<SPAN name="chap03"></SPAN>
<h2 align="center">Chapter III</h2>
<h2 align="center">Wrangell Island and Alaska Summers</h2>
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<p>Wrangell Island is about fourteen miles long, separated from the
mainland by a narrow channel or fiord, and trending in the direction
of the flow of the ancient ice-sheet. Like all its neighbors, it is
densely forested down to the water's edge with trees that never seem
to have suffered from thirst or fire or the axe of the lumberman in
all their long century lives. Beneath soft, shady clouds, with
abundance of rain, they flourish in wonderful strength and beauty to a
good old age, while the many warm days, half cloudy, half clear, and
the little groups of pure sun-days enable them to ripen their cones
and send myriads of seeds flying every autumn to insure the permanence
of the forests and feed the multitude of animals.</p>
<p>The Wrangell village was a rough place. No mining hamlet in the
placer gulches of California, nor any backwoods village I ever saw,
approached it in picturesque, devil-may-care <i>abandon</i>. It was a
lawless draggle of wooden huts and houses, built in crooked lines,
wrangling around the boggy shore of the island for a mile or so in the
general form of the letter S, without the slightest subordination to
the points of the compass or to building laws of any kind. Stumps and
logs, like precious monuments, adorned its two streets, each stump and
log, on account of the moist climate, moss-grown and tufted with grass
and bushes, <!-- Page 26 --> but muddy on the sides below the limit of
the bog-line. The ground in general was an oozy, mossy bog on a
foundation of jagged rocks, full of concealed pit-holes. These
picturesque rock, bog, and stump obstructions, however, were not so
very much in the way, for there were no wagons or carriages there.
There was not a horse on the island. The domestic animals were
represented by chickens, a lonely cow, a few sheep, and hogs of a
breed well calculated to deepen and complicate the mud of the
streets.</p>
<p>Most of the permanent residents of Wrangell were engaged in trade.
Some little trade was carried on in fish and furs, but most of the
quickening business of the place was derived from the Cassiar
gold-mines, some two hundred and fifty or three hundred miles inland,
by way of the Stickeen River and Dease Lake. Two stern-wheel steamers
plied on the river between Wrangell and Telegraph Creek at the head of
navigation, a hundred and fifty miles from Wrangell, carrying freight
and passengers and connecting with pack-trains for the mines. These
placer mines, on tributaries of the Mackenzie River, were discovered
in the year 1874. About eighteen hundred miners and prospectors were
said to have passed through Wrangell that season of 1879, about half
of them being Chinamen. Nearly a third of this whole number set out
from here in the month of February, traveling on the Stickeen River,
which usually remains safely frozen until toward the end of April. The
main body of the miners, however, went up on the steamers in May and
<!-- Page 27 --> June. On account of the severe winters they were all
compelled to leave the mines the end of September. Perhaps about two
thirds of them passed the winter in Portland and Victoria and the
towns of Puget Sound. The rest remained here in Wrangell, dozing away
the long winter as best they could.</p>
<p>Indians, mostly of the Stickeen tribe, occupied the two ends of the
town, the whites, of whom there were about forty or fifty, the middle
portion; but there was no determinate line of demarcation, the
dwellings of the Indians being mostly as large and solidly built of
logs and planks as those of the whites. Some of them were adorned with
tall totem poles.</p>
<p>The fort was a quadrangular stockade with a dozen block and frame
buildings located upon rising ground just back of the business part of
the town. It was built by our Government shortly after the purchase of
Alaska, and was abandoned in 1872, reoccupied by the military in 1875,
and finally abandoned and sold to private parties in 1877. In the fort
and about it there were a few good, clean homes, which shone all the
more brightly in their sombre surroundings. The ground occupied by the
fort, by being carefully leveled and drained, was dry, though formerly
a portion of the general swamp, showing how easily the whole town
could have been improved. But in spite of disorder and squalor, shaded
with clouds, washed and wiped by rain and sea winds, it was
triumphantly salubrious through all the seasons. And though the houses
seemed to rest uneasily among the miry rocks and stumps, squirming at
