CREATION OF THE UNIVERSE ACCORDING GENESIS |
CHAPTER VII.
FURTHER
ADVENTURES OF THE PROMYSHLENIKI.
1760-1767.
The first vessel which sailed to the
Aleutian Islands under protection of a special imperial oukaz was the Andreian i Natalia, owned and commanded by Andrei Tolstykh,
a man of courage and perseverance, who during his three previous voyages had
amassed some fortune, and concluded to adventure it on this turn.
The Andreian i Natalia left Kamchatka the 27th of September 1760. In two days Hering
Island was reached, when in accordance with custom the ship was hauled up for
the winter. In the June following Tolstykh again put
to sea, steering at first southerly, then northward, arriving at Attoo Island the 5th of August. Three vessels were there
trading, belonging respectively to Chebaievski, Postnikof, and Trapeznikof. Tolstykh had hoped to find the friendly chief Tunulgasan, whom he had met before, but the aboriginal had
died, and his successor, Bakutun, told the newcomers
that there were too many Russians on his island already, and they might as well
pass on, but appeased with presents the monarch finally gave Tolstykh some of his own relatives as hostages, who were
also to serve as interpreters and guides to other islands. After a sojourn of
two weeks the vessel continued to the eastward, and on the 28th of August
reached an island which was subsequently ascertained to be Adakh.
There
was every indication of multitudes of seaotters in this vicinity, and as soon
as a convenient harbor had been found all hands were set to work on Adakh and the adjoining island of Kanaga. Parties were also despatched to other islands as far eastward as Atkha and Amlia, meeting
everywhere a friendly reception. After a stay on these islands, subsequently
named after him the Andreianovski, of nearly three
years, Tolstykh collected quite a valuable cargo of
furs, and finally started homeward on the 14th of June 1764. He stopped at Attoo Island to land his interpreters and repair his
vessel, which was leaking badly. Some shipwrecked Russians were also taken on
board, and on the 27th of August the Andreian i Natalia took her final departure for Kamchatka.
On the 4th day of September the coast was sighted, but Tolstykh lost his vessel in attempting to weather the cape of Kamchatka. He succeeded,
however, in saving both crew and cargo.
As Tolstykh and Vassiutkinski claimed to have persuaded the inhabitants of six islands to become subjects of
Russia and to pay tribute, the voyage was duly reported to the empress, who
subsequently rewarded Tolstykh and the two Cossacks.
One
vessel was despatched to the islands in 1760, but our
information concerning it is meagre. It was built and fitted out under the
auspices of the merchant Terentiy Chebaievski, and
under the immediate superintendence of his clerk Vassili Popof.
Berg claims to have found a notice in the papers of Zelonski to the effect that Chebaievski’s vessel returned in
1763 with a cargo valued at 104,218 rubles.
A
plan had been formed by this combination of wealthy merchants for making a
thorough examination of the Aleutian chain and the adjoining continent, and
then to decide upon the most favorable locality for opening operations on a
larger scale. The object of the expedition was well conceived and deserving of
success, but a chain of unfortunate circumstances combined to frustrate their
designs. Three of the ships fitted out by the partners were destroyed with all
on board, and the fourth returned without even paying expenses. We have the
names of only two of the three vessels destroyed, the Zakhar i Elizaveta commanded by Drushinnin,
owned by Kulkof, and the Sv Troitska, or Holy Trinity, commanded by Ivan
Korovin. The third is known to have been commanded by Medvedef,
a master in the navy. The fourth vessel was the property of Trapeznikof,
but who commanded her is not known.
The Zakhar i Elizaveta sailed from Okhotsk the 6th of September 1762, wintered at Avatcha Bay, and proceeding the following July reached Attoo,
where seven of the shipwrecked crew of the Sv Petr i Sv Pavel were
taken on board. One of these was Korelin, who alone
survived this expedition and furnished a report of it. From Attoo Drushinnin proceeded to Adakh, where another vessel, the Andreian i Natalia was then anchored, but as the natives
all produced receipts for tribute signed by Tolstykh, Drushinnin contented himself with filling his water-casks
and moved on.
From Adakh the Zakhar i Elizaveta proceeded to Umnak where a party of Glottof’s men were then hunting. The peredovchik Miasnikh was sent out with thirty-five men to explore the
coast. They went to the north-eastern end of the island, and after meeting
everywhere with indications of the recent presence of Russians, they returned
to the ship about the middle of September. On the day of their return letters
were also received through native messengers from the vessels commanded by
Korovin and Medvedef, who had lately located
themselves on the islands of Umnak and Unalaska. Drushinnin at once sent out a reconnoitring party to the latter
island, and in due time a favorable report was received inducing the commander
to move his craft to Unalaska, where he anchored the 22d near the northern end
of the island. When the cargo had been landed and a foundation had been laid
for a winter habitation, two of the chiefs of neighboring villages voluntarily
opened friendly intercourse by offering hostages. Others from more distant
settlements soon followed their example.
