Katalan’s Rock towers above
the sea at the top corner of Sitka. Below it,
on the one hand, the ancient colonial houses are scattered
down the shore among green lawns like pasture lands,
and beside grass-grown streets with a trail of dust
in the middle of them. On the other hand, the
Siwash Indian lodges are clustered all along the beach.
This rancheria was originally separated from the town
by a high stockade, and the huge gates were closed
at night for the greater security of the inhabitants;
but since the American occupation the gates have been
destroyed, and only a portion of the stockade remains.
Katalan’s Rock is steep enough
to command the town, and ample enough to afford all
the space necessary for fortifications and the accommodation
of troops and stores. A natural Gibraltar, it
was the site of the first settlement, and has ever
remained the most conspicuous and distinguished quarter
of the colony. The first building erected on this
rock was a block-house, which was afterward burned.
A second building, reared on the ruins of the first,
was destroyed by an earthquake; but a third, the colonial
castle and residence of the governors, stands to this
day. It crowns the summit of the rock, is one
hundred and forty feet in length, seventy feet in
depth, two stories with basement and attic, and has
a lookout that commands one of the most romantic and
picturesque combinations of land and sea imaginable.
It is not a handsome edifice, nor
is it in the least like a castle, nor like what one
supposes a castle should be. Were it anywhere
else, it might pass for the country residence of a
gentleman of the old school, or for an unfashionable
suburban hotel, or for a provincial seminary.
It is built of solid cedar logs that seem destined
to weather the storms of ages. These logs are
secured by innumerable copper bolts; and the whole
structure is riveted to the rocks, so that neither
wind nor wave nor earthquake shock is likely to prevail
against it.
Handsomely finished within, it was
in the colonial days richly furnished; and as Sitka
was at that time a large settlement composed of wealthy
and highbred Russians, governed by a prince or a baron
whose petty court was made up of the representatives
of the rank and fashion of St. Petersburg and Moscow,
the colonial castle was most of the time the scene
of social splendor.
The fame of the brilliant and beautiful
Baroness Wrangell, first chatelaine of the castle,
lives after her. She was succeeded by the wife
of Governor Kupreanoff, a brave lady, who in 1835 crossed
Siberia on horseback to Behring Sea on her way to
Sitka. Later the Princess Maksontoff became the
social queen, and reigned in the little castle on
Katalan’s Rock as never queen reigned before.
A flagship was anchored under the windows, and the
proud Admiral spent much of his time on shore.
The officers’ clubhouse, yonder down the grassy
street, was the favorite lounging place of the navy.
The tea-gardens have run to seed, and the race-course
is obliterated, where, doubtless, fair ladies and
brave men disported themselves in the interminable
twilights of the Alaskan summer. In the reign
of the Princess Maksontoff the ladies were first shown
to the sideboard. When they had regaled themselves
with potent punch and caviare, the gentlemen followed
suit. But the big brazen samovar was forever
steaming in the grand salon, and delicious draughts
of caravan tea were in order at all hours.
What days they were, when the castle
was thronged with guests, and those of all ages and
descriptions and from every rank in and out of society!
The presidential levee is not more democratic than
were the fêtes of the Princess Maksontoff.
To the music of the Admiral’s band combined
with the castle orchestra, it was “all hands
round.” The Prince danced with each and
every lady in turn. The Princess was no less gracious,
for all danced with her who chose, from the Lord High
Admiral to midshipmite and the crew of the captain’s
gig.
You will read of these things in the
pages of Lutka, Sir George Simpson, Sir Edward Belcher,
and other early voyagers. They vouch for the unique
charm of the colonial life at that day. Washington
Irving, in his “Astoria,” has something
to say of New Archangel (Michael), or “Sheetka,”
as he spells it; but it is of the time when the ships
of John Jacob Astor were touching in that vicinity,
and the reports are not so pleasing.
