Рефераты. The History of Alaska (история Аляски)






The History of Alaska (история Аляски)

Municipal Educational Institution

Lyceum № 130 “RAVES”

Exam paper.

The History of Alaska.

Student:

Protopopova N.S., M-111

Teacher:

Shipulina O.N.

Barnaul, 2005

Contents:

Introduction……………………………………………………………………………………………………….……3

1. Origins of Alaska’s Groups……………………………………………………………………..…………4

The Eskimos

The Aathabascans

Aleuts

The Northwest Coast Indians

2. From the Russian Empire to the USA……………………………………………………………7

3. Alaska today………………………………………………………………………………………………………..8

Geography

Government

Business

Transport

4. The most important dates in the history of Alaska……………………….…………11

Conclusion………………………………………………………………………………………………………………..17

The list of literature………………………………………………………………………………………….…18

Introduction.

Undoubtedly, the history is one of the most interesting and most important

sciences. It incorporates experience of each person and all mankind. The

history acquaints us with process of development of a mankind. Behind acts

and decisions of separate people, behind actions of weights there is a

bright, many-sided and unique image of the world, different continents, the

countries and people. To understand history of the Native land, it is

necessary to understand world history. In the exam paper I will tell about

history of Alaska – history, which connects two great powers - Russia and

the USA. The purpose of the given work is to study political and social

life of Alaska, its daily life, material, spiritual and religious culture.

I will tell about the reasons and consequences of historical events of

Alaska, I will cite statistical data. To be prepared of this exam paper I

used the educational and scientific literature and materials of periodic

printed editions.

1. Origins of Alaska’s Native Groups.

No one knows exactly when people first found the land that would be called

Alaska. Some anthropologists believe that people migrated from Asia to

North America 40,000 years ago. Others argue it was as recent as 15,000

years ago.

Whenever, the consensus is that they came from Asia by way of a northern

land bridge that once connected Siberia and Alaska.

That land bridge, now recalled as Beringia, was the first gateway to

Alaska. But these first visitors were hardly tourists intent on exploring

new worlds. Rather they were simply pursuing their subsistence way of life

as they followed great herds of grazing mammals across the grassy tundra

and gentle steppes of Beringia.

Some groups settled in the Arctic. Others traversed the mountain passes to

other parts of Alaska. While still others migrated through Alaska,

continuing on to distant lands--perhaps as far as South America.

Those who made Alaska their permanent home make up the state’s four major

anthropological groups: Eskimos, Aleuts, Athabascans, and Northwest Coast

Indians.

While all four groups shared certain basic similarities--all hunted, fished

and gathered food--they developed distinctive cultures and sets of skills.

The Eskimos:

Flexible Residents of the Arctic.

The Eskimos were primarily a coastal people, setting along the shores of

the Arctic and Bering seas.

For millennia they lived a simple, subsistence life--much as they still do

today--by harvesting the fish and mammals of the seas, the fruits and game

of the land. Somehow they learned how to thrive despite the demanding

conditions of the Arctic.

Their sense of direction was keen, almost uncanny. Travelling in a straight

line, sometimes through snowstorms and whiteouts, they found their way

around the mostly featureless terrain by noting wind direction, the

position of the stars, the shape and size of a snowdrift. And they were

resourceful. In a land where the summer sun stays at eye-level for weeks on

end, never setting below the horizon, the Eskimos fashioned the first sun-

visor--which also doubled as a snow mask to protect their eyes from the

wind-driven snow.

The Athabascans:

Nomads of the Interior.

Like the Eskimos, the Athabascans were skilful hunters, but they depended

more on large land mammals for their subsistence--tracking moose and

migrating caribou.

When it came to fishing, the Athabascans were absolutely ingenious, snaring

fish with hooks, lures, traps and nets that are the fascination of modern

day anglers who visit their camps.

Generally nomadic, they lived in small, simply organized bands of a few

families, and whenever possible pitched their camps in the sheltered white

spruce forests of the Interior. Some adventurous tribes, however, wandered

all the way to the Southwest United States to become kin to the Navajos and

Apaches.