This
friendly reception encouraged Drushinnin to adhere to
the old practice of dividing his force into small parties for the winter in
order to secure better results both in hunting and in procuring subsistence.
The peredovchik accordingly sent out Petr Shekalef with eleven men; another party of eleven men under
Mikhail Khudiakof, and a third of nine men under
Yefim Koshigin. The last named remained at the
harbor; Khudiakof located his party at Kalekhtak; while Shekalef went to
the little island of Inaluk, about thirty versts distant from the ship. Drushinnin accompanied the latter party. Stepan Korelin, who subsequently alone survived to relate the
occurrences of that disastrous winter, was also a member of the Inaluk party
who had constructed a cabin in close proximity to the native habitation,
containing some twenty inmates. The relations between the promyshleniki and the natives appeared to be altogether friendly, and no trouble was
apprehended until the beginning of December. On the 4th a party of five men set
out in the morning to look after the foxtraps. Drushinnin, Shekalef, and Shevyrin then paid a visit to the native dwelling. They had
just entered the low aperture when they were set upon by a number of armed
men, who knocked down Shekalef and Drushinin with clubs and then finished them with the knives
they bought of them the day before. Shevyrin had
taken with him from the house an axe, and when the excited savages turned their
attention to him he made such good use of his weapon that he succeeded in
regaining the Russian winter-quarters alive, though severely wounded. Bragin
and Korelin at once began to fire upon the Aleuts
with their muskets from within, but Kokovin, who
happened to be outside, was quickly surrounded, thrown down, and assaulted with
knives and spears until Korelin, armed with a huge
bear-knife, made a gallant sortie, wounded two of the islanders, put the others
to flight, and rescued his half-dead comrade.
A
close siege of four days followed this sanguinary onslaught. The fire-arms of
the Russians prevented a charge by the enemy, but it was unsafe to show
themselves outside the hut even for a moment, in search of water or food. To
add to their apprehensions, the savages displayed in plain view the garments
and arms of their comrades who had gone to visit the foxtraps,
a sure indication that they were no longer among the living. Under the shelter
of night the Russians launched a bidar and pulled away out of the harbor, the
natives watching their movements, but making no attempt to pursue. Once out of
sight of their enemies Korelin and the other
fugitives landed, pulled their boat upon the beach, and set out across the
hills to Kalekhtak, where they expected to find Khudiakof and his detachment. It was after dark when they
reached the neighborhood. They fired signal-guns, but receiving no reply they
wisely kept at a distance. Before long, however, they found themselves pursued
by a horde of savages, and discovering an isolated, precipitous rock near the
beach which could be defended for a time, they concluded to make a stand there.
With their fire-arms they finally beat off the pursuers and resumed their
retreat, this time with but little hope of finding those alive who had remained
with the ship. Presently an object caught their eyes which confirmed their
worst apprehensions. It was the main-hatch lying on the beach, having been
washed up by the waves. Without waiting further confirmation of their fears the
four men took to the mountains, hiding in the ravines until nightfall. Under
cover of darkness they approached the anchorage, only to find the ship broken
up, and some stores with the dead bodies of their comrades scattered on the
beach. Gathering a few packages of dried fish and some empty leather
provision-bags they stole away into the hills, where a temporary shelter was
hastily constructed. Thence they made occasional excursions at night to the
scene of disaster, which must have occurred simultaneously with those of Inaluk
and Kalekhtak, in search of such needed articles as
had been left by the savages. The leather provision-bags, though cut
open, were very acceptable as material for the construction of a small bidar.
From
the 9th of December 1763 until the 2d of February 1764 these unfortunates
remained in hiding, but on the latter date their bidar was successfully
launched, and before morning the party had emerged from Kapiton Bay, coasting
to the westward in search of one of Trapeznikof’s vessels commanded by Korovin. Though travelling only at night and hiding among
the cliffs by day, they were soon discovered by the natives, and in the
vicinity of Makushin village they were compelled to
sustain a siege of five weeks in a cave, exposed to constant attacks. During
this whole time they suffered intensely from hunger and thirst, and would
certainly have succumbed had it not been for an ample supply of powder and lead
which prevented their enemies from engaging them at close quarters. At last on
the 30th of March the fugitives succeeded in joining their countrymen under
Korovin, who were then stationed on the southern shore of Makushin Bay. Shevyrin died at Unalaska during the same year;
the other three, Korelin, Kokovin,
and Bragin, recovered their strength, but only the former finally reached
Kamchatka with Solovief s vessel, after passing
through additional vicissitudes.