all angles as if they had <!-- Page 28 --> been tossed and twisted by
earthquake shocks, and showing but little more relation to one another
than may be observed among moraine boulders, Wrangell was a tranquil
place. I never heard a noisy brawl in the streets, or a clap of
thunder, and the waves seldom spoke much above a whisper along the
beach. In summer the rain comes straight down, steamy and tepid. The
clouds are usually united, filling the sky, not racing along in
threatening ranks suggesting energy of an overbearing destructive
kind, but forming a bland, mild, laving bath. The cloudless days are
calm, pearl-gray, and brooding in tone, inclining to rest and peace;
the islands seem to drowse and float on the glassy water, and in the
woods scarce a leaf stirs.</p>
<p>The very brightest of Wrangell days are not what Californians would
call bright. The tempered sunshine sifting through the moist
atmosphere makes no dazzling glare, and the town, like the landscape,
rests beneath a hazy, hushing, Indian-summerish spell. On the longest
days the sun rises about three o'clock, but it is daybreak at
midnight. The cocks crowed when they woke, without reference to the
dawn, for it is never quite dark; there were only a few full-grown
roosters in Wrangell, half a dozen or so, to awaken the town and give
it a civilized character. After sunrise a few languid smoke-columns
might be seen, telling the first stir of the people. Soon an Indian or
two might be noticed here and there at the doors of their barnlike
cabins, and a merchant getting ready for trade; but scarcely a sound
was heard, only <!-- Page 29 --> a dull, muffled stir gradually
deepening. There were only two white babies in the town, so far as I
saw, and as for Indian babies, they woke and ate and made no crying
sound. Later you might hear the croaking of ravens, and the strokes of
an axe on firewood. About eight or nine o'clock the town was awake.
Indians, mostly women and children, began to gather on the front
platforms of the half-dozen stores, sitting carelessly on their
blankets, every other face hideously blackened, a naked circle around
the eyes, and perhaps a spot on the cheek-bone and the nose where the
smut has been rubbed off. Some of the little children were also
blackened, and none were over-clad, their light and airy costume
consisting of a calico shirt reaching only to the waist. Boys eight or
ten years old sometimes had an additional garment,--a pair of castaway
miner's overalls wide enough and ragged enough for extravagant
ventilation. The larger girls and young women were arrayed in showy
calico, and wore jaunty straw hats, gorgeously ribboned, and glowed
among the blackened and blanketed old crones like scarlet tanagers in
a flock of blackbirds. The women, seated on the steps and platform of
the traders' shops, could hardly be called loafers, for they had
berries to sell, basketfuls of huckleberries, large yellow
salmon-berries, and bog raspberries that looked wondrous fresh and
clean amid the surrounding squalor. After patiently waiting for
purchasers until hungry, they ate what they could not sell, and went
away to gather more.</p>
<p>Yonder you see a canoe gliding out from the shore, <!-- Page 30 -->
containing perhaps a man, a woman, and a child or two, all paddling
together in natural, easy rhythm. They are going to catch a fish, no
difficult matter, and when this is done their day's work is done.
Another party puts out to capture bits of driftwood, for it is easier
to procure fuel in this way than to drag it down from the outskirts of
the woods through rocks and bushes. As the day advances, a fleet of
canoes may be seen along the shore, all fashioned alike, high and long
beak-like prows and sterns, with lines as fine as those of the breast
of a duck. What the mustang is to the Mexican <i>vaquero</i>, the
canoe is to these coast Indians. They skim along the shores to fish
and hunt and trade, or merely to visit their neighbors, for they are
sociable, and have family pride remarkably well developed, meeting
often to inquire after each other's health, attend potlatches and
dances, and gossip concerning coming marriages, births, deaths, etc.
Others seem to sail for the pure pleasure of the thing, their canoes
decorated with handfuls of the tall purple epilobium.</p>
<ANTIMG src="images/tia_030.jpg" width-obs="250" height-obs="180" alt="Indian Canoes" />
<p>Yonder goes a whole family, grandparents and all, making a direct
course for some favorite stream and camp-ground. They are going to
gather berries, as the baskets tell. Never before in all my travels,
north or south, had I found so lavish an abundance of berries as here.
