Sitka, the capital of Alaska, sleeps,
save when she is awakened for a day or two by the
arrival of a steamer-load of tourists. Fort Wrangell,
the premature offspring of a gold rumor, died, but
rose again from the dead when the lust of gold turned
the human tide toward the Klondike. Juneau, the
metropolis, was the only settlement that showed any
signs of vigor before the Klondike day; and she lived
a not over-lively village life on the strength of
the mines on Douglas Island, across the narrow straits.
There were sea-birds skimming the water as we threaded
the labyrinthine channels that surround Juneau.
We were evidently not very far from the coast-line;
for the gulls were only occasional visitors on the
Alaskan cruise, though the eagles we had always with
us. They soared aloft among the pines that crowned
the mountain heights; they glossed their wings in
the spray of the sky-tipped waterfalls, and looked
down upon us from serene summits with the unwinking
eye of scorn. It is awfully fine sailing all
about Juneau. Superb heights, snow-capped in
many cases, forest-clad in all, and with cloud belts
and sunshine mingling in the crystalline atmosphere,
form a glorious picture, which, oddly enough, one
does not view with amazement and delight, but in the
very midst of which, and a very part of which, he is;
and the proud consciousness of this marks one of the
happiest moments of his life.
Steaming into a lagoon where its mountain
walls are so high it seemed like a watery way in some
prodigious Venice; steaming in, stealing in like a
wraith, we were shortly saluted by the miners on Douglas
Island, who are, perhaps, the most persistent and
least harmful of the dynamiters. It was not long
before we began to get used to the batteries that
are touched off every few minutes, night and day; but
how strange to find in that wild solitude a 120-stamp
mill, electric lights, and all the modern nuisances!
Never was there a greater contrast than the one presented
at Douglas Island. The lagoon, with its deep,
dark waters, still as a dead river, yet mirroring
the sea-bird’s wing; a strip of beach; just
above it rows of cabins and tents that at once suggest
the mining camps of early California days; then the
rather handsome quarters of the directors; and then
the huge mill, admirably constructed and set so snugly
among the quarries that it seems almost a part of the
ore mountain itself; beyond that the great forest,
with its eagles and big game; and the everlasting
snow peaks overtopping all, as they lose themselves
in the fairest of summer skies. Small boats ply
to and fro between Douglas Island and Juneau, a mile
or more up the inlet on the opposite shore. These
ferries are paddled leisurely, and only the explosive
element at Douglas Island gives token of the activity
that prevails at Gastineaux Channel.
Soon, weary of the racket on Douglas
Island, and expecting to inspect the mine later on,
we returned across the water and made fast to the
dock in the lower end of Juneau. This settlement
has seen a good deal of experience for a young one.
It was first known as Pilsbury; then some humorist
dubbed it Fliptown. Later it was called Rockwell
and Harrisburg; and finally Juneau, the name it still
bears with more or less dignity. The customary
Indian village hangs upon the borders of the town;
in fact, the two wings of the settlement are aboriginal;
but the copper-skin seems not particularly interested
in the progress of civilization, further than the
occasional chance it affords him of turning an honest
penny in the disposal of his wares.
No sooner was the gang-plank out than
we all made a rush for the trading stores in search
of curios. The faculty of acquisitiveness grows
with what it feeds on; and before the Alaskan tour
is over, it almost amounts to a mania among the excursionists.
You should have seen us-men, women and
children-hurrying along the beach toward
the heart of Juneau, where we saw flags flying from
the staves that stood by the trading-stores. It
was no easy task to distance a competitor in those
great thoroughfares. Juneau has an annual rainfall
of nine feet; the streets are guttered: indeed
the streets are gutters in some cases. I know
of at least one little bridge that carries the pedestrian
from one sidewalk to another, over the muddy road
below. I was headed off on my way to the N. W.
T. Co.’s warehouse, and sat me down on a stump
to write till the rush on bric-a-brac was over.
Meanwhile I noticed the shake shanties and the pioneers
who hung about them, with their long legs crooked under
rush chairs in the diminutive verandas.
Indian belles were out in full feather.
Some had their faces covered with a thick coating
of soot and oil; the rims of the eyelids, the tip
of the nose and the inner portions of the lips showing
in striking contrast to the hideous mask, which they
are said to wear in order to preserve their complexion.
They look for the most part like black-faced monkeys,
and appear in this guise a great portion of the time
in order to dazzle the town, after a scrubbing, with
skins as fair and sleek as soft-soap. Even some
of the sterner sex are constrained to resort to art
in the hope of heightening their manly beauty; but
these are, of course, Alaskan dudes, and as such are
doubtless pardonable.
There is a bath-house in Juneau and
a barber-shop. They did a big business on our
arrival. There are many billiard halls, where
prohibited drinks are more or less surreptitiously
obtained. A dance-hall stands uninvitingly open
to the street. At the doorway, as we passed it,
was posted a hand-lettered placard announcing that
the ladies of Juneau would on the evening in question
give a grand ball in honor of the passengers of the
Ancon. Tickets, 50 cents.