The
ship Sv Troitska, which Korovin commanded, was fitted out in 1762 by Nikofor Trapeznikof, and sailed from the mouth of the
Kamchatka River on the 15th of September, with a crew of thirty-eight Russians
and six Kamehatkans. They passed the winter on Bering
Island, remaining until the 1st of August of the following year. The ship
fitted out by Protassof and commanded by Medvedef had also wintered there, and before sailing the
two commanders made some exchanges in their crews. After sustaining some loss
by death, Korovin had at the time of his departure from Bering Island
thirty-seven men and Medvedef forty-nine. Both
vessels made a short run to the Aleutian Islands, reaching the straits between
Umnak and Unalaska on the 15th of August. Medvedef concluded to remain on Umnak Island while Korovin selected an anchorage on the
Unalaska shore. The native villages on the coast appeared to be deserted, but a
short distance inland some inhabited dwellings were found. The chief of the
settlement offered several small boys as hostages, and produced tribute
receipts signed by the Cossack Ponomaref. Korovin
evidently was satisfied with his reception, as he returned immediately to the
ship, landed his whole cargo, erected a large hut of drift-wood, and built
several bidars for his hunting parties.
In
a few weeks all the arrangements for the winter were made, and Korovin set out
.with two boats manned by nine men each, one of them commanded by Barnashef, who had visited the island previously with Glottof. They visited three villages in succession,
meeting everywhere with a friendly reception on the part of the chiefs, but
nearly all the adult males appeared to be absent from home. After the safe
return of this party another expedition was sent out to the east side of the
island whence they also returned unmolested accompanied by some hostages,
having met during their journey with some men of Drushinnin’s party. Feeling now safe, Korovin sent out a hunting party of twenty-three under Barnashef, in two bidars, to the west end of the
island. Each boat carried eight muskets and every man had a pistol and a lance;
provisions had been prepared for the winter.
SCENE OF CONFLICTAt
various times during the season letters were received from the detached parties
reporting their safety, but about the middle of December Korovin received
warning that a large force of natives was marching toward the ship with hostile
designs. The Russian commander at once called his men under arms and kept a
strict watch. The following day about seventy savages made their appearance
carrying bundles of sea-otter skins in order to throw the promyshleniki off their guard; but Korovin would allow only ten of them to approach his house
at the same time. The savages perceiving that their design was known, and that
surprise had become impossible, disposed of their furs quietly and retreated.
On the same evening, however, three natives of Kamchatka came to the house in
a great fright, reporting that they belonged to Kulkof’s ship, that is to say Drushinnin’s party, and that the
vessel had been destroyed and all their comrades killed.
The promyshleniki, now thoroughly alarmed, prepared for defence. After remaining unmolested for two days, a large
force attacked and besieged them closely for four days, during which time two
Russians were killed with arrows, and five natives were counted dead on the
field. On the fifth day the enemy retreated to a cave near by, keeping up,
however, a vigilant blockade, and making it dangerous to proceed any distance
from the house. Worn out with constant watching and firing, Korovin at last
concluded to bury his iron, the article most coveted by the savages, and his
stores of blubber and oil under the house, and to retreat to the ship. His plan
was carried out, and the ship anchored within a short distance of the shore.
The danger of sudden attack was thus lessened, but hunger and the scurvy were
there as relentless as the savages. At length, on the 26th of April, reenforced
by the three fugitives from Drushinnin’s command,
Korovin put to sea, but so reduced was his crew that the ship could scarcely be
worked. During a gale on the 28th the unfortunate promyshleniki were wrecked in a cove on Umnak Island. Several of the sick died or were
drowned, and eight of the hostages made their escape. The arms, ammunition,
some sails, and a few sea-lion skins were all that could be saved. A temporary
shelter and fortification was constructed of empty casks, sails, and skins,
where the remaining sixteen, including three disabled by scurvy, the three
hostages, and the faithful interpreter, Kashmak,
hoped to secure some rest before beginning a new struggle. Their hope was in
vain. During the first night a large party of savages approached stealthily
from the sea and when within a few yards of the miserable encampment discharged
their spears and arrows with terrible effect, piercing the tent and the
barricade of sea-lion skins in many places. Two of the Russians and the three
hostages were killed, and all the other Russians severely wounded.
