CsX^ iCX^'i- C CSC CC: C^ C CCCcC C(a ^ccdc GuCWCC : c-ccj O I O i- o _• o o 3 ^, c-r^ a 134 132 100 503 503 200 2i5 24.') 167 60 143 146 38 162 275 247 317 1,281 1,281 550 1,000 1,000 690 150 323 321 200 100 95 600 7C0 EDUCATION EEPORJ, 1888-89. Table II. — Nximier in sundry hranches of study. Howkan Klawack Wrangell Sitka No. 1.... Sitka No. 2..., Killisnoo Juneau No. 1. Juneau No. 2 Douglass Haines Kodiak Afognak Cariuel liethel Anvlk Metlakabtla. ^3 a (s OS U) a c a & es Q 9 91 17 .1 59 11 130 >, s c * 2 a a 15 03 O 91 17 59 51 37 22 26 45 24 46 68 i 37 48 I 20 17 30 1 102 ! 1 31 i 38 55 1^ ■2 3 3.2 37 17 14 22 10 12 Table III. — Officers and teachers, with their salaries. The following persons have been paid frona the school fund: Name. Sheldon Jackson i John H. Keatley A. P. Swineford Lyman E. Knapp, in place of Mr. Swineford, resigned. James Sheakley "William Duncan Sheldon Jackson W. E. Roscoe James A. Wirtb F. F. White Miss Rhoda A. Lee Miss Alice R. Hill Mrs. Anna R. Moon Miss May Ransom Miss Mary Desha (September to January) Andrew Kashevorof (January) Miss Cassia Patton (February to June) Miss Virginia Pakle Mrs. Lyda McAvoy Thomas Mrs. M. V. Currie Miss Clara A. Gould Wm. Duncan and assistants Occupation, General agent , Board of education do do do do do Teacher . do do do do do do do da do do do do do do Place. Sitka . do. do. do. Fort Wrangell., Metlakabtla .... Sitka Kodiak Afognak Haines Juneau No.! Juneau No. 2 Douglass.... Killisnoo Sitka No.l do do Sitka No. 2 Fort Wrangell.. Klawack Howkan Metlakahtla ..... Compen- sation. $1,200 200 200 200 200 200 200 *120 *120 *120 *80 *80 *80 *80 *100 *80 *100 '80 *]00 *80 *100 t2,500 • Per month. t Per year. EDUCATION IN ALASKA. Table IV. — Teachers appointed for ISSQ-QQ, with salaries. 761 The board of education at its semiannual meeting, June 14 to 19, 1889, appointed, subject to the approval of the U. S. Commissioner of Education, the following persons teachers for IHtjy-aO: Name. Sliss Clara A. Gould .. H. S. Barrett, m. d Mrs. Will. G. Tliomas Miss Rlioda .\. Lee Miss Cassia Paltoii Mrs. W. S. Adams Charles Edwards W. H. lieid Miss Virginia Dox Miss May Ransom George E. Knapp Miss Gertrude Patton W. E, IJoscoo John Durt John H. Carr John A. Tuck Place. Howkan Klawack Wraiigell Juneau Xo. 1... Juneau No. 2... Douglass No. 1 Douglass No. 2 JHaines Hoonah Killisnoo SitUa No. 1 Sitka No. 2 Kodiak Afognak Unga Unalaska Conipen- sutioD. *S100 *80 *100 *100 *80 ♦80 *80 *80 *100 *80 *100 *80 tl.OOO tl, 000 + 1,000 + 1,000 Per month. t Per year. Table V. — Grants to contract scJiools. The board of education at its semiannual meeting, June, 1889, recommended to the U. S. Commissioner of Education the following coutract boarding schools: Sitka Training and Industrial School |1,5, OOO Metlakahtla schools .3,000 Anvik (Episcopal) 1,000 Bethel (.Moravian) 1,000 Carmel (Moravian) 1,000 Table VI. — School huildintjs. New school buildings recommended by board of education: Kodiak $1,200 Afognak 1,200 Karluk 1,200 Table YIL— Estimate for the year 1890-91. School. Salary of teacher. Salary of assistant teacher. Howkan $900 1,1100 900 900 9110 900 900 900 600 900 9(10 900 9(10 1,000 1,000 1,000 1,000 1,000 1,000 Juneau No. 1 Juneau No. 2 ^720 Douglass No. 1 720 Haines 30O Sitka No. 1 600 Sitka No. 2 600 Yakutat Kodiak Afognak Karluk Cook's Inlet Unga : Belkofsky Nineteen day schools 17,500 2 940 762 EDUCATION REPORT, 1888-89. Salaries of 24 teachers $20,440 Fuel ("or 19 day schools 4, 000 Books and stationery 3,000 Desks and blackboards, etc 1,000 Sixteen policemen at 815 per month 2, 160 Support of 19 day schools 830,600 Salary of general agent 2,400 Salary of superintendent of Sitka district 1, 200 3, 600 Salaries of school board 1,000 Traveling expenses. ■ 500 1,500 School building at — Juneau 1,200 Douglass 1,200 Yakutat 1,200 Cook's Inlet 1.200 Belkofsky 1,200 6,000 Contract schools at— Sitka -<).000 Metlakahtla 4,000 Unalaska 2,000 Carmel 2, 000 Bethel 2.000 Anvik 2,000 Nukalukyet 1,000 33,000 Total 74,700 SnUMABT. Support of 19 day schools with 24 teachers $30,600 Supportof 7 industrial boarding schools with from 40 to 45 teachers and employes 33,000 Five new school buildings - 6, 000 Oeneral agent, superintendent, and board of education 5, 100 74,700 Office of general agent. The general agent at the beginning of the year, being unable to secure transportation from Sitka to the schools of western Alaska on the U. S. S. Thetis, that was making the trip, requested permission of the U. S. Commissioner of Education to proceed to San Francisco and take passage by the steamers of the Alaska Commercial Company. Permission not being granted, I have been unable to carry out the instructions of the honorable the Secretary of the Interior to visit all the schools at least once a year. Indeed, for the want of tr&nsportation I have been unable to visit the schools of south- western Alaska since I established them in 1886, and those on Bering Sea not at all. This has been greatly regretted both by myself and the teachers. Also for want of transportation I have been unable to visit the schools at Howkan and Klawack, on Prince of Wales Island. The schools at Sitka, Juneau, Wrangell, Douglass, Haines, and KiUisnoo have been visited several times, and that of Metlakahtla twice. EECOMMENDATIONS. I have the honor to submit the following recommendations: 1. An inspection of the schools of western Alaska by the general agent. — In view of the fact that I have been unable to reach those schools for three years, and as the time has come for establishing new schools in that region, some of which have already been recom- mended by the Territorial board of education, and as it is probable that a Government vessel will be sent next summer to that section to convey Government officials, therefore it is recommended that the U. S. Commissioner of Education be respectfully requested to arrange for the transportation of the general agent. 2. Change in supervision. — In order that the general agent may for the next two or three years give the larger part of his time to developing the school work in Western Alaska, I would recommend the following change in section 4, division 2, of the rules and regulations for the conduct of education in Alaska, to wit: First, that the general agent be relieved for the coming year from the local su peri n tendency of the Sitka dis- trict, and be given the local superintendency of the Kodiak and Unalaska districts. Second, that a district superintendent be appointed for the Sitka district. 3. Ft-rmanent school fund. — I would again renew my recommendations of 1886-87 and 1887-88, which recommendations were also indorsed by the Territorial board of educa- EDUCATION IN ALASKA. 763 tion, that the U. S. Commissioner of Edacation be respectfully reqnested to procure leg- islation from Congress permanently appropriating a sum of money for the education of the children of Alaska without distinction of race. The present method of supporting the schools of Alaska by an annual appropriation from Congress is very unsatisfactory. As Congress one year voted $25,000 and the sec- ond nothing and the third $15,000, it can readily be seen that neither the school board nor the teachers can arrange for the schools until after Congressional action has been taken, nor until such action is had can they be sure that there will be any schools. And not only that, but some years the action of Congress is not known in Alaska until three months after the fiscal school year commences. A failure on the part of Congress any one year to make the necessary appropriation would close the schools, scatter Gov- ernment property, and throw the teachers out of employment thousands of miles away from home and friends. The disadvantages of the present system need but to be stated to be seen. In the Western States and Territories the general land laws of the country provide that sections 16 and 36 in each township be set apart for the use of the schools in said States and Territories. In some of the States this has been a munificent endowment. But Alaska has no townships and no surveyed lands and no law by which they can be surveyed. And when in course of time the general land laws are extended over it, the nature of the country and the peculiar climate and the requirements of the popula- tion will prevent to any great extent the laying out of the land in sections of a mile square. Thus while no school fund is practicable for years to come from the lands, the General Government derives a regular revenue from the seal islands and other sources, a portion of which could be used in the place of the proceeds of the sale of school lands. 4. A?i obligatorii attendance law. — The operation of the obligatory attendance law which was enacted by the Territorial board ot education and approved by the honorable the Secretary of the Interior in 1887, has been recently suspended by order of the United States Commissioner of Education. In view of the importance of some suitable law for securing the more regular attend- ance at school of the children of Alaska, the Territorial board of education at its semi- annual meeting June 14-19 took the following action: " Whereas it is the invariable experience of all who have been engaged or interested for years in the difficult task of attempting to educate and civilize the natives and Creoles of Alaska that the greatest obstacles to success are, first, the want of adequate means of securing the regular and general attendance of the children of these peopleat the various Government schools and, second, the stolid indifiereuce, superstition, and fear of change on the part of the greater number of the parents of such children; and "Whereas experience has also demonstrated that wherever native policemen have been employed and paid heretofore a moderate compensation for gathering these chil- dren into the schoolrooms and thus compelling attendance, not only is the average attend- ance itself largely increased, but an interest in the progress of the pupils and the success of the schools themselves has been gradually and permanently created in those native and Creole parents; and " Whereas, the Government of the United States is annually appropriating large sums of money for the purpose of educating and civilizing these people and employing com- petent and zealous teachers for that purpose, who are making great sacrifices by endur- ing severe privations, general discomfort, and personal isolation among an alien and barbarous race of people: Therefore, Be it resolved by ihs Territorial board of education, That the Hon. Lyman E. Knapp, the governor of the District of Alaska, is hereby requested and urged to embody in his forthcoming annual report to the Department of the Interior the suggestions we have made herein, with the recommendation that Congress take the subject of compulsory education of the natives and Creoles of Alaska into consideration, and, in addition to making the usual appropriations for the schools of the District, add thereto such enact- ments as will compel the regular attendance of the pupils at such schools as are already established or may be hereafter provided." I renew my recommendations of former reports on this subject. 