The woods and meadows are full of them, both on the lowlands and
mountains--huckleberries of many species, salmon-berries,
blackberries, raspberries, with service-berries on dry open places,
and cranberries in the bogs, sufficient for every bird,
<!-- Page 31 --> beast, and human being in the territory and thousands
of tons to spare. The huckleberries are especially abundant. A species
that grows well up on the mountains is the best and largest, a
half-inch and more in diameter and delicious in flavor. These grow on
bushes three or four inches to a foot high. The berries of the
commonest species are smaller and grow almost everywhere on the low
grounds on bushes from three to six or seven feet high. This is the
species on which the Indians depend most for food, gathering them in
large quantities, beating them into a paste, pressing the paste into
cakes about an inch thick, and drying them over a slow fire to enrich
their winter stores. Salmon-berries and service-berries are preserved
in the same way.</p>
<p>A little excursion to one of the best huckleberry fields adjacent
to Wrangell, under the direction of the Collector of Customs, to which
I was invited, I greatly enjoyed. There were nine Indians in the
party, mostly women and children going to gather huckleberries. As
soon as we had arrived at the chosen campground on the bank of a trout
stream, all ran into the bushes and began eating berries before
anything in the way of camp-making was done, laughing and chattering
in natural animal enjoyment. The Collector went up the stream to
examine a meadow at its head with reference to the quantity of hay it
might yield for his cow, fishing by the way. All the Indians except
the two eldest boys who joined the Collector, remained among the
berries.</p>
<p>The fishermen had rather poor luck, owing, they <!-- Page 32 -->
said, to the sunny brightness of the day, a complaint seldom heard in
this climate. They got good exercise, however, jumping from boulder to
boulder in the brawling stream, running along slippery logs and
through the bushes that fringe the bank, casting here and there into
swirling pools at the foot of cascades, imitating the tempting little
skips and whirls of flies so well known to fishing parsons, but
perhaps still better known to Indian boys. At the lake-basin the
Collector, after he had surveyed his hay-meadow, went around it to the
inlet of the lake with his brown pair of attendants to try their luck,
while I botanized in the delightful flora which called to mind the
cool sphagnum and carex bogs of Wisconsin and Canada. Here I found
many of my old favorites the heathworts--kalmia, pyrola, chiogenes,
huckleberry, cranberry, etc. On the margin of the meadow darling
linnæa was in its glory; purple panicled grasses in full flower
reached over my head, and some of the carices and ferns were almost as
tall. Here, too, on the edge of the woods I found the wild apple tree,
the first I had seen in Alaska. The Indians gather the fruit, small
and sour as it is, to flavor their fat salmon. I never saw a richer
bog and meadow growth anywhere. The principal forest-trees are
hemlock, spruce, and Nootka cypress, with a few pines (<i>P.
contorta</i>) on the margin of the meadow, some of them nearly a
hundred feet high, draped with gray usnea, the bark also gray with
scale lichens.</p>
<p>We met all the berry-pickers at the lake, excepting only a small
girl and the camp-keeper. In their <!-- Page 33 -->
bright colors they made a lively picture among the quivering bushes,
keeping up a low pleasant chanting as if the day and the place and the
berries were according to their own hearts. The children carried small
baskets, holding two or three quarts; the women two large ones swung
over their shoulders. In the afternoon, when the baskets were full,
all started back to the camp-ground, where the canoe was left. We
parted at the lake, I choosing to follow quietly the stream through
the woods. I was the first to arrive at camp. The rest of the party
came in shortly afterwards, singing and humming like heavy-laden bees.