While social life in the little colony
was still more enjoyable, a change came that in a
single hour reversed the order of affairs. For
years Russia had been willing, if not eager, to dispose
of the great lands that lay along the northwestern
coast of America. She seemed never to have cared
much for them, nor to have believed much in their present
value or possible future development. No enterprise
was evinced among the people: they were comparative
exiles, who sought to relieve the monotony of their
existence by one constant round of gaity. Soirees
at the castle, tea-garden parties, picnics upon the
thousand lovely isles that beautify the Sitkan Sea;
strolls among the sylvan retreats in which the primeval
forest, at the very edge of the town, abounds; fishing
and hunting expeditions, music, dancing, lively conversation,
strong punch, caviare and the steaming samovar,-those
were the chief diversions with which noble and serf
alike sought to lighten the burden of the day.
While Russia was willing to part with
the lone land on the Pacific, she was determined that
it should not pass into the hands of certain of the
powers for whom she had little or no love. Hence
there was time for the United States to consider the
question of a purchase and to haggle a little over
the price. For years the bargain hung in the balance.
When it was finally settled, it was settled so suddenly
that the witnesses had to be wakened and called out
of their beds. They assembled secretly, in the
middle of the night, as if they were conspirators;
and before sunrise the whole matter was fixed forever.
On the 18th of October, 1867, three
United States ships of war anchored off Katalan’s
Rock. These were the Ossipee, the Jamestown and
the Resaca. In the afternoon, at half-past three
o’clock, the terrace before the castle was surrounded
by United States troops, Russian soldiers, officials,
citizens and Indians. The town was alive with
Russian bunting, and the ships aflutter with Stars
and Stripes and streamers. There was something
ominous in the air and in the sunshine. Bang!
went the guns from the Ossipee, and the Russian flag
slowly descended from the lofty staff on the castle;
but the wind caught it and twisted it round and round
the staff, and it was long before a boatswain’s
chair could be rigged to the halyards, and some one
hauled up to disentangle the rebellious banner.
Meanwhile the rain began to fall,
and the Princess Maksontoff was in tears. It
was a dismal hour for the proud court of the doughty
governor. The Russian water battery was firing
a salute from the dock as the Stars and Stripes were
climbing to the skies-the great continent
of icy peaks and pine was passing from the hands of
one nation to the other. In the silence that
ensued, Captain Pestehouroff stepped forward and said:
“By authority of his Majesty the Emperor of
Russia, I transfer to the United States the Territory
of Alaska.” The prince governor then surrendered
his insignia of office, and the thing was done.
In a few months’ time fifty ships and four hundred
people had deserted Sitka; and to-day but three families
of pure Russian blood remain. Perhaps the fault-finding
which followed this remarkable acquisition of territory
on the part of the United States government-both
the acquisition and the fault-finding were on the
part of our government-had best be left
unmentioned. Now that the glorious waters of
that magnificent archipelago have become the resort
of summer tourists, every man, woman and child can
see for his, her and its self; and this is the only
way in which to convince an American of anything.
Thirty years ago Sitka was what I
have attempted to describe above. To-day how
different! Passing its barracks at the foot of
Katalan’s Rock, one sees a handful of marines
looking decidedly bored if off duty. The steps
that lead up to the steep incline of the rock to the
castle terrace are fast falling to decay. Weeds
and rank grass trail over them and cover the whole
top of the rock. The castle has been dismantled.
The walls will stand until they are blown up or torn
down, but all traces of the original ornamentation
of the interior have disappeared. The carved
balustrades, the curious locks, knobs, hinges, chandeliers,
and fragments of the wainscoting, have been borne
away by enterprising curio hunters. There was
positively nothing left for me to take.
One may still see the chamber occupied
by Secretary Seward, who closed the bargain with the
Russian Government at $7,200,000, cash down. Lady
Franklin occupied that chamber when she was scouring
these waters in the fearless and indefatigable, but
fruitless, search for the relics of the lost Sir John.