5. School police. — With the granting of an obligatory attendance law, and even with- out it, the appointment of a native policeman in the native villages where schools exist, whose duty shall be to see that the children are in school, will greatly increase the present attendance. I therefore recommend that an allowance of ten or fifteen dollars per month be allowed from the school fund for the employment of such men. 6. I recommend that the honorable the Secretary of the Interior be respectfully re- quested to ask Congress for an appropriation of $75,000 for education in Alaska for the year ending June 30, 1891. 7. In 1887-88 the Territorial board of education recommended to the United States 764 EDUCATION REPORT, 1888-89. CoratDissioner of Education that the salary of the general agent of education be increased to $2,400 annually. As nothing was done, I respectfully ask the board to renew the request. In closing this report I can not permit to pass unchallenged the statement made by the president of the Territorial board of education, which appears on page 181 of the Annual Keport of the Commissioner of Education, 1887-88, that my annual report for 1887-88 was recalled by the board of education in Alaska because of " a number of ma- terial inaccuracies in the report." My report for that year was regularly indorsed and approved by the board, ex-Governor Swineford not being present, on September 15, 1888, and forwarded to the Commissioner of Education. At a meeting of the board on October 31, 1888, four members being present, Mr. Swine- ford delivered a tirade against the general agent of education, claiming that some of the statements of the annual report were false aud demanding that the vote of approval be reconsidered. This demand was refused by the board. The report had been ofl&cially sent to the Commissioner, and could not be recalled, or changed, if recalled, except by my consent. However, to give Mr. Swineford an opportunity of pointing out alleged falsehoods I consented to a resolution (and without my consent the resolution could not have been passed) asking the Commissioner of Education to send the board a certified copy of the report, which was done. The report itself was not recalled, but remained in Washington, and was printed as usual in the appendix of the annual report of the U. S. Commissioner of Education as the regular official report of schools in Alaska. At a subsequent meeting of the board, January 23, 1889 (the general agent being absent), although a certified copy of my report had been received from Washington, it was neither read nor considered, but Judge Keatley was directed to make out a "new report and transmit the same to the Commissioner of Education." This was not a substitute for the report of the general agent, as no one could legally make that report but himself. It was not even a report on education in Alaska, because Judge Keatley had recently come into the Territory aud had no personal knowledge of its school affairs at that time. With his usual good judgment he did not attempt a re- port, but confined hjmself mainly to some general statements with regard to a few of the schools in soittheastem Alaska, and particularly the training school at Sitka, of which he had some personal knowledge. His report was never submitted to the consid- eration of or approved by a vote of tlie Territorial board of education. In making his reflections upon the report of the general agent he was evidently misled by the assertions of Mr. Swineford, which were never proven, and I take this first opportunity since the publishing of the report of 1887-88 to deny that the report ol the general agent for that year contains "a number of material inaccuracies." Very truly yours, Sheldon Jackson, General Agent of Education Jar Alaeka, [ Whole Nvmber 191 U. S. BUREAU OF EDUCATION. REPRINT OF CHAPTER XVII OF THE REPORT OF THE COMMISSIONER OF EDUCATION FOR 1889-90. EDUCATION IN ALASKA 1889-90. SHELDON JACKSON, GENERAL AGENT. WASHINGTOI!^: GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE. 1893. CHAPTER XVII. EDUCATION IN ALASKA. REPORT OF THE GENERAL AGENT I^OR THE YEAR 1889-90. Department of the Interior, Bureau of Education, Alaska Division, Washington, D. C, June 30, 1S90. Sir: In compliance with, tlie rules and regulations for the conduct of schools and education in Alaska, approved by the Secretary of the Interior, April 9, 1890, 1 have the honor of submittinor the following, as the annual report of the general agent of education for the year ending June 30, 1890 : A.— Number and General Condition of the Schools in Alaska. Alaska has 15 day schools, supported wholly by the Government, with a total enrollment of 1,110 pupils; 9 contract schools, containing 302 pupils, which are supported jointly by the Government and the missionary societies ; 10 mission schools, with an enrollment of 297 pupils, which are supported wholly from the funds of the churches, and two schools sustained on the Seal Islands by the North American Commercial Company, under contract with the Treasury De- partment, and containing 79 pupils, making a total of 37 schools and 1,788 pupils. I.— public schools. 1.— UfTAiiASKA District. Undlaska (John A. Tuck, teacher). — Enrollment, 30; population largely Aleuts. Prof. Tuck reached Unalaska in September, 1889, and renting a house from the Alaska Commercial Company, opened school with an average attendance of 6 pupils. In the absence of any school building, one end of his residence was fitted up as a schoolroom. So much interest was developed in the school that the pu- pils, with but few exceptions, continued at school during the Russo-Greek Church festivals, which are very numerous. Among the pupils were the grown-up daughters of the Russian priest. Prof. Tuck reports that the rate of progress was almost all that could be de- sired. With the opening of the next school year it is expected that the ladies of the National Home Mission Society of the Methodist Episcopal Chui'ch will enter into an agreement with the United States Bureau of Education to take charge of the scliool, several thousands of dollars having already been raised for that purpose. The building they propose to erect will be known as the " .Jesse Lee Memorial Home." Unga [John H. Carr, teacher).— Enrollment, 24; population, Russian and Aleut. Gratifying progress was made in the usual school studies and in temperance hygiene by those who were I'egular in their attendance. The teacher pleads earnestly for some rule to secure more regular attendance. The ladies of the National Home Mission Society of the Methodist Episcopal Church have purchased and shipped to Unga the materials for a teachers' resi- dence, to be known as the "Martha Ellen Stevens Cottage." 1245 1246 EDUCATION REPORT, 1889-90. 3.— Kadiak District. Kadiak(W. E. Roscoe, teacher).— Enrollment, 67 ; population, Russian, At the solicitation of the parents, Mr. Roscoe commenced his school a week in advance of the regular time of opening. The progress of the pupils proved very satisfactory, and the attendance fairly so. Much inconvenience resulted from the number of holidays of the Russo-Greek Church. These are more than 200 during the year, and they greatly interfere with the regular attendance of the pupils. During the year the Government erected a comfortable school building, which was greatly needed. Afognak (John Dufif, teacher). — Enrollment, 38 ; population, Russian and Es- kimo. The Rev. James A. Wirth, who had taught the school from the beginning, and was greatly beloved by parents and pupils alike, resigned on account of the health of his wife. His resignation was received so late in the season that there was no time to procure a teacher from the states, and Mr. John Duflf, who was already in that region, was appointed. School was resumed on the 3d of October with 16 pupils, the attendance in- creasing to 24 during the first week. From the first mauy of the parents took an interest in the school and scarcely a day passed that one or more were not visitors. Geographical exercises on the map were an unfailing source of interest ; pu- pils that did not know half of their letters could point out the States of the United States and give their names correctly. The ordinary school books speak of so many things that neither the children nor their parents have ever seen that it is difficult for them to understand what they are reading about. To remedy this somewhat Mr. Duff proposes to form a museum of common things in connection with the school and thus give the pupils object lessons in connection with their books. An interesting feature of the year was the attendance of a number of children from outside villages. The school has suffered greatly from intemperance, many of the children being on the verge of starvation because the parents had traded off the living of the family for liquor. Frequently, in visiting his pupils, the teacher found them hungry and shiver- ing in the corner of the room, and both the parents dead drunk. A comfortable scliool building and teacher's residence were erected by the Government during the year. KarluTc. — A good school building and teacher's residence were erected during the year at this important point, and a school will be opened at the beginning of the next school year. The number of villages of civilized Russians in this district requires many more schools than can be established with tbe amount appropriated by Congress for this purpose. Professor Duff', of Afognak, estimates that there should be at least twenty ad- ditional schools in the Kadiak district. a— Sitka District. Sitka, iVb. 1 (Miss Ann D. Beatty, teacher). — Enrollment, 68, or one more than the total number of white children of school age in the village ; population, American and Russian. Among the pupils of this school are the children of the civil and naval officials who are stationed at the capital of the Territory. Sitka, No. 2 (Miss Gertrude Patton, teacher). — Enrollment, 83 ; pupils, native Thlingets. With 280 native children between 5 and 17 years of age in the village, there ought to be some way of securing a larger attendance than 83. A simple oblig- atory attendance law would work a great improvement in school attendance among the native population. Juneau, No. 1 (Miss Rhoda A. Lee, teacher). — Enrollment, 33 ; pupils, Ameri- cans. This is one of the most advanced schools in the Territory. Year by year the public sentiment of Juneau is improving. More families are moving in, and the white school reaps the benefit of this growth. Juneau, No. 2 (Miss Cassia Patton, teacher). — Enrollment, 51 ; pupils, natives. The best portion of this school and the pupils that made the most rapid and gratifying progress in their studies were those that came from the Model Home, EDUCATION IN ALASKA. 