The
onslaught was so sudden that there was no time to get ready the fire-arms, but
Korovin with four of the least disabled seized their lances and made a sortie,
killing two of the savages and driving away the remainder. Covered with wounds,
the five brave men returned to their comrades, now thoroughly disheartened. In
the mean time the gale had continued unabated, breaking up the stranded vessel
and scattering the cargo upon the beach. Soon after daylight the natives
returned to resume the work of plunder, the Russians being too feeble to
interfere. They carried off what booty they could and remained away two days,
during which time such of the wounded promyshleniki as were still able to move about picked up what fragments of provisions and
furs the savages had left, also a small quantity of iron. On the 29th died one
of the wounded men, who was also suffering from scurvy. Three days afterward
one hundred and fifty islanders approached from the east and fired at the
Russians with muskets, but the bullets fell wide of the mark. They
then set fire to the dry grass in order to burn out the fugitives. A constant
firing of the Russians, however, foiled their efforts, and at last the savages
retired. The victors found themselves in such a state of prostration that they
remained on the same spot until the 21st of July, when the few survivors,
twelve in number, six of whom were natives of Kamchatka, embarked in a roughly
constructed bidar in search of Medvedef’s party.
After ten days of coasting the sufferers arrived at a place where the charred
remains of a burned vessel, of torn garments, sails and rigging, gave evidence
of another disaster. Filled with alarm the fugitives landed and hastened up to
a house which had escaped destruction. It was empty, but in an adjoining
bath-house twenty dead bodies were found, among them that of the commander Medvedef. There was some indication of the corpses having
been dragged to the spot with straps and belts tied around their necks, but no
further details of the catastrophe could be obtained, and not a soul survived
to tell the tale. Necessity compelled Korovin to remain at this ghastly spot,
and preparations were made to repair the house for the approaching winter, when
Stepan Glottof, who in the mean time had arrived on
the other side of Umnak Island, made his appearance with eight men. The so
lately despairing promyshleniki were wild with joy,
and forgetting on the instant their hunger and diseases, they planned further
ventures, agreeing with Glottof to hunt and trade on
joint account.
The
voyage of Glottof, covering the four years from 1762
to 1765 inclusive, was by far the most important of the earlier expeditions to
the islands, and constitutes an epoch in the swarming of the promyshleniki.
A
new vessel to which was given the old name of Andreian I Natalia was built in the Kamchatka River by Terentiy Chebaievski,
Vassili and Ivan Popof, and Ivan Lapin, and sailed on
the 1st of October 1762, under command of Glottof,
wintering at Copper Island.
On
the 26th of July 1763 Glottof again put to sea, and
after a tedious and stormy voyage sighted Umnak on the 24th of August. Having
previously visited this island and Unalaska, whence he brought the first black
foxes to Kamchatka, the commander concluded not to loiter there, but to sail on
in search of new discoveries. Passing eight large islands and a multitude of
smaller ones, Glottof finally anchored on the 8th of
September off the coast of a large and mountainous island, called Kikhtak by the natives, but now known as Kadiak. The first
meeting of the Russians with the inhabitants of this isle was not promising. A
few of the savages approached the ship in their kyaks,
but the Aleut interpreter, Ivan Glottof, a godchild
of the commander, could not converse with them, and when on landing some
habitations were discovered, they were found to be deserted. A few days later
a party came to the Russian camp with an Aleutian boy who had been captured
several years before during a hostile descent of the Kadiak people upon the
island of Sannakh, and through him intercourse was
held. Glottof endeavored to persuade the savages to
pay tribute to the imperial government and to furnish hostages, but they
refused. The natives here were of fiercer aspect, more intelligent and manly,
and of finer physique than those of the more western isles. At first they would
not even allow the interpreter to remain temporarily with the Russians, but a
few days later the boy made his appearance in the Russian camp, and
subsequently proved of great service to his new patrons. Under such
circumstances Glottof deemed it best not to discharge
the cargo, but to keep the ship moored in a bay near the mouth of a creek,
where she floated at every high tide. A strict watch was kept night and day.
Early one morning a large body of armed islanders crept up to the anchorage
unobserved, and sent a shower of arrows upon the Russian sentinels hidden
behind the bulwarks on the deck. The guards discharged their muskets, and the
deafening sound sent the savages scattering. In their wild alarm they left on
the ground rude ladders, packages of sulphur, dried
moss, and birch bark, a proof of their intention to fire the ship, and also of
the fact that the Kadiak people were a race more warlike and more dangerous to
deal with than the Aleuts. They were certainly fertile in both offensive and
defensive devices; for only four days after the first attack, previous to which
they had been unacquainted with fire-arms, they again made their appearance in
large force, and provided with ingeniously contrived shields of wood and
wicker-work intended to ward off the Russian’s bullets. The islanders, however,
had not had an opportunity of estimating the force of missiles propelled by
powder, for the Russians had purposely fired high during their attack, and
another rout was the result of a second charge.