Aleuts:

Born of the Sea.

For the Aleuts, life centred on the sea as they distributed themselves

among the 70-some islands in the Aleutian chain across the North Pacific.

Life here was somewhat more benign that in the Arctic, though wind storms

were sometimes strong enough to blow rocks around.

Since their food supply was rich, varied and readily available, the Aleuts

had time to develop a complex culture. Evidence indicates that they

practiced surgery and that their elaborate burial rituals included

embalming. Instruments utensils, even their boats were made with amazing

beauty and exact symmetry. And everything was fashioned for a specific

purpose--the Aleuts used 30 different kinds of harpoon heads for different

species of game!

Skilled navigators and sailors, the Aleuts had the dubious distinction of

being the first to encounter the white man...Russian fur traders who took

them as slaves to harvest the fur seals in the Pribilofs.

The Northwest Coast Indians:

High Society of Alaska’s southeast.

The milder, more temperate climate and an unlimited supply of salmon and

other seafood’s enabled the Northwest Coast Indians to evolve a way of life

quite different from the Eskimos, Aleuts and Athabascans. They settled in

year-round permanent villages, took slaves and lived their lives according

to the strict rules, rituals, and regulations of their respective clans.

Their artwork was nothing less than masterful...beautiful blankets, finely

woven cedar bark and spruce root baskets magnificent totem creations.

Natives, who make up 15 percent of the state's population, maintain many

traditions, such as whaling, subsistence hunting and fishing, and old ways

of making crafts and art. Native heritage history and culture can be found

in such diverse places as Ketchikan, Anchorage and Kotzebue, as well as in

hundreds of villages where people live in traditional ways.

But while Native culture, as a whole, may define much of Alaska's

appearance, the state contains a broad mixture of cultures. In Anchorage,

for example, the school district has found that its student body comes from

homes that speak 83 languages. Anchorage, the state's biggest city, has

many Alaska influences but is also sometimes called Los Anchorage for its

Lower 48-style architecture and mannerisms. Most residents of Alaska were

born outside the state, and when they came to Alaska they brought their own

traditions and desires.

There are European influences as well. Petersburg, in the Inside Passage,

has a strong Scandinavian heritage. Cordova and Valdez bear names bestowed

by a Spanish explorer; Cook Inlet is named for a British explorer; Russians

left a legacy of the Orthodox Church in much of the state.

2. From the Russian Empire to the United States of America.

The first written accounts indicate that the first Europeans to reach

Alaska came from Russia. Vitus Bering sailed east and saw Mt. St. Elias.

The Russian-American Company hunted otters for their fur. The colony was

never very profitable, because of the costs of transportation.

At the instigation of U.S. Secretary of State William Seward, the United

States Senate approved the purchase of Alaska from Russia for $7,200,000 on

9 April 1867, and the United States flag was raised on 18 October of that

same year (now called Alaska Day). The first American governor of Alaska

was W?odzimierz Krzy?anowski. The purchase was not popular in the

continental United States, where Alaska became known as "Seward's Folly" or

"Seward's Icebox". Alaska celebrates the purchase each year on the last

Monday of March, calling it Seward's Day.

President Dwight D. Eisenhower signed the Alaska Statehood Act into United

States law on 7 July 1958 which paved the way for Alaska's admission into

the Union.

The name "Alaska" is most likely derived from the Aleut word for "great

country" or "mainland." The natives called it "Alyeska", meaning "the great

land." It is bordered by the Yukon Territory and British Columbia, Canada

to the east, the Gulf of Alaska and the Pacific Ocean to the south, the

Bering Sea, Bering Strait, and Chukchi Sea to the west, and the Beaufort

Sea and the Arctic Ocean to the north.

In 1976, the people of Alaska amended the state's constitution,

establishing the Alaska Permanent Fund. The fund invests a portion of the

state's mineral revenue, including revenue from the Trans-Alaskan Pipeline

System, 'to benefit all generations of Alaskans.' In June 2003, the fund's

value was over $24 billion.

Over the years various vessels have been named USS Alaska, in honor of the

state.