1247 conducted by Rev. and Mrs. E. S. Willard and their assistants, Miss E. Mat- thews and Miss Jennie Dunbar, of the Presbyterian Mission. JJouglas City, No. 1 (Mrs. W. S. Adams, teacher).— Enrollment, 50; pupils, Americans. During the year a comfortable school building- was erected by the Govern- ment. Owing" to delay in its completion the school was not oj^iened until the 1st of February, 1S90. The opening of this new schoolroom for the whites al- layed the friction of last year, when the children of the whites and natives were compelled to use the same room or not go to school at all. Mrs. Adams repoits that her advanced pupils, in addition to their ordinary studies, have taken up natm-al history, botany, and simple lessons in mental science. Douglas City, Wo. 2 (C. H. Edwards, teacher). — Enrollment, 92 ; pupils, native. Douglas Island 'being the principal center of the mining interests, many na- tives come from distant villages to secure work for a longer or shorter period. They are constantly coming and going. This creates groat irregularity in the attendance of the children and greatly Increases the work of the teacher. Killisnoo (Miss May Ransom, teacher). — Enrollment, 32 ; pupils, Russians and natives. JF/-ovi(/c??(Mrs.LydaMcA. Thomas, teacher). — Enrollment, 84; pupils, natives. During the year the chief of the village acted as special policeman to look after all truants from school. The result was good, securing greater regularity in the attendance and more rapid advancement in their studies. Klaimck (Mr. Henry C. Wilson, teacher). — Enrollment, 66 ; pupils, natives. After the resignation of Mrs. Currie, in the summer of 18X9, no teacher was secured until the following spring, when Mr. Wilson reopened the school on the 1st of May, 1890. Jackson (Miss Clara A. Gould, teacher). — Enrollment, 87 ; pupils, natives. Dur- ing the winter a number of parents moved into the village for the purpose of placing their children in school. MctlakoMla (William Duncan, teacher). — Enrollment, 179; pupils, natives. This school is of more than ordinary interest from the fact that this settle- ment is composed of Tsimpseans, who, a few years ago, came over in a body from British Columbia to Alaska in order to secure greater religious and political freedom. Mr. Ivan Petroff, special agent for Alaska of the Eleventh United States Census, in his report to the Census Bureau, commenting upon the school attend- ance of the Sitka district, says: "Considering the nature of the population, widely scattered in small settlements, the showing of 1 ,049 scholars in attendance out of a total of 1,755 persons between the ages of 5 and 17 years is certainly a remarkable one. The number of natives speaking English does not much exceed that of the scholars enrolled." II.— CONTRACT SCHOOLS. 1.— Sitka District. Sitka Industrial Training School, Presbyterian fProf. W. A. Kelly, principal with 17 assistants). — Boai-ding pupils, 164; natives. Professor Kelly reports: " The past year has been one of marked progress, both in the schoolroom and in the industrial de])artment. It is surprising how quickly the pupils learn English when deprived of their native tongue. "Our school is distinctively coeducational. The boys and girls recite in the same classes, dine together in the same dining-room, and, under wholesome re- straint, have opportunities for social intercourse. "A few years of sedulous training have developed in some of our oldest pupils a spirit of emulation, a sense of personal responsibility, self-respect, self-i'eliance, and self-helpfulness which command respect. Most of our large boys, advanced far enough to read intelligently in the second reader, are learning a trade (all being in school half of each day and at work half a day), and the diligence with which they pursue their studies, the zest with which they enter upon industrial work day after day is most praiseworthy of them and encouraging to their in- structors. "All of the shoes for the pupils of our school are hand-made in our shop, under the direction of a competent foreman. Considerable custom work is also done. "Our supply of barrels and half barrels far exceeds the demand, yet we con- 1248 EDUCATION REPORT, 1889-90. sider coopering an excellent trade for our young men. Owing to high freight, barrels are usually made at the fishing stations where needed, and coopers are in demand at those places. "We are always pressed with work in carpentry. The variety and scope of work have proved a most valuable source of instruction to the boys, most of whom are aptly adapted to mechanical industry. The boys have made com- mendable progress during the- past year. Young men who can do carpenter work fairly well can find opportunity to ply their trade in any of the villages of Alaska. "We have eight model cottages, six of which are occupied by young married couples from the school. These young" folks have been thrown entirely upon their own responsiblitiy and resources, and they are doing right well in earning a livelihood, while their houses are kept clean, neat, and homelike. The en- vironments of family life among the young folk, in contradistinction to that in vogue among the natives, tend to create new conditions and inspire new im- pulses among their own people. "The general work of the school, patching, mending, refitting, making new garments (aprons, towels, underwear, dresses), is no light task. Each girl 8 years old and upwards knits her own stockings, and the large girls find time to learn useful tidy work in order that they may be able to beautify their own homes with the work of their own hands, "The girls are trained in every department of household industry, kitchen, dining-room, teachers" I'oom, etc. Our girls numbering but fifty, the matron and her assistants find time to give each girl individual care in the details of housekeeping, thus gradually inculcating and developing a sense of personal responsibility. "Our boys do the bread baking for the school, while the girls in turn are taught how to bake and cook for a family. This special instruction in the art of cook- ing is given in the teachers' kitchen, the cooking for the teachers and employes being dons by our native girls. They are also trained to wait upon the table, and they serve the teachers and guests with grace and manners. Our young boys are also trained in our school kitchen and dining room. ' ' Our pupils, from the children to the adults, sing with a spirit and understand- ing that outrivals many of the public schools. ' ' Our brass band of 20 members dispenses music for the school and for the town on public occasions. "We have a military company of 35 members. The guns were kindly loaned us by the governor of the Territory. "Lessons in patriotism are constantly inculcated. The Alaskans are a loyal, patriotic people. Rev. A. E. Austin, the veteran missionary of the school, has charge of the religious and devotional exercises." The time has fully come when a normal department should be added to this important school, and a beginning be made in training native teachers. 3.— Kadiac District. As yet there is no contract school in this important district, but the establish- ment of one on Wood Island is urged by the teachers of the several day schools. Prof. Duff, of Afognak, writes, under date of March 21, 1890: " We must have, and that very soon, an industrial school in this district, into which can be gathered and taught, the hundreds of orphans and neglected children. They are nearly all as white and as capabl'e of improvement as the children of New England, or any other part of the country." Prof. Roscoe, of Kadiak, writes, under date of September 29, 1890: "In every settlement through this part of the country may be found poor, defenseless children, clothed only in rags, with no one to provide suitable food or cloth- ing, and living entirely on such charity as may be found among a heathen peo- ple. There are many destitute children, made so by the drunkenness and hence vagabond character of their parents. In addition to a kind of beer which the natives themselves make from sugar and graham flour, they succeed in buying large quantities of whisky from sailors and the more reckless class of traders. The salmon canneries are, generally speaking, a curse to the natives. The Chinese employes bring, or rather smuggle, immense quantities of " samshu" into the country, and peddle it out to the natives. In the Aleut settlement of Afognak, the natives have sold the very fur bedding from their huts to obtain this vile stuff. The winter is upon them, and until recently they had been so demoralized with liquor that they had not laid in the usual winter's supply of dried fish, their main subsistence. Without money and provisions and cloth- EDUCATION IN ALASKA. 