"K'alyaan Pole in the Fort Site" by NPS , public domain

Sitka

Brochure

brochure Sitka - Brochure

Official Brochure of Sitka National Historical Park (NHP) in Alaska. Published by the National Park Service (NPS).

Sitka Sitka National Historical Park Alaska Walk through the temperate rain forest covering much of the park and see one of the finest collections of totem poles (right) in the Northwest. The Russian Bishop’s House also served as a seminary and school for Native children. (Right) Bald eagles and ravens thrive in the area. TOTEM POLE–PATRICK J. ENDRES, © ALASKAPHOTOGRAPHICS; RAIN FOREST–NPS RUSSIAN BISHOP’S HOUSE–© BRIAN HETHERINGTON; EAGLE–© DAVID GRIEBELING National Park Service U.S. Department of the Interior Russian Orthodox missionaries built St. Michael’s Cathedral in 1848. Orthodox icons fill the Russian Bishop’s House chapel (left of cathedral). •Sitka R U S S I A The Tlingit living on Shee (now Baranof) Island called their village Shee At’iká, “people on the outside of Shee.” Today we call it Sitka. CATHEDRAL, TOTEM PATH–PATRICK J. ENDRES, © ALASKAPHO­ TOGRAPHICS; CHAPEL–© FRED HIRSCHMANN Irkutsk• When They Tell the Story of Sitka . . . . . . they remember a land of plenty and the people drawn to its wealth. The for­ est shrouding the land, the rivers running through it, and the sea around it pro­ Alaska was one of the last places in the Americas to be settled •Okhotsk by Europeans. The Russian American Company, headquartered in Irkutsk, Siberia, took the lead. From the port of Okhotsk it expan­ vided everything needed to sustain a vigorous human community. The Tlingit had thrived on the island they called Shee for countless generations before ambitious after six decades, both groups had been changed by the encounter. The Tlingit pre­ KA MC H K AT ENI A P AI late 1700s. STR met, fought, and then uneasily coexisted for a time. When the Russians departed NSULA BE RI A L A S K A G traders came from the west in search of new goods. Here the Tlingit and Russians ded its fur-trading operations via the Aleutians to Alaska in the T R U S S I A N C O A S T M ALE XA •Sitka O U N ARC N T A DE HIP I N S R EL AG O served their traditions as the Americans who replaced the Russians wrought their own changes. In the 1960s, after decades of acculturation and population decline, the Tlingit began to reassert their culture. If you pay close attention to the land­ scape, artifacts, and artists of Sitka National Historical Park, you will hear the story of the cultures who lived, and still live, on this island. ALEUT IAN ISL AN DS KO D I A K ISLAND Seattle• Tlingit fishing canoe Tlingit girls at the Presbyterian mission school Ceremonial dress for 1904 potlach Russian Orthodox clergy and seminarians Russians with model of St. Michael’s Russian Bishop’s House NPS / MERRILL COLLECTION NPS / MERRILL COLLECTION NPS / MERRILL COLLECTION NPS / MERRILL COLLECTION NPS / MERRILL COLLECTION NPS / MERRILL COLLECTION The Tlingit People Berry basket woven of spruce root NPS Coming of the Anooshi Sea otter © KEN SCHNEIDER For the Tlingit, Haida, and other groups, South­east Alaska was a hos­ Cedar and other conifers in the great rain forest climbing the moun­ Vitus Bering’s 1741 voyage of exploration for Russia brought the Wanting to stabilize Russia’s foothold in the New World, Czar Paul I in pitable land where the warm Japanese Current moderated tempera­ tains behind Sitka provided the durable, straight-grained wood from first Europeans to Alaska. The sea otter pelts they took home to 1799 granted a monopoly to the Russian American Company, giving tures—and kept Sitka’s natural harbor free of ice year-round. Food which the Tlingit shaped much of their material world. They cut show the Czar drew them back to stay, and the area was soon over­ the company’s manager Alexander Baranov the powers of a colonial resources were so abundant that the Tlingit essentially harvested great beams and split planks to build their multi-family dwellings. run with Russian promyshlenniki—free-ranging hunters and fur governor. Baranov had already been pushing operations east and whatever they needed. A maritime people, they drew much of their Their basic structures were rectangular, pitched-roof buildings with traders. The Russians (called Anooshi by the Tlingit) were likely the south from Kodiak Island to extend Russia’s territorial claims and food from the sea and the rivers flowing into it. Salmon, the nutri­ round or oval entrances. From trunks they carved canoes up to 60 first European traders to encounter Alaska Natives. Through barter thwart growing competition in the fur trade from England and the tious staple of their diet, was available in staggering quantities dur­ feet