During World War II outlying parts of Alaska were occupied by Japanese

troops. It was the only part of the United States to have land occupied

during the war.

3. Alaska today.

Geography.

Alaska is the only state that is both in North America and not part

of the 48 contiguous states. Alaska is the largest state in the United

States in terms of land area, 570,374 square miles (1,477,261 kmІ). If you

superimposed a map of Alaska on the Lower 48 states, Alaska would stretch

from Minnesota to Texas and from Georgia to California.

One scheme for describing the state's geography is by labeling the regions:

• South Central Alaska is the southern coastal region with towns,

cities, and petroleum industrial plants;

• The Alaska Panhandle, also known as Southeast Alaska, is home to

towns, tidewater glaciers and extensive forests;

• the Alaska Interior has big rivers, such as the Yukon River and the

Kuskokwim River, as well as Arctic tundra lands and shorelines; and

• The Alaskan Bush is the remote, uncrowned part of the state.

Alaska, with its numerous islands, has nearly 34,000 miles (54,700 km) of

tidal shoreline. The island chain extending west from the southern tip of

Alaska is called the Aleutian Islands. Many active volcanoes are found in

the Aleutians.

Alaska is the easternmost state in the Union. The Aleutian Islands

actually cross longitude 180°.

Alaska's most populous city is Anchorage, home of 260,284 people, 225,744

of whom live in the urbanized area. It ranks a distant third in the List of

U.S. cities by area. Sitka ranks as the America's largest city by area,

followed closely by Junea.

Government.

Much of Alaska is managed by the federal government as national forests,

national parks, and national wildlife refuges. There are places in Alaska

that are general public lands (BLM land) but they are arguably more

spectacular than many national parks in the Lower 48. Many of Alaska's

state parks would be national parks if they were in other states.

Much of Alaska is managed by corporations called ANCSA, or native,

corporations, of which there are thirteen regional ones and dozens of local

ones.

Alaska has no counties in the sense used in the rest of the country;

however, the state is divided into 27 census areas and boroughs. The

difference between boroughs and census areas is that boroughs have an

organized area-wide government, while census areas are artificial divisions

defined by the United States Census Bureau.

Business.

Alaska's main agriculture output is seafood, although nursery stock, dairy

products, vegetables, and livestock are produced and used internally.

Manufacturing is limited, with most foodstuffs and general goods imported

from elsewhere. Employment is primarily in government and industries such

as natural resource extraction, shipping, and transportation. There is also

a small but growing service and tourism sector. Its industrial outputs are

crude petroleum, natural gas, coal, gold, precious metals, zinc and other

mining, seafood processing, timber and wood products.

Transport.

Alaska has various transportation options. Some of Alaska is connected by

roads (and sometimes a tunnel) to the highways of Canada and of the rest of

the United States. These places are "on the road system". Along the Pacific

Ocean, many places have freight and passenger service from ocean-going

ships. Most places have air service, ranging from jets on tarmac to

floatplanes on lakes.

4. The most important dates in the history of Alaska.

August 21

- In 1732, a Russian expedition under

surveyor Mikhail Gvozdev sights

the Alaska mainland at Cape Prince

of Wales.

July 16

- In 1741, Vitus Bering, on St. Elias Day, sights the Alaskan

mainland. In honour of the saint, the most

prominent peak was named; this was the first point

on the northwest coast named by Europeans.

December 8

- In 1741, Vitus Bering died after his ship was wrecked on an

island off the Alaskan coast.

September 25

- In 1745, a Russian fur hunter, Mikhail Nevodchikov, reaches

Attu in his search for sea otters.

May 12

- In 1778, Captain James Cook entered Prince William Sound.

May 26

- In 1778, Captain James Cook entered Cook Inlet.

August 25

- In 1778, Captain James Cook turned back south

July

- In 1786, while charting Lituya Bay, 2 small boats are

swamped by rip tides, and 21 French sailors drown.

July 8

- In 1799, the Russian American Company is formed by Royal

Charter; they were given a 20-year monopoly on

trading on the coast from 55 degrees north.