The
defeated enemy allowed three weeks to pass by without molesting the intruders,
but on the 26th of October there was yet another attack. The elaborate
preparations now made showed wonderful ability for savages. Seven large
portable breastworks, concealing from thirty to forty warriors each, were seen
approaching the vessel early one morning, and when near enough spears and
arrows began to drop like hail upon the deck. The promyshleniki replied with volley after volley of musketry, but this time the shields
appeared to be bullet-proof and the enemy kept on advancing until, as a last
resort, Glottof landed a body of men and made a
furious charge upon the islanders, who were growing more bold and defiant every
moment. This unexpected attack had the desired effect, and after a brief
struggle the savages dropped their shields and sought safety in flight. The
result of this third battle caused the natives to despair of driving off the
Russians, and to withdraw from the neighborhood.
Deeming
it dangerous to send out hunting parties, Glottof employed his men in constructing a house of drift-wood and in securing a good
supply of such fish as could be obtained from a creek and a lagoon in the
immediate vicinity of the anchorage. Late in December two natives made their
appearance at the Russian camp. They held a long parley with the interpreter
from a safe distance, and finally came up to the house. Kind treatment and
persuasion seemed to have no effect; nor did presents even; instinctively these
most intellectual of savages felt that they had met their fate. They went away
with some trifling gifts, and not another native was seen by the disappointed Glottof till April of the following year. Dour men then
came to the encampment and were persuaded to sell some fox-skins, taking glass
beads in payment. Ah, the vanity of humanity! Cotton and woollen goods had no attractions. Ornament before dress. They appeared at last to
believe in Glottof’s professions of friendship, and
went away promising to persuade their people to come and trade with the
Russians. Shortly afterward a party brought fox and sea-otter skins, accepting
glass beads; and friendly intercourse ensued until Glottof was ready to sail from the locality, where his party had suffered greatly from
disease without deriving much commercial advantage.
Glottof felt satisfied, however, that he
was near to the American continent, because he noticed that the natives made
use of deer-skins for dress. In the immediate vicinity of the Russian
encampment there was no timber, but the natives said that large forests grew in
the northern part of the island.
Through
Holmberg’s researches in Kadiak we possess the deposition of a native of the
island, which evidently refers to Glottof’s sojourn
on Kadiak. Holmberg states that he passed two days in a hut on the south side
of the island, and that he there listened to the tales of an old man named Arsenti Aminak, whom he
designates as the “only speaking monument of pagan times on Kadiak.” A creole
named Panfilof served as interpreter, and Holmberg
took down his translation, word for word, as follows: “ I was a boy of nine or
ten years, for I was already set to paddle in a bidarka, when the first Russian
ship with two masts appeared near Cape Aliulik.
Before that time we had never seen a ship; we had intercourse with the Aglegnutes of Aliaska peninsula,
with the Tnaianas of the Kenai peninsula, and with
the Koloshes; and some wise men even knew something
of the Californias; but ships and white men we did
not know at all. When we espied the ship at a distance we thought it was an
immense whale, and were curious to have a better look at it. We went out to sea
in our bidarkas, but soon discovered that it was no whale, but another unknown
monster of which we were afraid, and the smell of which (tar probably) made us
sick. The people on the ship had buttons on their clothes, and at first we
thought they must be cuttlefish, but when we saw them put fire into their
mouth and blow out smoke we knew they must be devils, as we did not know
tobacco then. The ship sailed by the island of Aiakhtalik,
one of the Goose Islands at the south end of Kadiak, where then a large village
was situated, and then passed by the Cape Aliulik (Cape Trinidad) into Kaniat (Alitak)
Bay, where it anchored and lowered the boats. We followed full of fear, and at
the same time curious to see what would become of the strange apparition, but
we did not dare to approach the ship. Among our people there was a brave
warrior named Ishinik, who was so bold that he feared
nothing in the world; he undertook to visit the ship and came back with
presents in his hand, a red shirt, an Aleut hood, and some glass beads. He said
there was nothing to fear, ‘they only wish to buy our sea-otter skins and to
give us glass beads and other riches for them.’ We did not fully believe his
statement. The old and wise people held a council in the kashima,
and some said: ‘Who knows what sickness they may bring us; let us await them
on the shore, then if they give us a good price for our skins we can do
business afterward.’
“Our
people formerly were at war with the Fox Island people, whom we called Tayaoot. My father once made a raid upon Unalaska and
brought back among other booty a little girl left by her fleeing parents. As a
prisoner taken in war she was our slave, but my father treated her like a
daughter, and brought her up with his other children. We called her Plioo, which means ashes, because she had been taken from
the ashes of her house. On the Russian ship which came from Unalaska there were
many Aleuts and among them the father of our slave. He came to my father’s
house, and when he saw that his daughter was not kept like a slave but was well
cared for, he told him confidentially, out of gratitude, that the Russians
would take the sea-otter skins without payment if they could. This warning
saved my father, who, though not fully believing the Aleut, acted cautiously.