It began to drizzle. We dodged
under the narrow awnings of the shops, and bargained
blindly in the most unmusical lingos. Within were
to be had stores of toy canoes-graceful
little things hewn after the Haida model, with prows
and sides painted in strange hieroglyphics; paddles
were there-life-size, so to speak,-gorgeously
dyed, and just the things for hall decorations; also
dishes of carved wood of quaint pattern, and some
of them quite ancient, were to be had at very moderate
prices; pipes and pipe-bowls of the weirdest description;
halibut fish-hooks, looking like anything at all but
fish-hooks; Shaman rattles, grotesque in design; Thlinket
baskets, beautifully plaited and stained with subdued
dyes-the most popular of souvenirs; spoons
with bone bowls and handles carved from the horns
of the mountain goat or musk-ox; even the big horn-spoon
itself was no doubt made by these ingenious people;
Indian masks of wood, inlaid with abalone shells, bears’
teeth, or lucky stones from the head of the catfish;
Indian wampum; deer-skin sacks filled with the smooth,
pencil-shaped sticks with which the native sport passes
the merry hours away in games of chance; bangles without
end, and rings of the clumsiest description hammered
out of silver coin; bows and arrows; doll papooses,
totem poles in miniature. There were garments
made of fish-skins and bird-skins, smelling of oil
and semi-transparent, as if saturated with it; and
half-musical instruments, or implements, made of twigs
strung full of the beaks of birds that clattered with
a weird, unearthly Alaskan clatter.
There were little graven images, a
few of them looking somewhat idolatrous; and heaps
upon heaps of nameless and shapeless odds and ends
that boasted more or less bead-work in the line of
ornamentation; but all chiefly noticeable for the
lack of taste displayed, both in design and the combination
of color. The Chilkat blanket is an exception
to the Alaskan Indian rule. It is a handsome
bit of embroidery, of significant though mysterious
design; rich in color, and with a deep, knotted fringe
on the lower edge-just the thing for a lambrequin,
and to be had in Juneau for $40, which is only $15
more than is asked for the same article in Portland,
Oregon, as some of us discovered to our cost.
There were quantities of skins miserably cured, impregnating
the air with vilest odors; and these were waved at
you and wafted after you at every step. In the
forest which suddenly terminates at the edge of the
town there is game worth hunting. The whistler,
reindeer, mountain sheep and goat, ermine, musk-rat,
marmet, wolf and bear, are tracked and trapped by
the red-man; but I doubt if the foot of the white-man
is likely to venture far into the almost impenetrable
confusion of logs and brush that is the distinguishing
feature of the Alaskan wilderness. Beautiful
antlers are to be had in Juneau and elsewhere; and
perhaps a cinnamon or a black cub as playful as a
puppy, and full of a kind of half-savage fun.
In the upper part of the town, where
the stumps and brush are thickest, there are cosy
little log-cabins, and garden patches that seem to
be making the most of the summer sunshine. In
the window of one of these cabins we saw a face-dusky,
beautiful, sensitive. Dreamy eyes slumbered under
fringes that might have won a song from a Persian poet;
admirably proportioned features, delicious lips, almost
persuaded us that a squaw-man might in some cases
be excusable for his infatuation. Later we discovered
that the one beauty of Alaska was of Hawaiian parentage;
that she was married, and was as shy of intruders
as a caged bird. Very dissimilar are the ladies
of Juneau.
In the evening the town-crier went
to and fro announcing the opening of the ball.
It was still drizzling; the cliffs that tower above
the metropolis were capped with cloud; slender, rain-born
rivulets plunged from these airy heights into space
and were blown away like smoke. Sometimes we
caught glimpses of white, moving objects, far aloft
against the black wall of rock: these were mountain
sheep.
The cannonading at Douglas Island
continued-muffled thunder that ceases neither
night nor day. Nobody seemed to think of sleeping.
The dock was swarming with Indians; you would have
known it with your eyes shut, from the musky odor
that permeated every quarter of the ship. The
deck was filled with passengers, chatting, reading,
smoking, looking off upon the queer little town and
wondering what its future was likely to be. And
so, we might have lingered on indefinitely, with the
light of a dull day above us-a light that
was to grow no less till dawn, for there is no night
there,-were it not that some one looked
at his watch, and lo! it was the midnight hour.
Then we went to the ball given by
the ladies of Juneau in our honor. Half a dozen
young Indian maidens sat on a bench against the wall
and munched peanuts while they smiled; a few straggling
settlers gathered at the bar while they smiled; two
fiddlers and a guitar made as merry as they could
under the circumstances in an alcove at the top of
the hall. Round dances were in vogue,-round
dances interspersed with flirtations and fire-water;
round dances that grew oblong and irregular before
sunrise-and yet it was sunrise at the unearthly
hour of 3.30 a. m., or thereabout. We all felt
as if we had been cheated out of something when we
saw his coming; but perhaps it was only the summer
siesta that had been cut short,-the summer
siesta that here passes for the more wholesome and
old-fashioned sleep of the world lower down on the
map.
During the night, having discharged
freight and exhausted the resources of Juneau, including
a post-office, and a post-mistress who sorts the mail
twice a month, we steamed back to Douglas Island, and
dropped many fathoms of noisy chain into the deep
abreast of the camp. The eve of the Fourth in
the United States of America is nothing in comparison
with the everlasting racket at this wonderful mine.
The iron jaws of the 120-stamp mill grind incessantly,
spitting pulverized rock and ore into the vats that
quake under the mastication of the mighty molars; cars
slip down into the bowels of the earth, and emerge
laden with precious freight; multitudinous miners
relieve one another, watch and watch. Electric
light banishes even a thought of dusk; and were it
now winter-the long, dark, dreary winter
of the North, with but half a dozen hours of legitimate
daylight out of the four and twenty-the
work at Douglas Island would go on triumphantly; and
it will go forever-or, rather, until the
bottom drops out of the mine, just as it drops out
of everything in this life. All night long the
terrible rattle and rumble and roar of the explosive
agent robbed us of our rest. I could think of
nothing but the gnomes of the German fairy tale; the
dwarfs of the black mountain, with their glowworm
lamps, darting in and out of the tunnels in the earth
like moles, and heaping together the riches that are
the cause of so much pleasure and pain, and envy and
despair, and sorrow and sin, and too often death.