It was interesting to note how kindly they held out handfuls of the
best berries to the little girl, who welcomed them all in succession
with smiles and merry words that I did not understand. But there was
no mistaking the kindliness and serene good nature.</p>
<p>While I was at Wrangell the chiefs and head men of the Stickeen
tribe got up a grand dinner and entertainment in honor of their
distinguished visitors, three doctors of divinity and their wives,
fellow passengers on the steamer with me, whose object was to organize
the Presbyterian church. To both the dinner and dances I was invited,
was adopted by the Stickeen tribe, and given an Indian name
(Ancoutahan) said to mean adopted chief. I was inclined to regard this
honor as being unlikely to have any practical value, but I was assured
by Mr. Vanderbilt, Mr. Young, and others that it would be a great
safeguard while I was on my travels among the different tribes of the
archipelago. <!-- Page 34 --> For travelers without an Indian name
might be killed and robbed without the offender being called to
account as long as the crime was kept secret from the whites; but,
being adopted by the Stickeens, no one belonging to the other tribes
would dare attack me, knowing that the Stickeens would hold them
responsible.</p>
<p>The dinner-tables were tastefully decorated with flowers, and the
food and general arrangements were in good taste, but there was no
trace of Indian dishes. It was mostly imported canned stuff served
Boston fashion. After the dinner we assembled in Chief Shakes's large
block-house and were entertained with lively examples of their dances
and amusements, carried on with great spirit, making a very novel
barbarous durbar. The dances seemed to me wonderfully like those of
the American Indians in general, a monotonous stamping accompanied by
hand-clapping, head-jerking, and explosive grunts kept in time to grim
drum-beats. The chief dancer and leader scattered great quantities of
downy feathers like a snowstorm as blessings on everybody, while all
chanted, “Hee-ee-ah-ah, hee-ee-ah-ah,” jumping up and down
until all were bathed in perspiration.</p>
<p>After the dancing excellent imitations were given of the gait,
gestures, and behavior of several animals under different
circumstances--walking, hunting, capturing, and devouring their prey,
etc. While all were quietly seated, waiting to see what next was going
to happen, the door of the big house was suddenly thrown open and in
bounced a bear, so true to <!-- Page 35 --> life in form and gestures
we were all startled, though it was only a bear-skin nicely fitted on
a man who was intimately acquainted with the animals and knew how to
imitate them. The bear shuffled down into the middle of the floor and
made the motion of jumping into a stream and catching a wooden salmon
that was ready for him, carrying it out on to the bank, throwing his
head around to listen and see if any one was coming, then tearing it
to pieces, jerking his head from side to side, looking and listening
in fear of hunters' rifles. Besides the bear dance, there were
porpoise and deer dances with one of the party imitating the animals
by stuffed specimens with an Indian inside, and the movements were so
accurately imitated that they seemed the real thing.</p>
<p>These animal plays were followed by serious speeches, interpreted
by an Indian woman: “Dear Brothers and Sisters, this is the way
we used to dance. We liked it long ago when we were blind, we always
danced this way, but now we are not blind. The Good Lord has taken
pity upon us and sent his son, Jesus Christ, to tell us what to do. We
have danced to-day only to show you how blind we were to like to dance
in this foolish way. We will not dance any more.”</p>
<p>Another speech was interpreted as follows: “‘Dear
Brothers and Sisters,’ the chief says, ‘this is else way
we used to dance and play. We do not wish to do so any more. We will
give away all the dance dresses you have seen us wearing, though we
value them very highly.’ He says he feels much honored to have
so <!-- Page 36 --> many white brothers and sisters at our dinner and
plays.”</p>
<p>Several short explanatory remarks were made all through the
exercises by Chief Shakes, presiding with grave dignity. The last of
his speeches concluded thus: “Dear Brothers and Sisters, we have
been long, long in the dark. You have led us into strong guiding light
and taught us the right way to live and the right way to die. I thank
you for myself and all my people, and I give you my heart.”</p>
<p>At the close of the amusements there was a potlatch when robes made
of the skins of deer, wild sheep, marmots, and sables were
distributed, and many of the fantastic head-dresses that had been worn
by Shamans. One of these fell to my share.</p>
<p>The floor of the house was strewn with fresh hemlock boughs,
bunches of showy wild flowers adorned the walls, and the hearth was
filled with huckleberry branches and epilobium. Altogether it was a
wonderful show.</p>
<p>I have found southeastern Alaska a good, healthy country to live
in. The climate of the islands and shores of the mainland is
remarkably bland and temperate and free from extremes of either heat
or cold throughout the year. It is rainy, however,--so much so that
hay-making will hardly ever be extensively engaged in here, whatever
the future may show in the way of the development of mines, forests,
and fisheries. This rainy weather, however, is of good quality, the
best of the kind I ever experienced, mild <!-- Page 37 --> in
temperature, mostly gentle in its fall, filling the fountains of the
rivers and keeping the whole land fresh and fruitful, while anything
more delightful than the shining weather in the midst of the rain, the
great round sun-days of July and August, may hardly be found anywhere,
north or south. An Alaska summer day is a day without night. In the
Far North, at Point Barrow, the sun does not set for weeks, and even
here in southeastern Alaska it is only a few degrees below the horizon
at its lowest point, and the topmost colors of the sunset blend with
those of the sunrise, leaving no gap of darkness between. Midnight is
only a low noon, the middle point of the gloaming. The thin clouds
that are almost always present are then colored yellow and red, making
a striking advertisement of the sun's progress beneath the horizon.
