Alaska
               
                
               
               The U.S. state of Alaska is located in the northwest corner of North America, west
                  of 
British Columbia and 
Yukon Territory, and east of Russian Siberia. At 943,739 km
2 (about 365,000,000 acres), Alaska is the largest U.S. state, with over 54,000 km
                  of coastline that touches the North Pacific Ocean, Bering Sea, Beaufort Sea, Chukchi
                  Sea, and the Arctic Ocean; its western and southern borders span 2,500 km running
                  adjacent to Canada.
1The name Alaska, an English corruption of the original name,
 has a complicated etymology.2 It originates from the Aleut (Unangan) wordaláxsxaq,
 which refers to an object to which the sea is directed--in this case an island or
                  peninsula; it also translates as to Alyeksa, which means great land.
3 From Alyeksa, the Russians derived names for the Alaskan peninsula, “Aliaska,” and
                  the territory as a whole, “Alashka.”4 The current variation of the name “Alaska” follows from the same etymology, rooted
                  in the Eskaleut language family.5
               
               
               The Russian explorer Vitus Bering is credited as the first non-Indigenous visitor
                  to present-day Alaska, in 
1741.
6 Spanish explorer Juan Perez followed in 
1774, and 
Captain James Cook arrived in 
1776.
7 The Russian explorer and fur trader Grigorii Shelikhov, who established the Shelikhov-Golikov
                  Company, established the first non-Indigenous settlement in 
1784.
8 Alaska became the last major confluence of Empire in the North Pacific. In 
1867, Alaska was sold by the Russians to the United States, where it existed variously
                  as a District, Department, and Territory until statehood was granted in 
1959.
Many Indigenous Peoples continue to live in Alaska, with histories dating back at
                  least 10,000 years.9 Within western classifications, there are five distinct groups of Indigenous Peoples
                  within Alaska: Northwest Coast Indians, Inupiaqs (In Canada, Inuit), Yupiks, Aleuts,
                  and Athabascans.10 Many of these groups’ traditional territories have been divided by the creation of
                  arbitrary borders: Richard Osburn describes these disjointed territories as divided
                  by artificial lines.
11 The “Northwest Coast Indians” comprised of the Haida, Tlingit, and Tshimshian Peoples,
                  as well as the Inupiaq, Yupik, and Athabaskan Peoples, continue to exist within a
                  complex geopolitical sphere of influence amongst the United States, Russia and Canada.12 Indigenous Peoples comprise approximately 16% of the Alaska's total population of
                  736,239.13
               
               
               In the collection, many of the documents on Alaska reveal anxieties caused by an increased
                  American presence within the territory. For example, in 
this despatch, 
Governor Frederick Seymour discusses rumours of annexation by the United States and the unprecedentedly high
                  number of Americans flooding over the border. In a follow-up 
despatch, Seymour goes on to explain that the “Indians” have, 
regrettably,
 taken up the English flag in opposition to their new American administrators.
                  
                  
                     - 1. Geography, State of Alaska.
- 2. Ella Higginson, Alaska: The Great Country, (New York: The Macmillan Co, 1912).
- 3. Alaska State Names (Etymology of Names), eReferenceDesk.com.
- 4. Higginson, Alaska: The Great Country.
- 5. Unangan (Native Americans of the Arctic), What-When-How.com.
- 6. Merle Colby, A Guide to Alaska: Last American Frontier. (Toronto: Macmillan, 1939).
- 7. Ibid.
- 8. Ibid.
- 9. Alaska Natives, State of Alaska.
- 10. Ibid.
- 11. Richard Osburn. 2000. Problems and Solutions regarding Indigenous Peoples Split by International Borders, American Indian Law Review 24, no. (2): 471.
- 12. Alaska Natives, State of Alaska.
- 13. Geography, State of Alaska.