1249 ing, what misery and want will there be in that village this wintcrj all because of intoxicating; liquor ! "While Imnteis, recently arrived from the westward, tell meit is the same out there. The natives are demoralized by drink. Now. Ihe future of this race is that, practically, they will perish Irom off the face of the }^lob(3 luilcss they are Christianized— and that soon. It is a fact that the children do not yenenilly show this terrible craving- for strong" drink. The pupilsof my school are ashamed of their jjarcnts" drinking, and we never see them drink any. It seems, there- fore, to bo x'athcr an acquired habit than an inherited appetite. It is only right and just that our Government take orphan children and inebriates' childi'enand put them in a good industrial school imder religious tt achers, who, in addition to moral and intellectual training, will teach them the cultivation of the soil, the rearing- of cattle, sheep, hogs, and poultry, the elements of some of the me- chanical arts;. and the girls the arts of sewing- and cooking-. Such aschool can be and should be established in this vicinity." The establishment of such a school is under consideration by the Woman's American Baptist Home Mission Society. 3.— Unalaska District. The great distance of this district from the Bureau of Education, its remote- ness from a post-office (2,500 to 4,000 miles), and its inaccessibility, portions of the field having- communication with the outside world but once a jear, have led to the very general establishment of contract schools in this section of Alaska. In these schools well-known missionary societies share with the Gov- ernment the expense and responsibility. UnalasJia. — The ladies of the Woman's Home Missionary Society of the Meth- odist Church ax"e raising funds for the establishment of a school at this point. Carmel (Moravian, Rev. B'rankE. Wolff, principal, with 4 assistants). — Board- ing pupils, 20; day pupils, 15; Eskimo. Of the boarding pupils 14 were boys and (i girls. It is expected that additional buildings will be erected ,by the open- ing of the next school year. Bethel (Moravian. Rev. J. H. Kilbuck, principal, with 4 assistants). — Boarding pupils, 30; day pupils, 9; Eskimo. With regard to the school. Rev. J.H. Kilbuck reports, under date of May 28, 1890 : " This past school y3ar has been our best, more scholars having been en- rolled, and in consequence a better average attendance. '■ The great drawback we find to be the running back and forth of scholars to their homes, which is not conducive to progress. We are compelled to acquiesce at present in order to hold scholars who have parents. The orphans, of course, we have full control of, and we keep them steadily at school. ' ' The migratory habits of the people are the root of irregular attendance. The parents as a rule take out their children to help them in getting food and fur. It is only dvu-ing the season of rest that we can hope to keep a large number of .scholars. Of course it is absolutely necessary that the boys be trained early to get their living, hence we can not seriously object to the parents taking their children for this purpose; " There are instances where parents send their children to school for the sole purpose of having them clothed, and then take them away after a short stay. This, however, never occurred before this year, and we will see to it that it will not happen again. "As regards behavior we can not complain. There was a case or two of im- morality, but severe and speedy measures soon put an end to that, and the gen- eral conduct of the boys has been more manly. Several of the boys have been taking music lessons during the year. They have made reasonable progress under the teaching of Signer Weber. "From the reports you will see that brother Weber has taught the school all winter. Whenever I was at home I kept the boys in in the evening, when I would give them general instruction in descriptive and physical geography and phys- iology. These evenings were pleasant to teachers and scholars, and many of the latter took a deep interest in the lessons. "In speaking English the boys, as a rule, make but slow progress. We will have to resort to compulsory measures before they will take up English in earnest. "As in other years, the boys help in fishing, getting wood, and sawing and splitting- firewood, and in general work they are quite a factor. As play is more pleasing to boy nature than work, it sometimes takes a good command of pa- tience to keep them busy. The boys learn to get their food, as they supply us 1250 EDUCATION REPORT, 1889-90. with fresh meat during the winter and spring, with the aid of snares, ponder, and sliot. and traps." Anvik (Episcoi^al, Rev. John W. Chapman, teacher). — Day pupils, 35 ; Indians. During tlie summer of IsSn, Ihe school room was furnished with desks for 24 children, which to the gi'atifica i'.'n of the teacher, were filled. The progress of the scholai s proved most satisfactory. Rev. O. Parker writes, in connection with this school : " In closing this letter, 1 would say that both Mr. Chapman and 1 are still of the opinion that a board- ing schcol is a neces-ary thing for the more successful cari-yingon of this work, and though we realize that a common school education should underlie all in- struction in other branches, yet we feal it all necessary that mechanical branches should be taught as soon as possible. Perhaps a dozen boys' chests of tools and three or four sewing machines woulcl enable us to make a beginning in that di- rection." KosoriffsTcy (Roman Catholic, Rev. P. Tosi, principal, with 6 assistants). — Boarding pupils, 29; Eskimo. Nulato (Rornan Catholic, Rev. A. Robaut. principal). — No report received. Kingegan (Cape Prince of Wales), (Congregational, Messrs. H. R. Thornton, of Hampden Sidney, Va., and W. T. Lopp, of Valley City, Ind., teachers). — Popu- lation, Eskimo. The teachers report : "The natives ax'e peaceable, friendly, and intelligent, instead of ferocious, hostile, and stupid, as we were led to expect. We do not now entertaiji any fear of violence from them, and they already seem attached to us. In appearance they are a fine-looking set of people — robust and healthy — something like very good looking mulattoes, but with better features, and often brilliant color. In school they show as much intelligence as white children would under similar circumstances. We have now 65 pupils enrolled, although five-sixths of the populatioii are absent on trading voyages. In fall, winter, and spring we think we shall have at least 300 pupils. This is the largest settlement on the coast and would form a valuable center of missionary work for the neigh- boring settlements at Port Clarence, the Diomede Island (middle of strait), Kot- zebue Sound, Kings Island, etc. The children are very sweet and attractive. We have never seen any signs of a fight or even a quarrel among them ; nor have we seen any of them show any inclination to disobey their parents, a most remarkable fact, we think. Point Hope (Episcopal, Mr. John B. Driggs, teacher). — Population Eskimo. Point Barrow (Presbyterian, Mr. L. M. Stevenson, of Versailles, Ohio, teacher). — Population, Eskimo. These last three schools are in Arctic Alaska, and will be noticed more at length later on in the report. Ill,— OTHER SCHOOLS. Unalaklik ("Swedish Evangelical Mission Covenant in America," Messrs. Axel E. Karlson and Aug. Anderson, teachers). — Pupils enrolled, 40 (31 boys and 9 girls) ; Eskimo. Yakiitat ("Swedish Evangelical Mission Covenant in AiBerica," Rev. Albert Johnson and Rev. K. J. Henrickson. teachers). — Population, Thlinget; pupils 30. Ni(kli(kahy€t ("Church Missionary Society," London, England, Rev. and Mrs. T. H. Canham, teachers). — Population, Athabaskan Indians: pupils, 40. This school was established in the summer of 1888, and has been taught in the Indian tongue. Drawing all of their supplies from England by way of Hudson Bay and across the continent by dog train the teachers have been much ham- pered by the want of suitable books and other facilities. Arrangements are in progress to transfer this mission to the Protestant Episco^Dal Mission Society of the United States and reorganize the school on an English speaking basis as one of the contract schools of this department. Hoonah (Presbyterian, Rev. and Mrs. John W. McParland, teachers). — Popu- lation, Thlinget; pupils, 126. Juneau (Presbyterian, Rev. Eugene S, Willard in charge with 3 assistants). — Attendance, 21 Thlingets. This is a home where these children are taken from their parents, or received as homclets waifs, and lodged, fed, clothed, and trained as in a Christian family. It is a practical exhibition of Christian philanthropy, and is accomplishing much good. Jioieau (Roman Catholic, Sisters of St. Ann, Sister Mary Zeno, superior , with 2 assistants^. — Attendance, 40; mainly white children. liJ^UCATlUiN IN ALASKA. 125J Douglass City (Friends, Mt. and Mi's. S. R. Moon in charge). — No statistics received. Jackson (Pi*esbyterian, Mrs. A. R. McFarland in charge with 1 assistant). — This is a homo similar to the one at Juneau. iSt. Paul Island (North American Commercial Company, Simeon Milevedoff, teacher). — Population, Aleut; attendance, 50. ISt. George Jsland (North American Commercial (Jompany, Dr. A. L. Noyes, teacher). — Population. Aleut; attendance. 29. This and the pieecdino- school on St. Paul are the two that are maintained on the Seal Islands in accordance with the terms of the lease issued by the U. S. Treasury Department. Through the influence of the priest of the Russo-Greek Church, the people are reluctant to have their children leaxni the English language. Mr. Charles J. Goff, Treasury agent in charge of the Seal Islands, writes in his annual report to the Department : " Mr. Milevedoff was energetic and un- tiring in his efforts to advance the pupils, but thei'e is very little interest taken by them in English speaking schools, so that there was but little progress made." liussian. — In addition to the above are a number' of Russo-Greek parochial schools, supported by the imperial Government of Russia, which -will be enum- erated in the tables of school attendance. The statistics of these schools have been furnished by Mr. Ivan Petroff, spe- cial agent for Alaska of the Eleventh Census. B.