One handsome apartment has been partially restored
and suitably furnished for the use of the United States
District Attorney. Two rooms on the groundfloor
are occupied by the signal officers; but the rest
of the building is in a shameful condition, and only
its traditions remain to make it an object of interest
to every stranger guest.
It is said that twice in the year,
at the dead hour of the night, the ghost of a bride
wanders sorrowfully from room to room. She was
the daughter of one of the old governors-a
stern parent, who forced her into a marriage without
love. On the bridal eve, while all the guests
were assembled, and the bride, in wedding garments,
was the centre of attraction, she suddenly disappeared.
After a long search her body was found in one of the
apartments of the castle, but life was extinct.
At Eastertide the shade of this sad body makes the
round of the deserted halls, and in passing leaves
after it a faint odor of wild roses.
The basement is half filled with old
rubbish. I found rooms where an amateur minstrel
entertainment had been given. Rude lettering upon
the walls recorded the fact in lampblack, and a monster
hand pointed with index finger to its temporary bar.
Burnt-cork debris was scattered about, and
there were “old soldiers” enough on the
premises to have quite staggered a moralist.
The Muscovite reign is over. The Princess is
in her grave on the hill yonder,-a grave
that was forgotten for a time and lost in the jungle
that has overgrown the old Russian cemetery. The
Indians mutilated that tomb; but Lieutenant Gilman,
in charge of the marines attached to the Adams, restored
it; and he, with his men, did much toward preserving
Sitka from going to the dogs.
Gone are the good old days, but the
Americanized Sitka does not propose to be behind the
times. I discovered a theatre. It was in
one of the original Russian houses, doomed to last
forever-a long, narrow hall, with a stage
at the upper end of it. A few scenes, evidently
painted on the spot and in dire distress; a drop-curtain
depicting an utterly impracticable roseate ice-gorge
in the ideal Alaska, and four footlights, constituted
the sum total of the properties. The stage was
six feet deep, about ten feet broad, and the “flies”
hung like “bangs” above the foreheads
of the players. In the next room, convenient in
case of a panic, was the Sitka fire department, consisting
of a machine of one-man-power, which a small boy might
work without endangering anybody or anything.
Suburban Sitka is sweet and sad.
One passes on the way to the wildwood, where everybody
goes as often as may be,-a so-called “blarney
stone.” Many a fellow has chipped away
at that stone while he chatted with his girl-I
suppose that is where the blarney comes in,-and
left his name or initials for a sacred memory.
There are dull old Russian hieroglyphs there likewise.
Love is alike in all languages, you know. The
truth about the stone is merely this: it is a
big soft stone by the sea, and of just the right height
to rest a weary pilgrim. There old Baranoff,
the first governor, used to sit of a summer afternoon
and sip his Russian brandy until he was as senseless
as the stone beneath him; and then he was carried
in state up to the colonial castle and suffered to
sober off.
Beyond the stone, and the curving
beach with the grass-grown highway skirting it, is
the forest; and through this forest is the lovers’
lane, made long ago by the early colonists and kept
in perfect trim by the latest,-a lane that
is green-arched overhead and fern-walled on either
side, and soft with the dust of dead pine boughs underfoot.
There also are streams and waterfalls and rustic bridges
such as one might look for in some stately park in
England, but hardly in Alaska. Surely there is
no bit of wilderness finer than this. All is sweet
and grave and silent, save for the ripple of waters
and the sighing of winds.
As for the Siwash village on the other
side of Sitka, it is a Siwash village over again.
How soon one wearies of them! But one ought never
to weary of the glorious sea isles and the overshadowing
mountains that lie on every side of the quaint, half-barbarous
capital. Though it is dead to the core and beginning
to show the signs of death, it is one of the dreamiest
spots on earth, and just the one for long summer solitude,-at
least so we all thought, for on the morrow we were
homeward bound.