March

- In 1812, the Russian American Company establishes a post at

Fort Ross, California to grow crops for their Alaska.

September

- In 1848, the Hudson's Bay Company builds Fort Selkirk, at

the confluence of the Pelly and Yukon Rivers.

- In 1852, Fort Selkirk is destroyed by a group of Tlingits who

objected to the Hudson's Bay Company trying to

break the Tlingit monopoly on trade with the

interior tribes.

March 30

- In 1867, the United States purchased Alaska for

$7,200,000

July 23

- In 1867, Alaska's first post office is authorized, to

be opened at Sitka.

October 18

- In 1867, official ceremonies at Sitka transferred

Alaska from Russia to the United States.

July 27

- In 1868, the Customs Act is amended to include Alaska.

October 7

- In 1869, the prediction of a total solar eclipse by American

scientist George Davidson so impressed Kohklux,

chief of the Chilkat Indian village of Klukwan, he

drew him an incredibly detailed map of a vast part

of the interior of the Yukon and Alaska.

- In 1871, of the 41 whaling ships hunting in the Bering Sea,

32 are trapped by early ice; all of the 1,200 people

on the ships escaped, but 31 of the ships were

destroyed the following spring.

August

- In 1876, twelve whaling ships are trapped by ice near Point

Barrow; 50 men die attempting to reach safety.

July 2

- In 1882, George Krause becomes the first white man

allowed to cross the Chilkat Pass to the interior.

- In 1894, a resolution of the Privy Council authorizes the

North-West Mounted Police into the Yukon "in

the interests of peace and good government, in

the interests also of the public revenue." By June

26, Inspector Charles Constantine and Staff-

Sergeant Charles Brown were at Juneau, heading

for the goldfields of the British Yukon.

October 2

- In 1895, the North-west Territories was divided into the

Districts of Franklin, Mackenzie, Ungava and

Yukon.

August 17

- In 1896, a party consisting of George Carmack, his wife

Kate, Skookum Jim, Tagish Charlie and Patsy

Henderson stake placer gold claims on Rabbit

Creek, and rename the creek Bonanza Creek.

July 14

- In 1897, the Excelsior reaches San Francisco with the first

large shipment of Klondike gold.

July 17

- In 1897, the Portland reached Seattle with a large shipment

of Klondike, turning the excitement caused by the

Excelsior's arrival at San Francisco into an all-out

gold rush.

- In 1898, gold was discovered near the future site of Nome,

triggering a stampede.

- In 1898, a series of 5 avalanches in the Chilkoot Pass between

2:00 AM and noon killed over 70 people.

June 13

- In 1898, the Yukon Territory is created.

July 29

- In 1900, the White Pass & Yukon Route railroad was

completed, with the Golden Spike driven at

Carcross, Yukon.

- In 1900, Congress authorized a massive telegraph construction

project in Alaska.

July 22

- In 1902, Felice Pedroni ("Felix Pedro") discovered gold in

the Tanana Hills, causing a stampede which

resulted in the founding of Fairbanks.

May

- In 1904, the first commercial wireless communication

facility in the U.S. opened, between Nome and St.

Michael.

May 7

- In 1906, the Alaska Delegate Act was passed by Congress,

giving the territory's 40,000 people the right to elect

a non-voting delegate to Congress.

August 24

- In 1912, the Alaska Territorial Act was passed by Congress.

July 3

- In 1913, the first airplane in Alaska made a demonstration

flight at Fairbanks, piloted by James V. Lilly.

March 12

- In 1914, a bill authorizing the construction of the

government-financed Alaska Railroad was signed by

President Wilson. Construction started in 1915, and

some sections were opened as they were completed,

but the entire line, running from Seward to Fairbanks,

was not completed until July 15, 1923.

October 25

- In 1918, the coastal steamer Princess Sophia sunk near

Juneau, killing 463 people, about 10% of the

Yukon's white population.

- In 1919, the Yukon finally allowed women to vote in Territorial

elections. Manitoba had been the first province to

enfranchise women.

