the pack was only of salt salmon. At
that date there were two other canneries in operation, one at Bristol Bay,
named the Arctic Packing Company, and the other at Karluk on Kadiak Island, the
pack of the latter for 1885 being about 36,000 cases.
The total pack of Alaska salmon was estimated for the
year 1885 at about 65,000 cases, and the fact that, in the face of extremely
low prices, this industry has not only held its own, but increased
considerably, while on the Columbia there has been a considerable decrease in
the output, is significant of its future success. Thus far, however, profits
have been very light. The amount of capital needed to establish and conduct the
business is disproportionately large. Payments for material must be made at
least four or five months before the product is laid down in San Francisco or
in other markets, and it is found necessary to carry a large surplus stock of
stores. The cost of the passage of employes is paid at all the Alaska
canneries, together with their wages while journeying to and fro; and the repair of machinery is an unusually expensive
item. The prospects of the business depend, of course, mainly on the
continuance of heavy runs of fish on the Columbia River, and it is stated that
the enormous catch year by year has already begun to tell very seriously on the
run. The supply of salmon in the waters of Alaska is practically unlimited, and
it is probable that the take is more than offset by the destruction of
fur-seals, which devour the food-fish that frequent her shores, as salmon,
smelt, and mackerel, each one consuming, it is said, no less than sixty pounds
a day.
At Killisnoo, on the island
of Kenashoo, originally a whaling-station, the
Northwest Trading Company had, in 1885, a large establishment where codfish
were dried, and herring and dog-fish oil, and fish guano manufactured. Large
warehouses and works were built, near which was a village of Indians employed
as fishermen, and receiving two cents apiece for the catch of codfish, boats
being provided by the company. About $100,000 was invested in this enterprise,
the oil-works alone having cost $70,000. The cod in these waters average about
four pounds in weight, and as many as eight thousand are sometimes taken in a
single day, producing about fifteen hundred boxes of the dried fish. Of
herring, as many as five hundred barrels are occasionally caught at a single
haul of the seine, each barrel yielding about three gallons of oil.
Thus it would appear that the fisheries of Alaska
alone might furnish the basis of a considerable commerce; but under such
conditions as now exist in that district, there is little field for commercial
or industrial .enterprise, and it may be said that commerce, in its legitimate
sense, does not exist. Imports of duty-paying goods, which, as I have said, for
the twelve months ending March 1, 1878, were $3,295, amounted, for the fiscal
year ending June 30, 1882, to $8,484; and meanwhile domestic exports showed a
slight increase. For the latter year, if we can believe official reports, the
entire foreign trade was with British Columbia, though, during that year,
fifteen American vessels, with an aggregate measurement of 9,461 tons, and
twenty-nine foreign vessels of 8,073 tons, entered Alaskan ports, while the
clearances were twelve American vessels of 8,993 tons, and twenty-nine foreign
vessels of 8,156 tons. Meanwhile the ship-building industry had fallen somewhat
into decadence. In 1882 there was built a single vessel, probably a
fishing-smack, with a measurement of 6.43 tons—somewhat of a contrast, compared
with the days of the Russian American Company, when, as we have seen, a fleet
of sea-going ships was launched in Alaskan waters.
A country where there is no commerce, where there are
few industries, where there are no schools except those supported by charity,
where no title can be had to land, where there are no representative
institutions and no settled administration, and where the rainfall is from five
to eight feet a year, does not, of course, hold out any very strong inducements
to settlers. Of 690 persons who arrived at Alaskan ports during the year ending
June 30, 1880, 583 were merely passengers, the remaining 107 being miners from
British Columbia. For the year ending June 30, 1882, matters were still worse,
the total arrivals mustering only 27, of whom 17 were miners, while the
departures for that year were 387.55 These, however, are merely the returns
forwarded from the customs districts, and I give them for what they are worth.
While Alaska remains, as it is today, little more than
a customs district, though in name a civil and judicial district, no better
results need be anticipated. If it should happen that in the year 1890, when
the lease of the Alaska Commercial Company expires, its privileges be divided, then
there would doubtless be a considerable influx of population; but whether such
influx would, under present conditions, be of benefit to the territory or to
the United States is a somewhat doubtful question. Laying aside, however, the
comments of the press, and of disappointed political adventurers, it would seem
to an impartial observer that the claims of the company are not altogether
unworthy of recognition. Leasing a few leagues of rock, hanging almost midway between
the continents, they have, while making larger returns to stockholders year by
year than were made by the Russian American Company in a decade, paid over to
the United States almost the face of the purchase money, and by their
forethought and business tact furnished, though perhaps incidentally, means
for wasteful extravagance in other sections of the territory. It is probable
that the lessees of the Prybilof Islands were at
first no less sorely disappointed with their bargain than were the purchasers
of the Treadwell lode, and it is almost certain that in neither instance did
the parties foresee the difficulties that lay before them. The fact that they
have confronted and overcome those difficulties, and while doing so have laid
bare some of the resources of Alaska, is one that needs not be pleaded against
them.
What there is to be pleaded against them, save perhaps
their success as a business association—the fact that in 1885 they gathered
nine tenths of the world’s supply of sea-otter skins and three fourths of its
supply of fur-seal skins, their chain of posts extending from Kamchatka far
inland to the wilderness on the purchase of which the secretary of state was
accused of wasting $7,200,000; that when they entered upon this business
seal-skins were barely salable at a dollar, and have since found a ready market
at from twelve to twenty dollars—the reader will judge for himself from the
statements that I have laid before him.
Excepting, perhaps, Mr Seward, none whose names are known in Alaskan annals provoked about the year
1870 so much of cheap ridicule as did the firm that now controls the seal
islands. “What, Mr Seward,” asked a friend, “do you
consider the most important measure of your political career?” “The purchase of
Alaska,” he replied; “but it will take the people a generation to find it out.”