long, built in various types and sizes for fishing, sea travel, river and coercion the promyshlenniki used the skills of the native United States. He also wanted to stop the British and American prac­ ing the spawning runs. The Tlingit also fished on the open sea, wres­ travel, or war. They fashioned everyday implements from alder, like Aleutians—the Aleuts—to gather the profitable pelts. By 1784 a tice of trading guns to the Tlingit, a powerful group in Southeast tling 5-foot-long halibut into their canoes; hunted sea mammals; and spoons and bowls, and crafted bentwood boxes to hold their large Russian trading company employing promyshlenniki had established Alaska. To those ends he planned to establish a fortified station on gathered shellfish and edible seaweed. They hunted land animals stocks of food and fish oil. Theirs was a bountiful life. a station on Kodiak Island, and forced Aleuts to hunt sea otter and Baranof Island, the one called Shee by its Native inhabitants. and supplemented their diet with berries, grasses, and roots. other sea mammals. Russia remained the dominant power in the North Pacific for 125 years. Pink salmon crowd the Indian River during their spawning run. These runs peak in mid-August, but can extend from mid-July into October. PATRICK J. ENDRES, © ALASKAPHOTOGRAPHICS Tlingit, Russians, and Americans Who Will Control These Lands? New Archangel and American Sitka The Russian American Company’s desire to establish an outpost in Southeast Alaska inevitably led to conflict. Under the direction of company manager Alexander Baranov, a group of Russians, Alutiiq, and other Native Alaskans constructed the first non-Native settlement near Starrigavan Bay in 1799. Powerful leaders of the Kiks. ádi clan quickly grew to resent the Russian intrusion. In 1802, they attacked the Starrigavan settlement, Redoubt Saint Michael, and killed most of its Russian, Aleut, and Alutiiq inhabitants. Baranov made Shee At’iká the Russian American Company’s headquarters, renaming it New Archangel—though it was commonly called Sitka. On the rocky promontory now called Castle Hill he located his home and harbor fortificati­ons. The Russians never became selfsufficient, depending on fresh food from the Tlingit who had stayed in the area. The company remained wary of them, maintaining a stockade between the communities. The Russian Orthodox mission, though, established a sympathetic relationship with the Tlingit. This bronze plaque, buried in 1799 at Redoubt St. Michael on Baranof Island, reads “Land of Russian Possession.” NPS After the Tlingit drove the Russians from Sitka in 1802, Tlingit Shaman Stoonookw predicted the Russians would return. He urged the clans to build a new fortification strong enough to withstand cannon fire. The Kiks.ádi chose an area near present-day Indian River for their new fort (Shís’gi Noow) because it was close to food and fresh water, but out of range of ship artillery. When the Russian ships appeared at the mouth of Indian River (Kaasda Héen) on September 28, 1804, Kiks.ádi preparations were tested by a siege and multi-day bombardment. By the mid-1800s the Russian government had grown disenchanted with its stake in America. When the United States offered to buy Alaska in 1867, Russia accepted and Sitka became a US territorial capital. In 1890 the US government created a federal reserve, Indian River Park, at the mouth of the river. The park was designated Sitka National Monument in 1910, then became part of the National Park System when that system was established in 1916. In 1972, with the addition of the Russian Bishop’s House, it was re-designated Sitka National Historical Park. Two fateful events worked against the Kiks.ádi—the unexpected arrival of the Russian frigate Neva and the loss of the canoe carrying their reserve ammunition and most seasoned warriors right before the battle. Russian forces boldly waded ashore in a frontal attack on Shís’gi Noow on October 1, 1804. They were driven back from the fort to the beach when Tlingit defenses held. Hidden behind floating logs, Kiks.ádi warriors counter-attacked. They were led by K’alyaan (Katlian) wielding the blacksmith’s hammer he had won in 1802. Russian forces retreated to their ships and laid siege. After six days the Kiks.