— Rules and Regulations for the Conduct of Schools and Edu- cation IN the District of Alaska. During the winter of 1890 the rules and regulations for the conduct of public schools in Alaska, approved by the Secretary of the Interior, June 15, 1887, were revised and amplified by the Commissioner of Education, and approved by the Secretary of the Interior, April 9, 1890, and are ^ follows : By virtue of the power conferred upon the Secretary of the Interior by act of Congress of May 17, 1884, authorizing him to make needful and proper provi- sion for the education of children of school age in the Territory of Alaska, with- out i-efei'ence to race until such time as permanent provision shall be made for the same, the following rules and regulations for the government of the public schools in Alaska are hereby promulgated : GENERAL MANAGEMENT. Section 1. The general supervision and management of public education in Alaska is hereby committed to the Commissioner of Education, subject to the direction and control of the Secretary of the Interior. Sec. 2. The Commissioner of Education is authorized — (a) To appoint district superintendents and local school committees. (6) To establish common schools in every settlement where there are chil- dren in sufficient number, and at least one school in every tribe or large settlement of the natives. (c) To enter into agreement with missionary societies for the maintenance of boarding and industrial training schools, especially among the wild tribes and more inaccessible regions. (d) To provide plans and contract for the erection of school buildings, and where necessary, I'esidences for the teachers. (e) To approve of the appointment of teachers and regulate the amount of their salaries. (/) To provide necessary books and other school supplies. {g) To make such recommendations to the Secretary of the Interior as the interest of education in Alaska may seem to require. supervision. Sec, 3. A superintendent of education, to be known as the general agent of education for Alaska, shall be appointed by the Secretary of the Interior, upon the recommendation of the Commissioner of Education, and shall hold the posi- tion during the pleasure of the Secretary, and until his successor be appointed. He shall receive from the Government for his services as general agent an annual salary of $1,200. 1252 EDUCATION REPORt, 1889-90. Sec. 4. The genei-al agent of education shall have a desk in the Bureau of Education ; but during the six months of the year (summer) when it is possible to go from place to place in Alaska, he shall give his personal attention and supervision to the school work in the Territory. Sec. 5. He shall be allowed necessary traveling expenses while on duty. Sec. 6. It shall be the duty of the general agent to exercise special supervision and superintendence over the public schools and teachers in the Territory, sub- ject to the approval of the Commissioner of Education. Sec. 7. He shall have power, subject to the approval of the Commissioner of Education — (a) To select and appoint the teachers of the public schools, to prescribe their duties, and to fix their salaries. (b) To provide general rules for the government of the schools and the at- tendance of the children. (c) To prescribe the series' of text-books to be used in the public schools and to require all teaching to be done in the English language. (d) To select the location of schoolhouses, to provide plans for the same, to draw up contracts for'the erection of said buildings for the approval and signature of the Commissioner of Education, and to lease houses for school purposes. Sec. 8. Requisitions for all materials for the erection of school buildings, articles of school furniture, supplies of books, stationery, and other necessary materials for the use of the schools shall be made by the general agent upon the Commissioner of Education, and when such requisitions are approved by the Commissioner they shall be transmitted to the Secretary of the Interior for his approval, and when approved by him the supplies will be purchased by the Com- missioner of Education, and paid for as hereinafter provided. Sec. 9. The general agent of education, at least three months in advance of the close of the scholastic year, ^hall submit to the Commissioner of Educa- tion detailed estimates of the probable necessary expenses for the support of the Territorial schools for the next fiscal year, including therein the erection of school buildings, the pay of schdfcl officers and teachers and other employes, traveling expenses of the general agent and the district superintendents, rents, fuel and lights, furniture, school books, apparatus, and all other necessary ex- penses for the maintenance of the schools. Sec. 10. All salaries, expenditures, and other claims for the payment of edu- cational expenses in Alaska must be audited by the general agent of education, or in his absence by the assistant agent (hereinafter provided for), approved by the Commissioner of Educa'ion, and when approved by him transmitted to the Secretary of the Interior for his approval, and when so approved, will be paid out of the funds appropriated by Congress for the education of the children of the Territory. Sec. 11. In cases of special emergency the general agent, district superintend- ent, or local school committee, may incur expenditures for immediate necessary school purposes in advance of the approval of the Commissioner of Education, but such liabilities shall be only for unforeseen and necessary purposes, and shall in no case exceed $100. Sec. 12. Whenever such exti^aordinary expense is incurred the general agent, superintendent, or local committee making the same, shall make an immediate report thereon in writing, to the Commissioner of Education, setting forth the reasons for incurring said expense, and transmitting properly signed and au- dited vouchers for the payment thereof. Sec. 13. In the pi'eparation of estimates, vouchers, and other official forms and papers, the blanks approved by the Treasury and Interior Departments shall be used. Sec. 14. As far as possible the general agent shall visit each school district once in two years. Sec. 15. The general agent shall make a report at the end of the school year to the Commissioner of Education, which report shall embrace— (a) Number and general condition of all the schools in the Territory. 1. Public schools in — Unalaska district. Kadiak district. Sitka district. 2. Contract schools. 3. Other private and church schools. (b) Rules and regidations prescribed by the general agent for the govern- ment of the schools and the duties-of the teachers. EDUCATION IN ALASKA. 1253 (c) School census, monthly attendance, etc. 1. Census of popiilation and of childi-cn of school age. 2. Statistics of enrollment, avei-age attendance, etc. 3. Branches of study taught and number of pupils in each. 4. Other statistics when possible. (d) Personnel. 1. General agent, district superintendents, school committees, and clerk ; their pay. 2. Government school teachers and their pay. 3. School policemen and their pay. (e) School houses. 1. The number, location, and seating capacity of the school buildings owned by the Government. " 2. The number, location, seating capacity, and rental of rented build- ings. 3. The number, location, seating capacity, and cost of school buHdings erected during the year. (/) Any and all information, suggestions, and recommendations that may be useful for the advancement of education in Alaska or that may be required by the Commissioner of Education. Sec. 16. The Commissioner of Education is hereby authorized to employ a per- son, to be known as the assistant agent, at a salary of $100 per month, to be paid out of the fund appropriated by Congress for education in Alaska, whose duties shall be, under the direction of the general agent — (a) To attend to the Alaska correspondence. {b) To take care of the Alaska files, (c) To keep the accounts with the Alaska fund. {d) In the absence of the general agent to audit the accounts of the teachers. (e) And to prepare Alaska papeis, vouchers, etc., for submission to the Com- missioner of Education, and in evei'y possible way to assist the Com- missioner and the general agent. SCHOOL DISTRICTS. The Territory of Alaska is divided into three school districts, which shall conform to the geographical divisions known as Sitka, Kadiak, and Unalaska, as follows : Sec. 17. Sitka, comprising all southeastern Alaska, with an area of 28,980 square miles. Sec. 18. Kadiak, comprising the region from Mount Saint Elias westward to ZakharofE Bay, with an area of 70,884 square miles. Sec. 19. Unalaska, comprising the region from Zakharoff Bay westward to the end of Aleutian Islands and northward to the Arctic Ocean, with an area of 431,645 square miles. Sec. 20. In the Sitka district the Commissioner of Education shall appoint a district superintendent of schools at a salary of $40 per month, and he shall hold the position during the pleasure of the Commissioner and until his successor be appointed. Sec. 21. It shall be the duty of the district superintendent to exercise local supervision over the Government schools and teachers in his district. Sec. 22. He shall visit all the schools of his district at least twice a year and keep the general agent informed of their condition and wants as to school build- ings, repairs, and supplies, the manner in which teachers perform their duties, and make such recommendations as may seem important to the best interests of the schools. Sec. 23. He shall make an annual report to the general agent of education of the condition of schools in his district. Sec. 24. He may once a year hold a teachers' association at such time and place as in his judgment will best promote the interest of the schoolfe. Sec. 25. He shall be allowed necessary traveling expenses in the discharge of his official duties. Sec. 26. Until the schools become more numerous and the means of commu- nication more frequent, the general agent of education shall be ex-ofBcio district superintendent of the Kadiak and Unalaska districts. Sec. 27. In any village in Alaska containing a sufficient number of suitable persons the Commissioner of Education may at his discretion appoint three per- sons who shall act as a local school committee. 