The Russians came ashore together with the Aleuts and the latter persuaded our
people to trade, saying: Why are you afraid of the Russians? Look at us, we
live with them and they do us no harm.’ Our people, dazzled by the sight of
such quantities of goods, left their weapons in the bidar and went to the
Russians with their sea-otter skins. While they were busy trading, the Aleuts,
who carried arms concealed about them, at a signal from the Russians fell upon
our people, killing about thirty and taking away their sea-otter skins. A few
men had cautiously watched the result of the first intercourse from a distance,
among them my father. These attempted to escape in their bidarkas, but they
were overtaken by the Aleuts and killed. My father alone was saved by the
father of his slave, who gave him his bidarka when my father’s own had been
pierced with arrows and was sinking. In this bidarka he fled to Akhiok. My father’s name was Penashigak.
The time of the arrival of this ship was the month of August, as the whales
were coming into the bays and the berries were ripe. The Russians remained for
the winter, but could not find sufficient food in Kaniat Bay. They were compelled to leave the ship in charge of a few watchmen and
moved into a bay opposite Aiakhtalik Island. Here was
a lake full of herrings and a kind of smelt. They lived in tents here through
the winter. The brave Ishinik, who first dared to
visit the ship, was liked by the Russians and acted as a mediator. When the
fish decreased in the lake during the winter the Russians moved about from
village to village. Whenever we saw a boat-coming at a distance we fled to the
hills, and when we returned no yukala (dried fish)
could be found in the houses. In the lake near the Russian camp there was a
poisonous kind of starfish; we knew it very well, but said nothing about it to
the Russians. We never ate them, and even the gulls would not touch them; many
Russians died from eating them. But we injured them also in other ways. They
put up foxtraps and we removed them for the sake of
obtaining the iron material. When the Russians had examined our coast they left
our island during; the following year.”
On
the 24th of May Glottof finally left Kadiak, and
passing through the numerous islands lining the south coast of the Alaska
peninsula made a landing on Umnak with the intention to hunt and trade in the
same locality which he had previously visited. When the ship entered the well
known bay the houses erected by the promyshleniki were still standing, but no sign of life was visible. The commander hastened to
the shore and soon found signs of death and destruction. The body of an
unknown Russian was there; Glottof’s own house had
been destroyed, and another building erected near by.
On
the 5th of July an exploring party of sixteen discovered the remains of Medvedef’s ship, and the still unburied bodies of its crew.
Upon consultation it was decided to take steps at once to ascertain whether any
survivors of the disaster were to be found on the island. On the 7th of July
some natives approached the vessel and endeavored to persuade Glottof to land with only two men, for the purpose of
trading, displaying at the same time a large number of sea-otter skins on the
beach. When they found that their devices did not succeed, they retreated to a
distance and began to fire with muskets at the ship, without, however, doing
any damage. Later in the day a few natives came off in their canoes and paddled
round the ship. As Glottof was desirous of obtaining
information concerning the recent occurrences on the island, the bold natives
were not molested, and finally one of them ventured on board the ship, partaking
of food, and told freely all that had happened since Glottof’s visit, hinting also at the existence of Korovin’s small party in some part of
the island. He acknowledged that it had been the intention of the natives to
kill Glottof after enticing him to land, imagining
that they would have no difficulty in dealing with the crew after the leader
was despatched. After a vain attempt to find
Korovin’s camp, some natives advised the Russians to cross the island to the
opposite side, where they would find their countrymen engaged in building a
house beside a brook. The information proved correct, and the hearts of Korovin
and his men were soon gladdened by the appearance of their countrymen.
Glottof evidently did not intend to feed
the additional members in idleness. In a few days he sent out Korovin with
twenty men in a bidar to reconnoitre the coast of
Umnak and search for fugitive Russians who might have survived the various
massacres. For a long time he could find no living soul, Russian or native; but
at last, in September, he fell in with some parties of the latter. They greeted
the Russians with musket-shots, and would not listen to overtures. At various
places where Korovin attempted to stop to hunt the natives opposed his
landing, and engagements ensued. At the place of the massacre of Barnashef and his crew, his bidar and the remains of
his cargo were found, and a few women and boys who lingered about the place
were taken prisoners and questioned as to the details of the bloody episode.
