The
Department of Alaska was the designation for the
government of Alaska from its purchase by the United States of
America
in 1867 until its organization as the District of Alaska in 1884. During
the Department era, Alaska was variously under the jurisdiction of
the
U.S. Army (until
1877), the United States Department of the
Treasury
(from 1877 until 1879) and the U.S. Navy (from
1879 until 1884).
The area later became the District of Alaska, then the Alaska Territory, then the State of
Alaska
.
At the instigation of
U.S. Secretary of State William Seward, the United States Senate approved the
purchase of Alaska from Russia
for
$7,200,000 on 9 April 1867, and the United States flag was raised on 18 October of that same year (now called Alaska Day). Coincident with the
ownership change, the de facto International Date Line
was moved westward, and Alaska changed from the
Julian calendar to the Gregorian calendar. Therefore, for
residents, Friday,
October 6,
1867 was followed by Friday,
October 18,
1867; two Fridays
in a row because of the date line shift.
On the
morning of October 18, 1867, USS Ossipee arrived at Sitka
with Russian Commissioner Captain Alexis Pestchouroff and American
Commissioner General Lowell
H. Rousseau on board.
That afternoon, 250 American soldiers, 80 Russian soldiers,
Russian-American Company Chief Manager
Prince Maksutov and his wife, and
a group of locals assembled at the flagstaff in front of the
governor's residence (on what has come to be known as "Baranof
(Baronov) Castle Hill") to witness the
flag of Russia being lowered and the
U.S. flag being raised in its
place.
A dual cannon salute was fired for each flag, and each Commissioner
gave a short speech. Perhaps misunderstanding the directions, the
Russian soldier bringing his country's flag down tore it loose,
then dropped it. The banner drifted down and was caught on a
portion of the upraised bayonets of the Russian
garrison.
Princess
Maksutova is said to have fainted at the sight.
Legend has it that the first American administrator of Alaska was
Polish immigrant
Włodzimierz Krzyżanowski.
However, the
Anchorage Daily
News was unable to find any conclusive information to
support or disprove this claim. The purchase was not popular in the
United States, where Alaska became known as "Seward's Folly" or
"Seward's Icebox". However, the resources of Alaska would soon show
that this was a wise buy. Alaska celebrates the purchase each year
on the last Monday of March, which is known as
Seward's Day.
When the United States had first bought Alaska, vast regions of the
area still remained unexplored. In 1865,
Western Union decided to lay a
telegraph line across Alaska to Bering Strait
where it would connect with an Asian line.
Robert Kennicott, part of a Western Union
surveying effort, had led his crew to Nulato on the banks of the
Yukon. He died the following year and
William
H. Dall took charge of scientific
affairs.
The Western Union expedition
conducted the first scientific studies of the region and produced
the first map of the entire Yukon River
. That same year, 1866, workers finally
succeeded in laying an Atlantic undersea telegraph cable, and the
Alaskan overland project was abandoned. Dall returned to Alaska
many times, recording and naming geological features.
The
Alaska Commercial
Company also contributed to the growing exploration of Alaska
in the last decades of the 1800s, building trading posts along the
Interior's many rivers. Small parties of trappers and traders
entered the Interior, and, though the federal government provided
little money to the region, army officers would occasionally
explore on their own. In a four-month journey, Lt.
Frederick Schwatka and his party rafted
the Yukon from Lake Lindeman in Canada to Saint Michael near the
river's mouth on the Bering
Sea
. In 1885, Lt.
Henry T. Allen
and four others left the Gulf of Alaska
, followed the Copper River, crossed a mountain
range, and traveled down the Tanana
River to the Yukon, and portaged to the Kanuti and Koyukuk
rivers. Allen went up the Koyukuk, then back down the Yukon,
crossed over to Unalakeet on the coast, and then made his way to
Saint Michael, exploring about 1,500 miles (2400 km) of
Interior Alaska.
References
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http://www.litsite.org/index.cfm?section=Digital-Archives&page=Government&cat=Making-of-Alaska&viewpost=2&ContentId=2736}}