1254 EDUCATION REPORT, ^889-90. Sec. 28. The duties of the school committee shall be — (a) To visit and inspect the schools of the villag'e, advise with the teachers, and make such i-ecommendations to the district superintendent with re- gard to the schools as may seem proper. {&) With the written approval of the Commissioner of Education, they shall provide fuel, make repaii'S on buildings, and purchase local supplies. (c) If a school building is under contract in the village, it shall further be their duty to act at the building committee and see that the contractor fulfills his agreement. At the completion of the said building they shall examine the same and certify to the Commissioner of Education tha^ the building has been erected and finished in accordance with the terms of the contract and in a workmanlike manner. Sec. 29. The children shall be taught in the English language, reading, writ- ing, arithmetic, geography, oral history, physiology, and temperance hygiene. No text-books printed in a foreign language shall be allowed. Special efforts shall be put forth to train the pupils in the use of the English language. Sec. 30. All public schools shall be open to all children without reference to race. Sec. 31. In suitable weather, at the opening of each school in the morning, a United States flag shall be raised, and at the close of school in the afternoon the the same shall be taken down. Sec. 32. The Sitka training school shall teach the primary branches of indus- trial education. The boys shall be taught shoemaking, cai^penter and cabinet work, printing, and such other trades as are of use in the Territory, while the girls shall be instructed in intelligent housekeeping and household industries. - Pupils in the Government day schools developing unusual aptness in learning and wishing increased advantages, shall be received into the Sitka training- school upon the written request of the general agent or district superintendent. The above " Rules and Regulations for the Conduct of Public Schools and Ed- ucation in the Territory of Alaska," in sections numbered from 1 to 32, inclusive, are hereby approved to take effect July 1, 1890. John W. Noble, Secretary of the Interior. Hon. W. T. Harris, ll.d., Commissioner of Education. Washington, D. C, April 9, 1890. dTable 1. — Enrollment and monthly attendance, 1889-90. Station. St. Paul, public day school Unalaska, public day school Urega, public day school St, George, public day school .. Auvik. contract school Kozoiiffsky, contract school Bethel, contract school Carmel. contract school Unalaklik, Swedish school Nuklukahyet, Episcopal school Total, Unalaska district. . . Kadiak. public day school Aloguak, public day school Total Kadiak district Sitka No. 1, public day school .. Sitka No. 2, public day school .. Killisnoo, public day school ,4 -a Septem- ber. October. Novem- ber. Decem- ber. CD O > O O y. is H < H < fcH < ^ < 120 50 50 17 50 17 50 17 .50 17 184 179 120 30 24 29 17 19 29 6 14 20 19 18 29 16 14 20 17 17 29 15 13 29 20 20 102 273 35 29 31 25 9A 25 25 25 25 25 25 25 150 39 35 25 29 26 31 26 31 25 191 35 13 7 31 22 39 28 30 26 157 200 40 40 30 29 30 23 30 ?6 1,676 351 .. - 196 67 42 21 55 40 52 37 53 32 180 38 26 21 26 22 30 '^3 376 105 --. 81 61 78 59 83 55 190 68 45 28 44 34 45 39 43 31 190 83 33 13 34 13 34 20 35 16 175 32 12 10 30 22 25 19 12 9 EDUCATION IN ALASKA. 1255 Table I. — Enrollment and monthly attendance, 1559- '90— Continued. ■a . O t 4> bO < in 1 < 20 30 1 Juneau No 1 public day school 136 192 105 192 192 30 189 169 261 155 300 205 33 51 50 92 84 66 87 179 164 126 21 40 28 19 25 13 26 27 21 21 33 28 80 25 18 23 .Juneau No -. public day school Douglas No. i, public day school Douglas No ~. Jjublic day school 57 36 23 25 46 50 20 30 41 52 21 35 45 49 27 40 Klawack, public day school Jackson, public dav school 45 113 148 27 52 136 51 148 150 12 21 26 88 138 10 20 91 146 1.50 80 21 32 96 138 50 20 80 151 150 100 21 54 Metlakahtla, public day school 101 Sitka Qonti'act school . . 138 68 Hoonah, Presbyterian school Juneau, Presbyterian school 21 20 20 Juneau, Roman Catholic School Douglas, Friends school Jackson, Presbyterian school 200 312 25 30 Yakutat, Swedish school . .. . 3 3 3 3 3 3 2 2 Total, Sitka district 3,093 1,231 101 3 Russo-Greek parochial schools Total reported 5,145 1,788 January. Feb- ruary. March. April. May. Station. 1 o i > < i bo cS u > < 6 u > < 1 « fco a u 1 1 <6 u > < St. Paul, public day school 50 16 16 29 33 27 23 30 40 47 10 10 20 17 26 19 24 36 50 14 16 29 31 27 28 28 40 17 13 18 20 15 26 22 23 37 50 14 17 29 24 27 26 23 33 17 12 12 20 11 26 23 20 30 50 19 20 29 27 29 19 26 19 17 11 12 20 14 28 17 17 17 Unalaska public day school 14 18 11 Unga public day school 15 St. George, public day school Anvlk, contract school Kosorifisky, contract school 29 28 Bethel, contract school Carmel contract school 23 17 Unalaklik, contract school Nuklukahyet Total Unalaska District Kadiak public day school 50 30 28 25 45 31 30 25 51 28 "34" 23 51 28 25 24 50 24 35 Afognak, public day school 20 Total Kadiak District 80 42 33 9 22 33 53 20 18 7 18 29 76 40 27 24 33 34 23 3 13 55 25 9 19 21 26 20 "i2' 79 34 30 23 32 31 23 30 17 57 21 19 18 20 26 20 18 15 79 34 33 25 32 33 23 29 18 30 32 99 164 49 17 U 20 23 25 20 20 15 16 15 42 148 74 58 26 11 24 30 25 25 20 66 24 59 164 55 Sitka, No. 1, public day school 22 Sitka, No. 2, public day school 9 Killisnoo, public day school 8 Juneau, No. 1, public day school 7 Juneau, No. 3, public day school 24 Douglass No. 1, public day school 20 Douglass, No. 8, public day school 35 30 .17 23 21 Wrangell, public day school 17 Klawack, public day school.. 20 Jackson, public day school 77 165 145 100 37 88 140 67 41 129 145 90 22 72 140 65 35 100 145 50 19 39 140 40 14 Metlakahtla, public day school 28 Sitka, contract day school 148 Hoonah, Presbyterian school Jimeau, Presbyterian school Juneau, Roman Catholic school Douglass. Friends' school Jackson, Presbyterian school Yakutab, Swedish school 28 20 2 2 Total Sitka District Russo-Greek parochial schools Total reported 1256 EDUCATION REPORT, 1889-90 Table 2. — Number in sundry branches of study. g a o o .- 0) • u p< 6 a < C5 PI bti ® . CO (T) ft a EH 03 to MO bi) g B be a '$■ (a to a> to i~t .a P Public day schools. Sitka; No. 1 - 6 23 5 12 12 16 20 4 21 28 16 4 17 11 8 17 12 £9 8 29 26 S5 21 5 14 11 64 2 9 1 16 11 7 2 19 25 4 18 11 6 4 41 33 35 24 17 11 11 4 52 51 ""35" 21 35 10 7 1 14 80 19 17 10 7 A 24 4 34 35 28 22 16 13 30 52 45 22 55 16 14 165 2 8 2 11 "4" 10 35 23 23 30 52 80 21 10 12 3 10 5 3 2 ..... 31 35 28 35 11 13 30 52 80 46 55 15 14 28 165 12 "0 No. 2 IH Juneau: No. 1 ;?fi No. 2 .... 19 Douglas: City,' No. 1 ^>0 City, No. 2 '28" '^0 "4' 2 23 4 9 Wrangell . 11 '?« Klawack '32' v. Kadialf .. 55 16 14 28 165 9 53 8 8 28 165 9 6 4 14 4 41 3 6 55 15 18 9 8 28 105 Uiiga ?0 Unalaska 12 Afognak ... 9 60 28 28 18 1^^ Metlakahtla 4 Contract schools. Anvik 34 10 Kosoriffsky Bethel 24 21 12 10 10 108 1 ..... 35 10 148 34 35 31 148 35 31 148 '75' 4 6 60 5 Carmel 9 yitka 144 68 2 100 57 161 9 36 Table 3. — lable showing highest enrollment 18S5-1890. 1885-86. 188ft-87. 1887-88. 1888-89. 1889-90. Public schools. Sitka: No. 1 51 55 70 93 60 71 25 67 67 51 46 29 47 52 68 N0.2 . . 83 Juneau: No.l 75 33 No. 2 51 Douglas City : No.l 50 N0.2 92 Killisnoo 50 70 87 58 89 96 124 70 37 29 44, 106 110 81 136 81 25 23 59 91 31 32 Wrangell .. 84 Jackson 87 Klawack 66 Hoonah 165 126 Kadiak 52 67 Unga •. .. 24 Unalaska 45 30 Kurluk Afognak SO 100 13 24 186 17 21 47 170 26 20 38 Contract schools. Sitka 164 Bethel 39 Carmel 31 Nulato !Sk. Kosoriffsky 29 Anvik _ 30 166 35 Metlakahtla 170 179 EDUCATION IN ALASKA. 1257 CONTRACT SCHOOLS. Table 4. — Amount contributed by the ckurches to supplement the work of the Govern- ment. Amount apportio)xed by the Government to the contract schools for 1891-92. Denominations of schools. ^^ eo >> a ■S *■ ■pi o o a ^ p ^^■^ > U 0) a s 13 a o , P O +J 2; ■p* P< ■a o s I? o O 00 P! o -Paid out by the church during 1890 in addition to the amount received from Government. ^ tn 23 ■?^^ O S ^ j::; S tn a o a eparating' the Arctic Ocean from Bering Sea, and in front of the snow-capped mountains of Asia, plainly visible for miles, we celebrated our Fourth of July by laying the foundations of the first ijublic-sehool building in Arctic Alaska. Upon the completion of the school building the Bear weighed anchor, sailed through Bering Straits into the Arctic Ocean, and 200 miles to the north waid dropped anchor under the light of the midn'ght sun at Point Hope. Here again all hands that could be spared were sent ashore to work at the EDUCATION IN ALASKA. 1261 school building. After completing the building we again turned our faces to- ward the North Pole. After various detentions by the great ice field of the Arctic, on the 'Slst clay of July we reached Point Barrow, over 800 miles north and east of Jioring Straits. The next day, running before a gale, we rounded the northern end of the con- tinent and anchored on the eastern side of the Point. On tbe northernmost blutT of the continent was established probably the north- ernmost school in the world. SUPERVISION. Through the special permission of Hon. William Windom, Secretary of the Treasury, and the courtesies of Capt. L. G. Shepard, Chief of the Revenue Ma- rine Service, Capt. M. A. Healy, commanding the U. S. R. M. S. Bear, and Capt. A. C. Coulson, commanding the IJ. S. R. M. S. Bush, I was able to inspect, for the first time m four years, the schools at Afognag, Kadiak, Unga, and Una- laska, and also visit the settlements on the Bering Sea and Arctic coasts of Alaska. Mr. Windom, in furnishing meTvith transportation, recognized the fact that the revenue vessels visiting the native settlements of Alaska had, " in addition to routine duties, the philanthropic work of caring for and assisting the native peoples." In a letter concerning the trip he says: " The ordinary duties of the revenue marine have been greatly augmented on the North Pacific and Arctic station by the service which it renders in affording aid and protection to the natives, who are often in peril and distress from the rigors of the climate, the exposed con- dition of the country, and their lack of knowledge in the ways of civilization. The service is doing good missionary work, and is an important factor among the instruments which ai'e being utilized to improve the interests of these people."' The trip of the U. S. R. M. S. Bear was the ordinary annual cruise of one of the U. S. Revenue Marine steamers in Alaskan waters. Season after season she goes north in the spring to enforce the revenue laws and practically do police duty around the seal islands of Bering Sea and the