Later
in the winter Korovin was sent out again with a party of men and the Aleut
interpreter, Ivan Glottof. They proceeded to the
western end of Unalaska and there learned from the natives that a Russian
vessel commanded by Solovief was anchored in one of
the harbors of that island. Korovin at once shaped his course for the point,
but reached it only after several sharp engagements with the natives,
inflicting severe loss upon them. He remained with Solofief three days and then returned to the scene of his last encounter with the
natives, who seemed to have benefited by the lesson administered by Korovin,
being quite tractable and willing to trade and assist in hunting. Before the
end of the year the deep-rooted hatred of the Russian intruders again came to
the surface, and the hunters concluded to return to the ship. On the passage
from Unalaska to Umnak they had two engagements and were finally wrecked upon
the latter island. As it was midwinter they were forced to remain there till
the 6th of April following, subject to the greatest privations. After another
tedious voyage along the coast the party at last rejoined Glottof with a small quantity of furs as the result of the season’s work. On account of
Korovin’s failures in hunting, Glottof and his partners
declared the agreement with them void. The brave leader, whose indomitable
courage alone had carried his companions through an appalling succession of
disasters, certainly deserved better treatment. The Kamchatkans belonging to
his former crew entered Glottof’s service; but five
Russians concluded to cast their lots with him. In June they found Solovief, who willingly received them into his company, and
in his vessel they finally reached Kamchatka.
Solovief had been fortunate in his voyage
from Kamchatka to Umnak, passing along the Aleutian isles with as much safety
and despatch as a trained sea-captain could have
done, provided with all the instruments of modern nautical science. In less
than a month, a remarkably quick passage for those days, he sighted the island
of Umnak, but finding no convenient anchorage he went to Unalaska.
A
few natives who still remembered Solovief from his
former visit, came to greet the new arrivals and informed them of the cruel
fate that had befallen Medvedef and his companions.
The Cossack Korenef was ordered to reconnoitre the northern coast of the island with a
detachment of twenty men. He reported on his return that he had found only
three vacant habitations of the natives, but some fragments of Russian arms and
clothing led him to suspect that some of his countrymen had suffered at the
hands of the savages in that vicinity. In the course of time Solovief managed to obtain from the natives detailed
accounts of the various massacres. The recital of cruelties committed inflamed
his passions, and he resolved to avenge the murder of his countrymen. His first
care, however, was to establish himself firmly on the island and to introduce
order and discipline among his men. He adhered to his designs with great
persistency and unnecessary cruelty.
Solovief had not quite finished his
preparations when the savage islanders, made bold by frequent victories,
attempted the first attack, an unfortunate one for the Aleuts. The promyshleniki, who were ready for the fray at any moment,
on this occasion destroyed a hundred of their assailants on the spot, and broke
up their bidars and temporary habitations. With this victory Solovief contented himself until he was reenforced by
Korovin, Kokovin, and a few others, when he divided
his force, leaving half to guard the ship while with the others he set out in
search of the “blood-thirsty natives,” who had destroyed Drushinnin and Medvedef.
The
bloodshed perpetrated by this band of avengers was appalling. A majority of all
the natives connected with the previous attacks on the Russians paid with
their lives for presuming to defend their homes against invaders. Being
informed that three hundred of the natives had assembled in a fortified
village, Solovief marched his force to the spot. At
first the Russians were greeted with showers of arrows from every aperture, but
when the natives discovered that bullets came flying in as fast as arrows went
out, they closed the openings, took down the notched posts serving as ladders,
and sat down to await their fate. Unwilling to charge upon the dwellings, and
seeing that he could not do much injury to the enemy as long as they remained
within, Solovief managed to place bladders filled
with powder under the log foundation of the structure, which was soon blown
into the air. Many of the inmates survived the explosion only to be despatched by the promyshleniki with muskets and sabres.
At
the end of his crusade, Solovief, having succeeded
in subjugating the natives, established ‘friendly intercourse’ with them. A few
of the chiefs of Unalaska tendered their submission. During the winter his men
suffered from scurvy, and many died. Observing which the savages regained
courage and began to revolt. The people of Makushin village were the most determined, but Solovief managed to entrap the chief, who confessed that he had intended to overpower
the Russians and burn their ship. In June two more of the scurvy-stricken crew
died, and Solovief was only too glad to accept of the
offer of Korovin and his companions, who had only just arrived, to join his
expedition. The Cossack Shevyrin died on the third of
August and another Russian in September.
Late
in the autumn Solovief again despatched Korenef with a detachment of promyshleniki to the northern part of the island. He did not return until the 30th of January
1766, and was immediately ordered out again to explore the west coast. During
the first days of February a young Aleut named Kyginik,
a son of the chief, came voluntarily into the Russian camp and requested to be
baptized, and to be permitted to remain with the promyshleniki.