ádi withdrew from the fort and marched north to Peril Strait. There they set up a trade blockade, while continuing to hunt, fish, and gather wild food in and near Sitka Sound. Today, Sitka National Historical Park preserves and interprets the site of this battle. NPS / LOUIS S. GLANZMAN Fur trader Alexander Baranov (1746–1819) (middle) became head of the Russian American Com­pany. He paved the way for Russian Orthodox missionaries like Ioann Veniaminov (1797–1879) (far left), who built schools for the Tlingit and created a Tlingit alphabet. In 1840 Veniaminov was named Bishop Innocent. Both men served the Russian Czar, symbolized by the double-headed eagle (left). VENIAMINOV AND BARANOV–LIBRARY OF CONGRESS; DOUBLE-HEADED EAGLE–ALASKA STATE MUSEUM The Tlingit encountered by the Russians were a vital, complex society. The Tlingit were divided into moieties, the Eagle and Raven. (At right is the war chief K’alyaan’s raven war helmet and hammer.) Clans, the basic social and economic units, controlled resources and trade routes. So abundant was food that large surpluses were created, allowing the Tlingit time to bring decorative design to every area of their lives (far right). RAVEN WAR HELMET–© PETER METCALFE; K’ALYAAN’S HAMMER–KIKS.ADI CLAN / photo by NPS, TLINGIT GROUP–ALASKA STATE LIBRARY Who Lives Here? About Your Visit The convergence of the Indian River, Pacific Ocean, and coastal rain forest creates a biologically rich habitat. This temperate rain forest ecosystem is domi­nated by towering Sitka spruce and Western hemlock. Brown bears, river otters, mink, and blacktailed deer frequent the area. The park’s intertidal zone teems with marine inverte­brates like sea stars, limpets, and barn­acles. The area hosts 150 bird species, and pink salmon runs sometimes pack the Indian River with over tens of thousands of fish. The park visitor center houses a collection of Tlingit artifacts, many of them loaned to the National Park Service by Tlingit clans. “The Voices of Sitka” video connects the stories of Sitkans present and past. Native artists work in studios devoted to textile arts, carving, and metal work. Completed in 1843, the Russian Bishop’s House was Bishop Innocent’s home and the diocese administrative center. Salmon are the ultimate recy­ clers: Aquatic insects, a critical food source for juvenile salmon, feed on organic nutrients in the Indian River. Salmon eventually Raven head to sea to feed on rich ocean resources. Mature salmon return to the river to spawn and die. Their carcasses provide food for bears, ravens, and eagles and add nutrients to the stream ecosystem, jump-starting a new generation of salmon. The park visitor center is open daily, mid-May through September, 8 am to 5 pm. From October to mid-May hours vary. Totem Trail The park trails are open daily mid-May through September, 6 am to 10 pm, and October to midMay, 7 am to 8 pm. The Russian Bishop’s House is open daily mid-May through Septem­ber, 9 am to 5 pm. Ranger-led tours are offered every 30 minutes. From October to mid-May the house is open by appointment only. Call 907-747-0110 to schedule a tour. Accessibility We strive to make our facilities, services, and programs accessible to all. The historical features of some locations at the park provide unique challenges to accessibility. The second floor of the Russian Bishop’s House is accessed via stairs only. A video on the first floor describes the second floor features. More Information Sitka National Historical Park 103 Monastery St. Sitka, AK 99835 907-747-0110 www.nps.gov/sitk Sitka National Historical Park is one of over 400 parks in the National Park System. To learn more about national parks, visit www.nps.gov. ✩GPO:20xx—xxx-xxx/xxxxx Last updated 20xx Printed on recycled paper. The Totem Trail is a 1-mile loop trail through temperate rain forest, where you will find a remarkable collection of totem poles carved by Tlingit and Haida artists. The poles have been part of the Sitka story since 1901, when a collection of poles donated by villages from southern Southeast Alaska were shown at national expo­sitions in 1904 and 1905, then shipped to Sitka and erected in Indian River Park. Traditionally the poles were allowed to dete­rior­ate naturally, and many of those you see today are replicas. Woodcarving is a fundamental art form of Northwest American Indian cultures, and the totem pole is among their highest Sea otters (below) thrive in the waters around Sitka. RAVEN AND OTTERS–PATRICK J. ENDRES, © ALASKAPHOTOGRAPHICS A village watchman tops the Yaadaas Crest corner pole. PATRICK J. ENDRES, © ALASKAPHOTOGRAPHICS achievements. These are public records, displays of identity and clan pride serving several functions: Crest poles (shown here) record the ancestry of a family; legend poles depict folklore or historical events; history poles re­ count a clan’s story; and memorial poles commem­ orate an individual clan member. The art of carving totem poles lives in Sitka: A few of the park’s poles have been raised since 1976. Tribal organizations continue to carve poles that address themes like wellness and healing.

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