native settlements stretching from Kadiak 1, 500 miles to Attn, and from Unalaska 1,200 miles northward t > i-'oint Bari'ow. In vast stretches of coast (frcm 10,000 to 12,000 miles is a season's cruise), unknown to civilization, the flag of the reve- nue steamer is the only evidence of the authority of the Government ever seen and the only protection afforded. When Capt. Healy commenced cruising in these waters, schooners loaded with rum, were visiting every native settlement along the vast coast, and even some of the whalers were not above trafficking in the accursed stuff. The temptations were great, when a bottle of whisky would purchase $200 worth of furs, and the profits were a thousand fold. At that time intemperance was threatening the extinction of the native race. Through the vigilance and tact of Ca];t. Healy this trade has been almost entirely broken up. It is also the duty of the revenue cutter, as far as possible, to be on hand to assist when disaster or shipwreck overtakes the whalers, to search after missing vessels, to note the bearing of different points of land, islands, etc., to determine • the position of all bars and reefs encountered, to keep ai'ecord of tides and cur- rents, to take meteorological and astronomical observations for the benefit of commerce, to investigate scientific phenomena, and inquire into the mode of life, political and social relations of the native population, and make collections for the Smithsonian Institution, and to perform many other services beneficial to commerce, science, and humanity. This year, in addition to the ordinary routine, the commanding officer is charged with several special duties. In 1887-'88, Congress voted $1 ,000 for pres- ents to the natives near Cape Navarin, Asia, as a reward for having fed and cared for some American sailors wrecked on their coast. These presents were to be distributed on this trip. Then, scattered through Bering Sea and the Arctic Ocean are islS,nds and lands so remote and inaccessible that the ordinary census taker can not reach them: hence the commanding officer of the revenue cutter was appointed a special agent for the taking of the Eleventh Census in those places. This gave me an opportunity of visiting these little known regions. Again, the steamer was charged with the duty of conveying the material for a storehouse and a supply of provisions for the Government refuge station at Point Barrow; and last, but not least, the commanding officer was anthorized to * 1262 EDUCATION EEPORT, 1889-90. furnish such assistance as he could in the erection of school buildings at Cape Prince of Wales and Point Hope, and give the general agent of education for Alaska every facility for visiting the native settlements on the coast. At 4 o'clock on the morning of the 3d of June, 1890, we steamed out of the har- bor of Seattle. At 9 o'clock that evening we swept by the light-house at Cape Flattery and passed out to sea. For nine days and nights we sailed steadily west, without seeing land or sail and scarcely a bird or fish. On the evening of June 12 land was sighted, which proved to be Unimak Island. The next morning, rising early, we were passing through Akutan Pass. The storm and fogs and rough waves of the pi-eceding days were gone ; the water was as qviiet as a millpond. Pinnacles of rocks, iso- lated and in groups, were to the right and to the left of us ; bold headlands thou- sands of feet in height ; mountain slopes covered with mosses of every variety of shade and great patches of snow ; volcanoes with their craters hid in the clouds were on either side, and all lighted up by the morning sun made a scene of surpassing loveliness and beauty. In due time we swept by Cape Erskine, rounded Priests Rock, and were in Unalaska Bay. Twelve miles up the bay and we were at Iliuiuk, better known as Unalaska, the commercial metropolis of the Aleutian Islands and Bering Sea. The Aleutian Ai'chipelago consists of anarrow chain of islands, extending from the end of the Alaskan Peninsula in a general westerly direction for a thou- sand miles to Attu, the westernmost limit of the land possessions of the United States. This chain of islands separates Bering Sea from the Pacific Ocean, and gives coloring to the Russian claim of a "closed sea." The discovery of these islands by Europeans is due to the unbounded ambi- tion of Peter the Great of Russia, who, having founded a Russian empire in Eu- rope and Asia, would also found one in America. The western coast of America had been explored as far as Cape Mendocino, California, but from California north it was a vast unknown region— " the great northern mystery, with its Anian strait and silver mountains and divers other fabulous tales." To solve these mysteries, to determine whether Asia had land communication with America, to learn what lands and people were beyond his possessions on the eastern coast of Siberia, and to extend his empire from Asia to America, Peter the Great, in 1724, ordered two expeditions of exploration and placed them both under the command of Vitus Bering, a Dane in the Russian service. The expedition set out overland through Siberia on January 28, 1725, under Lieut. Chirikoff. Three days later the Emperor died, but the expeditions were energetically pushed by his widow and daughter. The first expedition, from 1725 to 1730, ex- plored Bering Straits, and settled the question of separation between Asia and America. The second expedition was fitted out by the Empress Catharine, and consisted of two vessels, the St. Paul, commanded by Bering himself, and the St. Peter, in charge of Alexei Uich Chirikoff, second in command. The expedition was accompanied by several scientists and sailed from Avatcha Bay, Kamtschatka, on June 4, 1741. This ill-fated expedition discovered the mainland of Alaska and the Aleutian Islands. But the remnant that brought back the news of the discovei'y of northwestern America, also brought with them the beautiful furs of the sea otter, and wide-awake merchants were not slow to see their opportu- nity. As the adventurous hunt for the little sable had led the hardy Cossack and extended Russian dominion from the Ural Mountains across Asia to Kamt- schatka and Bering Sea, so now the hunt for the sea otter was to extend Rus- sian settlement 2,01)0 miles along the coast of America. A few months after the return of Bering's expedition in the spring of 1743, Emilian Bassof formed a partnership with a wealthy Moscow merchant, built a small vessel named the Kapiton, and commenced the fur trade of the newly dis- covered islands. On his second trip, in 1745, he collected 1,600 sea otters, 2,000 fur seals, and 2,000 blue Arctic foxes. This was the commencement on the part of the merchants of Siberia of a mad race after the furs of Alaska — a race so mad that they could not wait the secur- ing of proper materials for the building of safe vessels and the procuring of trained seamen. Boats were hastily constructed of planks fastened together with raw hide or sealskin thongs. In these unseaworthy boats, without charts or compass, they boldly ventured to sea, and the half of them found a watery grave. Those that did return in safety with a fair cargo received from 2,000 to 3,000 roubles each as their share of the profit. EDUCATION IN ALASKA. 1263 On the 26th of September, 1745, for the first time the -discharge of fii-earms was heard on the Aleutian Islands. A native was shot on the island of Agoto by a party of Russians under Chuprof. Then commenced a reign of lust, robbery, and bloodshed, which lasted for 50 years. One Feodor Solovief is reported to have alone killed 3,000 Aleuts. Ve- niaminof , who was the leading Greek priest and first bishop in Alaska, declares that during that dreadful period Aleuts were used as targets for Russian prac- tice in firing ; that one Solovief, finding the inhabitants of several of the Una- laska villages assembled on Egg Island, made an attack, slaughtering men, women, and children, until the sea was covered with the blood of the slain. One Lazaref threw over precipices, cut with knives, and split open with axes a number of Aleuts. Whole villages were massacred by the Russians, so that Lieut- Sary, chief of the Russian navy, who accompanied Capt. Billings's expedition in 1790, declares that it was a very moderate estimate to place the number murdered at 5,000. This first half-centui-y of Russian occupation can be roughly summarized as follows : On the credit side, from $15,000,000 to $20,000,000 worth of furs ; on the debit side, thousands of Russians drowned, died of scurvy, and killed by natives, and thousands of natives needlessly murdered by the Russians. A better day dawned for the poor natives of Alaska in the coming of Grigor Ivanovich Shelikof. a merchant of Okhotsk, who has been justly styled the founder of the Russian colonii?s in Alaska. He introduced reforms in the meth- ods of hunting, redressed abuses, formed permanent settlements, and procured concessions and power from the Emperor. The work commenced by him was afterwards enlarged by Alexander Baranof. The largest and most important of the Aleutian Islands is Unalaska. This island is 120 miles long and 40 wide. It contains three separate groujas of moun- tains. It also has an active volcano. Makushin, 5,474 feet high. Prom a cave at the southern end of the island were taken eleven mummies for the Smithso- nian Institution. It also possesses several deep bays, of which Unalaska is one of the longest. In their season codfish, salmon, halibut, and herring abound in those waters. The island was first sighted by Lieut. Chirikof. of Bering's expedition, on the 4th of September, 1741. The first landing was made by a merchant of Turinsk, Stepan Glottof, in the vessel Yulicm. This was in the fall of 1759. Glottof gave the world the first map of that region, and is said to have baptized many of the natives into the Greek faith. To the average American the Aleutian Islands seem so remote, and concerning them so little is knjwn, that but few think of them as having been the theater of stirring events and as having a history extending back one hundred and fifty years, but such is the case. Unalaska shares with the other islands in that history. For thirty years it was a struggle between the rapacious, cruel, and bloody fur-trader and the Aleuts striving to preserve their homes and