Fort Stikine
Fort Stikine is located in current day Wrangell,
Alaska and is the longest standing fort on the Alaskan coast. The location of the fort on
the
Stikine River made it an important supply point for fur traders and its proximity to the Indigenous
village, Kotzlitzna, aided trade with the Stikine Tlingit First Nations.
Fort Stikine was established in
1839 after the Russian-American Company (who were in
Alaska for sea otter) and the
Hudson’s Bay Company came to an agreement. The agreement allowed the
HBC’s use of the Russian post of Redoubt St. Dionysus which became Fort Stikine. Fort Stikine fell under the direction of Chief Trader
James Douglas (later Governor of the colonies of
British Columbia and
Vancouver Island). William Glen Rae, who would become the chief trader of the post after
Douglas reported in the first journal entry at Fort Stikine on
13 June 1840.
The men at the fort spent their time protecting themselves against “anticipated Tlingit
attacks,” collecting water, turning potatoes, and chopping wood. The men also experienced
trade problems with the Tlingit, however these problems would have been easily solved
had
someone at the fort spoken Tlingit.
Problems escalated between Fort Stikine and the Tlingit, when the Tlingits claimed
their traditional rights to the
Stikine River and protested when the
HBC began to use their trade routes. A smallpox epidemic between
1836-1840, due to the arrival of Europeans, reduced the Tlingit population by half.
Fort Stikine was abandoned in
1848 when furs were depleted, however it remained under British control, connected to
other colonial holdings through its ships such as the
Beaver and
Labouchere. British control remained until the United States purchased
Alaska from Russia in
1867. After the US purchase, a new fort was built in
1868 at the spot of Fort Stikine, it was named Fort Wrangel after Baron von Wrangel of
the Russian-American company.
- 1. Laura F. Klein, Demystifying the Opposition: The Hudson's Bay Company and Tlingit, Arctic Anthropology, vol.24, no.1, (1987): 101-103; Fort Wrangel, AlaskaWeb.
- 2. Klein, Demystifying the Opposition, 102.
- 3. Ibid. 103.
- 4. Ibid. 104.
- 5. Fort Wrangel, AlaskaWeb.
- 6. Ibid.; Klein, Demystifying the Opposition, 103.
- 7. Fort Wrangel, AlaskaWeb.