The day opens slowly. The low arc of light steals around to the
northeastward with gradual increase of height and span and intensity
of tone; and when at length the sun appears, it is without much of
that stirring, impressive pomp, of flashing, awakening, triumphant
energy, suggestive of the Bible imagery, a bridegroom coming out of
his chamber and rejoicing like a strong man to run a race. The red
clouds with yellow edges dissolve in hazy dimness; the islands, with
grayish-white ruffs of mist about them, cast ill-defined shadows on
the glistening waters, and the whole down-bending firmament becomes
pearl-gray. For three or four hours after sunrise there is nothing
especially impressive in the landscape. The sun, though seemingly
unclouded, may <!-- Page 38 --> almost be looked in the face, and the
islands and mountains, with their wealth of woods and snow and varied
beauty of architecture, seem comparatively sleepy and
uncommunicative.</p>
<p>As the day advances toward high noon, the sun-flood streaming
through the damp atmosphere lights the water levels and the sky to
glowing silver. Brightly play the ripples about the bushy edges of the
islands and on the plume-shaped streaks between them, ruffled by
gentle passing wind-currents. The warm air throbs and makes itself
felt as a life-giving, energizing ocean, embracing all the landscape,
quickening the imagination, and bringing to mind the life and motion
about us--the tides, the rivers, the flood of light streaming through
the satiny sky; the marvelous abundance of fishes feeding in the lower
ocean; the misty flocks of insects in the air; wild sheep and goats on
a thousand grassy ridges; beaver and mink far back on many a rushing
stream; Indians floating and basking along the shores; leaves and
crystals drinking the sunbeams; and glaciers on the mountains, making
valleys and basins for new rivers and lakes and fertile beds of
soil.</p>
<p>Through the afternoon, all the way down to the sunset, the day
grows in beauty. The light seems to thicken and become yet more
generously fruitful without losing its soft mellow brightness.
Everything seems to settle into conscious repose. The winds breathe
gently or are wholly at rest. The few clouds visible are downy and
luminous and combed out fine on the edges. Gulls here and there,
winnowing the <!-- Page 39 --> air on easy wing, are brought into
striking relief; and every stroke of the paddles of Indian hunters in
their canoes is told by a quick, glancing flash. Bird choirs in the
grove are scarce heard as they sweeten the brooding stillness; and the
sky, land, and water meet and blend in one inseparable scene of
enchantment. Then comes the sunset with its purple and gold, not a
narrow arch on the horizon, but oftentimes filling all the sky. The
level cloud-bars usually present are fired on the edges, and the
spaces of clear sky between them are greenish-yellow or pale amber,
while the orderly flocks of small overlapping clouds, often seen
higher up, are mostly touched with crimson like the out-leaning sprays
of maple-groves in the beginning of an Eastern Indian Summer. Soft,
mellow purple flushes the sky to the zenith and fills the air, fairly
steeping and transfiguring the islands and making all the water look
like wine. After the sun goes down, the glowing gold vanishes, but
because it descends on a curve nearly in the same plane with the
horizon, the glowing portion of the display lasts much longer than in
more southern latitudes, while the upper colors with gradually
lessening intensity of tone sweep around to the north, gradually
increase to the eastward, and unite with those of the morning.</p>
<p>The most extravagantly colored of all the sunsets I have yet seen
in Alaska was one I enjoyed on the voyage from Portland to Wrangell,
when we were in the midst of one of the most thickly islanded parts of
the Alexander Archipelago. The day had been showery, but late in the
afternoon the clouds melted away from <!-- Page 40 --> the west, all
save a few that settled down in narrow level bars near the horizon.