His wish was willingly complied with, and if the promyshleniki claimed a miracle as the cause of the action, I should acquiesce. Nothing but
the mighty power of God could have sanctified the heart of this benighted one
under these bright examples of Christianity. In May Solovief began his preparations for departure, collecting and packing his furs for the
voyage and repairing his vessel. He sailed the 1st of June and reached
Kamchatka the 5th of July.
At
Okhotsk there was great disorder, amounting almost to anarchy, under the
administration of Captain Zybin, up to 1754, when
the latter was relieved by Captain Nilof, who
subsequently became known and lost his life during the famous convict revolt of
Kamchatka under the leadership of Benyovski. In 1761
Major Plenisner was appointed to the command of
Kamchatka for five years; he held this position until relieved by Nilof.
In
1765 a new company was formed by Lapin, Shilof, and Orekhof, the latter a gunsmith from Tula. They built two
vessels at Okhotsk, naming them after those excessively honored apostles the Sv Petr and the Sv Pavel, and crossed over to Bolsheretsk, where
they remained till August. The Sv Petr was commanded by Tolstykh and carried a crew
of forty-nine Russians, twelve natives of Kamchatka, and two Aleuts. Acting
under the old delusion that there must be land somewhere to the southward, Tolstykh steered in that direction, but after a fruitless
cruise of two months he concluded to make the port of Petropavlovsk to winter;
but on the 2d of October in attempting to anchor near Cape Skipunskoi,
in a gale, the vessel was cast upon the rocks and broken in pieces.
The Sv Pavel was commanded by Master Afanassiy Ocheredin, and carried
a crew of sixty men. Sailing from Bolsheretsk the 1st
of August they steered for the farther Aleutian Isles, and went into winterquarters the 1st of September in a bay of Umnak. At
first the natives were friendly, but as soon as tribute was demanded
intercourse ceased for the winter, and the Russians suffered greatly from
hunger and disease. Scarcely had the promyshleniki begun to overcome the dread disease in the spring, with the help of
antiscorbutic plants, when Ocheredin sent out
detachments to demand tribute of the natives. In August 1767 a peredovchik named Poloskof, was despatched with twenty-eight men in two boats to hunt.
Having heard of the massacre of Medvedef and Korovin,
he passed by Unalaska and established himself at Akutan,
distributing small detachments of hunters over the neighboring islands. In the
following January he was attacked and four of his men killed. Onslaughts were
made by the natives at the same time upon Ocheredin’s vessel and another craft commanded by Popof, who was
then trading at Unalaska. In August Poloskof rejoined Ocheredin, and their operations were continued until
1770.
Ocheredin’s share of the proceeds was
600 seaotters, 756 black foxes, 1,230 red foxes; and with this rich cargo he
arrived at Okhotsk on the 24th of July 1770. The partners in this enterprise
received in addition to a large return on their investment gracious
acknowledgments from the imperial government. In 1764, when the first black
fox-skins had been forwarded to the empress, gold medals were awarded to the
merchants Orekhof, Kulkof, Shapkin, Panof, and Nikoforof. Desirous of obtaining a more detailed account of
the doings of her subjects in the far east, Catherine ordered to be sent to St
Petersburg one of the traders, promising to pay his expenses. When this order
reached Okhotsk only one merchant engaged in the island trade could be found,
Vassili Shilof. He was duly despatched to the imperial court, and on arriving at St Petersburg was at once granted an
interview by the empress, who questioned him closely upon the locality of the
new discoveries, and the mode of conducting the traffic. The empress was much
pleased with the intelligent answers of Shilof, who
exhibited a map of his own making, representing the Aleutian Islands from
Bering to Amlia. This the empress ordered to be
deposited in the admiralty college.
Three
other vessels were despatched in 1766-7, but of their
movements we have but indefinite records. The Vladimir, owned by Krassilnikof and commanded by Soposhnikof,
sailed in 1766, and returned from the Near Islands with 1,400 sea-otters, 2,000
fur-seals, and 1,050 blue foxes. In the following year the Sv Petr i Sv Pavel, owned
by the brothers Panof, sailed, and returned after a
cruise of three years with a very rich cargo composed of 5,000 sea-otters and
1,100 blue foxes. The Ioann Oustioushki, owned by
Ivan Popof, made two voyages between 1767 and 1770,
returning the second time with 3,000 sea-otters, 1,663 black foxes, 230 cross
foxes, 1,025 red foxes, and 1,162 blue foxes. The merchants Poloponissof and Popof also sent out a ship in 1767, the Joann Predtecha, which returned after an absence of five years
with 60 sea-otters, 6,300 fur-seals, and 1,280 blue foxes. This ends the list
of private enterprises prior to the resumption of exploration by the imperial
government.
CHAPTER VIII.IMPERIAL EFFORTS AND FAILURES. 1764-1779. |