July 10

- In 1919, Louis Beauvette staked the first silver claim at Keno

Hill, in the central Yukon; by 1930 this district was

producing 14% of all the silver mined in Canada.

enfranchisement was passed in May 1918.

July 15

- In 1923, the Alaska Railroad was completed, following 8 years

of construction.

February 24

- In 1924, Carl Ben Eielson made Alaska's first Air Mail flight.

June 3

- In 1942, a large carrier-based Japanese force attacked

Dutch Harbour.

June 7

- In 1942, the Japanese landed almost 2,500 troops on the

Aleutian islands of Attu and Kiska. It took a huge

Allied force until August 15, 1943 to regain control.

September 24

- In 1942, the Alaska Highway opened at Contact Creek, 305

miles north of Fort Nelson, B.C.

February 22

- In 1951, after 3 years of rumours, the federal government

approved moving the capital of the Yukon from

Dawson City to Whitehorse. A new Federal Building

was constructed in 1952, and the Territorial

Council chambers were moved the following year,

with the first meeting held in Whitehorse in April.

- In 1951, the Alaska Highway was turned over to Canada, in a

ceremony at Whitehorse.

January 3

- In 1959, Alaska became the 49th State.

March 27

- In 1964, an earthquake with a magnitude of 8.4 on the

Richter scale hits the Anchorage area, killing 115

people and destroying hundreds of homes.

November 6

- In 1967, Jean Gordon, the Yukon's first female member of

the Territorial Council, takes her seat.

- In 1968, the oil riches of Alaska's North Slope, first

reported almost 100 years ago, were confirmed by

a drilling program at Prudhoe Bay. The following

year, a total of $990,220,590 was bid in a one-day

lease sale of those properties.

January 23

- In 1971, the temperature at Prospect Creek, Alaska,

dropped to 80 degrees below zero, the lowest

temperature ever recorded in the United States.

December 18

- In 1971, the Alaska Native Claim Settlement Act (ANCSA)

was signed into law by the President. Among the

major provisions were the transfer of title to 40

million acres of land to native corporations, and a

cash payment of $962.5 million.

February 14

- In 1973, the Yukon Native Brotherhood presented a

Statement of Claim to the federal government,

stating their position on land claims, self-

government and other issues which had been

published in January in "Together Today For Our

Children Tomorrow".

- In 1975, the first section of pipe for the Trans-Alaska

Pipeline from Prudhoe Bay to Valdez was laid. By

August, 21,600 people were working on the project.

The first oil was put through the 800-mile line on

June 20, 1977.

February 3

- In 1988, PL 100-241, the Alaska Native Claim Settlement

Act Amendments, was signed by President Regan.

The amendments gave more flexibility to the

corporations managing Settlement lands.

March 24

- In 1989, the oil tanker Exxon Valdez went aground on Bligh

Reef, pouring almost 11 million gallons of oil into

Prince William Sound.

May 29

- In 1993, the Umbrella Final Agreement is signed by

representatives of the Council for Yukon Indians

and the Yukon and federal governments,

establishing the basic format for all 14 Yukon First

Nations land claims agreements.

Conclusion.

Summing up to the aforesaid, it would be desirable to emphasize, that

Alaska is a crossroads of a sea, air truck transport between Northern

America, Asia and the Europe, that’s why Alaska is one of the most

perspective states of USA by way of development of economy and tourism. The

variety of riches of culture, an abundance of national parks attracts

tourists from the world.

The considerable contribution to development of Alaska was brought by

Russian empire. The general past, the general cultural wealth is what

unites Russia and Alaska and today.

The list of literature.

1. Джеймс Микэнер «Аляска».

2. Боб Черрай «Дух Ворона».

3. Marcia Simpson «Rogue's Yarn», «Crow in Stolen Colors»,

«Sound Tracks».

4. Gore Vidal «Williwaw».

5. Borneman «The Native People of Alaska»

6. http://www.encyclopedia.thefreedictionary.com

7. http://www.alaskacam.com

8. http://www.alaska.com

9. http://www.goingtoalaska.com

10. http://www.mapquest.com



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