The evening was calm and the sunset colors came on gradually,
increasing in extent and richness of tone by slow degrees as if
requiring more time than usual to ripen. At a height of about thirty
degrees there was a heavy cloud-bank, deeply reddened on its lower
edge and the projecting parts of its face. Below this were three
horizontal belts of purple edged with gold, while a vividly defined,
spreading fan of flame streamed upward across the purple bars and
faded in a feather edge of dull red. But beautiful and impressive as
was this painting on the sky, the most novel and exciting effect was
in the body of the atmosphere itself, which, laden with moisture,
became one mass of color--a fine translucent purple haze in which the
islands with softened outlines seemed to float, while a dense red ring
lay around the base of each of them as a fitting border. The peaks,
too, in the distance, and the snow-fields and glaciers and fleecy
rolls of mist that lay in the hollows, were flushed with a deep, rosy
alpenglow of ineffable loveliness. Everything near and far, even the
ship, was comprehended in the glorious picture and the general color
effect. The mission divines we had aboard seemed then to be truly
divine as they gazed transfigured in the celestial glory. So also
seemed our bluff, storm-fighting old captain, and his tarry sailors
and all.</p>
<p>About one third of the summer days I spent in the Wrangell region
were cloudy with very little or no rain, one third decidedly rainy,
and one third <!-- Page 41 --> clear. According to a record kept here
of a hundred and forty-seven days beginning May 17 of that year, there
were sixty-five on which rain fell, forty-three cloudy with no rain,
and thirty-nine clear. In June rain fell on eighteen days, in July
eight days, in August fifteen days, in September twenty days. But on
some of these days there was only a few minutes' rain, light showers
scarce enough to count, while as a general thing the rain fell so
gently and the temperature was so mild, very few of them could be
called stormy or dismal; even the bleakest, most bedraggled of them
all usually had a flush of late or early color to cheer them, or some
white illumination about the noon hours. I never before saw so much
rain fall with so little noise. None of the summer winds make roaring
storms, and thunder is seldom heard. I heard none at all. This wet,
misty weather seems perfectly healthful. There is no mildew in the
houses, as far as I have seen, or any tendency toward mouldiness in
nooks hidden from the sun; and neither among the people nor the plants
do we find anything flabby or dropsical.</p>
<p>In September clear days were rare, more than three fourths of them
were either decidedly cloudy or rainy, and the rains of this month
were, with one wild exception, only moderately heavy, and the clouds
between showers drooped and crawled in a ragged, unsettled way without
betraying hints of violence such as one often sees in the gestures of
mountain storm-clouds.</p>
<p>July was the brightest month of the summer, with fourteen days of
sunshine, six of them in uninterrupted <!-- Page 42 -->
succession, with a temperature at 7 A.M. of about 60°, at 12 M.,
70°. The average 7 A.M. temperature for June was 54.3°; the
average 7 A.M. temperature for July was 55.3°; at 12 M. the
average temperature was 61.45°; the average 7 A.M. temperature for
August was 54.12°; 12 M., 61.48°; the average 7 A.M.
temperature for September was 52.14°; and 12 M., 56.12°.</p>
<p>The highest temperature observed here during the summer was
seventy-six degrees. The most remarkable characteristic of this summer
weather, even the brightest of it, is the velvet softness of the
atmosphere. On the mountains of California, throughout the greater
part of the year, the presence of an atmosphere is hardly recognized,
and the thin, white, bodiless light of the morning comes to the peaks
and glaciers as a pure spiritual essence, the most impressive of all
the terrestrial manifestations of God. The clearest of Alaskan air is
always appreciably substantial, so much so that it would seem as if
one might test its quality by rubbing it between the thumb and finger.
I never before saw summer days so white and so full of subdued
lustre.</p>
<p>The winter storms, up to the end of December when I left Wrangell,
were mostly rain at a temperature of thirty-five or forty degrees,
with strong winds which sometimes roughly lash the shores and carry
scud far into the woods. The long nights are then gloomy enough and
the value of snug homes with crackling yellow cedar fires may be
finely appreciated. Snow falls frequently, but never to any great
depth or <!-- Page 43 --> to lie long. It is said that only once since
the settlement of Fort Wrangell has the ground been covered to a depth
of four feet. The mercury seldom falls more than five or six degrees
below the freezing-point, unless the wind blows steadily from the
mainland. Back from the coast, however, beyond the mountains, the
winter months are very cold. On the Stickeen River at Glenora, less
than a thousand feet above the level of the sea, a temperature of from
thirty to forty degrees below zero is not uncommon.</p>
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