freedom. The end was the complete sub- jugation of the natives. In January ,'1762, a party of fur hunters, under the leadership of Golodof and Pushkaref . landed upon the island. Owing to their excesses against the natives, several were killed and the rest fled the island the following May. But the island was too rich in furs to be given up. That same fall another party came under the leadership of Drushinnin. Outraging the natives, the latter com- menced on the 4th of December a series of attacks which resulted in the break- ing up of the Russian settlement, only 4 out of 150 men escaping with their lives. In August, 1763, Capt. Korovin, of the vessel St. Tmfsfca, formed a settlement. This also was broken up by the natives. In 1764 Capt. Solovief formed a settlement. His stay on the island was marked by such bloody atrocities that the few who survived were completely subjugated. His name has come through a hundred years of local tradition as the synonym of cruelty. Among other things, it is said that he experimented upon the pen- etrative power of his bullets by binding 12 Aleuts in a row and then firing through them at short range. The bullet stopped at the ninth man. In 1770, wben the American colonists were preparing themselves for the struggle for independence, the struggle of the Aleuts was ending. They had given their lives in vain. The few who were left could no longer maintain the unequal conflict and were reduced to practical slavery. But Unalaska has since seen better days and been visited by a better class. On the 16th of September, 1768, Capt. Levash "f , in charge of a Russian scien- tific expedition, dropped his anchor and wintered on the island. 1264 EDUCATION REPORT, 1889-90. In 1778 it was visited by the celebrated Capt. Cook with his ships Besolution and Discovery. On tlie 21st of July, 1787, Capt. Martine, in command of two Spanish vessels on a tour of exploration, landed and took possession of the island in the name of the King of Spain. In 1709 Unalaska was visited by one of the most remarkable men of the day, Alexander Baranof, who was to rule Alaska for the next twenty-eight years, bring- order out of confusion, and, cari-ying out and enlarging the plans of the merchant Shelikof, create a Russian empire in America. On the 30th of September of that year, the ship Trekh Sviatiteli, upon wliich he had embai^ked for Kadiak Island, was wrecked and he was compelled to spend the winter at Unalaska. He improved his time by studying the character oi the people with whom he had to deal, and forming the plans which he after- wards so successfully executed. In 1808 a rude log chapel was erected for the worship of the Greek Church. This was torn down in 182() and a better church built in its place. In or about 1795 a Greek priest, Father Makar, took up his abode on the island, and had great success in baptizing the natives. He was followed in 1824 by Innocentius Veniaminof , who was made bishop of all Alaska in 1840. He was subsequently recalled to Russia and made metro- politan of Moscow , the highest ecclesiastical position in the Russo-Greek Church. On the 25th of June, 1791, the island was visited by Capt. Billings, in charge of the Russian ' ' astronomical and geographical exposition for navigating the frozen sea and describing its coasts, islands," etc. In August, 1815, the place was visited by the Russian exploring expedition in seai'ch of the " Northwest passage " on the Burik, Otto von Kotzebue command- ing. In 1827 a Russian exploring expedition, under the command of Capt. Lutke, visited the island. From the beginning of Russian rule to the present day, it has been the com- mercial metropolis of the Aleutian Islands and Bering- Sea. But after all this stirring history of a century and a half, it is rather disap- pointing to learn that up to twenty years ago, when the Americans took pos- session, it was still a small village of barabaras or dirt huts, partly under ground, the Russian conquerors having largely adopted native ways of living. Since then the village has been greatly improved and almost rebuilt at the expense of the Alaska Commercial Company. They have erected 18 small, but comforta- ble frame cottages for their employes, together with residences for officers, store, wharf, and warehouses. The village has a population of from 14 to 20 white men, two white women, and about 400 Aleuts and Creoles. The Greek Church has a church and parsonage and school-house. Upon landing, I was met by Frof. John A. Tuck, who, with his estimable wife, is in charge of the Government school. The thi-ee days that the steamer lemained at Unalaska were given to the work of the school. The first year of their work has been unexpectedly successful, and I felt, with the teachers, that the time had come for the commencement of the " Home," which the Methodist Woman's Home Missionary Society of the United States have had under advisement for two or three years, and for whick, under the leadershipof Mrs.L. H. Daggett, of Boston, they have been raising funds. During my stay I had the satisfaction of seeing the "Home" commenced by Professor and Mrs. Tuck taking into their family two orphan girls from the island of Attn. A suitable building for the "Home" will be erected by the Methodist ladies this coming spring. On Sabbath morning I attended the Greek Church and saw the services in connection with the baptism of children. Fourteen infants were presented be- fore the altar of the church. The priest had in his hand a silver spoon with a handle about a foot long, and a bowl about the si/e of that of a spoon for a sa,lt- cellar. With this spoon the priest dijiped water from a silver cup into the mouth of the babe, the attendant priest holding a napkin under the child's chin. After receiving the water, the cup was pressed to the lips of the babe. The mother or godmother then carried it to a side table, where it received a small piece of bread, and if old enough, a drink of water to wash down the bread. From the bread table, the child was carried to the altar platform, and its lips pressed to a picture of the Virgin and Child. The babe was then kissed by its god-mother. These babes were dressed in long white di'esses, with a blue or red silk ribbon or sash around the waist. On the morning of the 17th of June the Bear sailed for Bogoslof Island. Four or five miles^iwest of Unalaska Island is that of Umnak. From its north- ern side, stretching out for miles into Bering Sea, is a reef. At the time of EDUCATION IN ALASKA;^^ 1265 Ciipt. Cook's visit, in 1778, the nortlieru end of this reef was marked by a i-ock 87;") feet high rising from the sea in the foi'm of a tower. This he named " Shij) Rock." On the 18th of May, 179(i, during a violent storm, from the northwest, the inhabitants of Unakiska and Uranak [slands were startled by distant explosions and rumbling- shocks of an earthquake. On the morning- of the third day, when the sky had cleared, it was found that an island II miles long, and Ihree-fourths of amile wide, in the formof a cone 2,240 feethigh, had been thrown up out of the sea 1.200 feet distant from Ship Rock. Eight years a'terwards, some hunters visit- ing the spot found the adjacent sea still warm and the rocks too hot for landing. The island continued to grow in circumference and height until 1823. Since then it has gradually decreased in height until in 1884 it measured but 324 feet. In 1882 the natives reported Bogoslof as again smoking. On the 27 th of Septem- ber, 1883, Capt. Anderson, of the schooner Mathcw lurner, sailed partly around the island. He reported thata new island had appeared one^haU' of a mile in cir- cumference, and was throwing out great masses of rock and smoke and steam. On the 20th of October, I88.i. a shower of volcanic ashes fell at Unalaska, and was supposed to come from this island. The first landing and official investigation was made on the 21 st of May, 1884, by Capt. M. A. Healy, commanding United States Revenue Steamer Corunn. The new cone proved to be ab^ut 1,760 feet from the old one, the two being c:)nneeted by a low sandspit 32G feet wide, with Ship Rock on the spit between the two cones. The extreme length of the island was found to be 7,904 feet, its general trend BE. by E. and NW. by W. From the 17th to the 22d of last February the sky was obscured with a cloud of ashes, a liberal shower of which fell in the village of Unalaska, 50 miles away. A pillar of flame and smoke ascended high into the heavens. It has been vari- ously estimated from 4 to 15 miles high. The first white man to pass by was Capt. Everett E. Smith, of the steam whal- ing bark Balcena, who reported the appearance of four new islands in the vicin- ity. It was therefore with feelings of more than oi'dinary interest that in the early morning of Tuesday, June 17. we steamed from Unalaska, bound for Bogoslof. Long before we reached the island, great white clouds of steam were seen upon the horizon. As we approaclied nearer all eyes were eagerly bent and glasses trained \\\)0n the land looming- above the horizon. But the captain was puzzled. He could not make out his landmarks. The two volcanic cones were all right, but where was Ship Rocky Soon we were among myriads of birds which had chosen these inaece.^sible and warm rocks for their breeding ground. Capt. Healy with his glass went to the masthead. Two men were placed in the chains to throw the lead. We steamed on and on until it seemed as if we would steam into the volcano itself ; sulphurous smoke enveloped us, almost strangled us. Amid the roar of the breakers and the screaming of the birds the leadman called out, '• No bottom at 17." Where previously the captain had anchored in 8 fathoms of water, no bottom was now found at 100 fathoms. Ap- parently the bottom of the sea had fallen out, carrying with it the four islands reported only a few weeks before by Capt. Smith. We steamed in safety over their former sites. More than that, the center of the island had dropped out, and where for centuries Ship Rock had stood, a well-known mark to the mar- inesr, was now a lake. It was with peculiar sensations that we steamed partly around the island, so close that we could look into the sulphur-lined steam vents, and, enveloped in its steam, could almost imagine that we saw "fire and binmstone." The captain had intended making a landing and an investigation of the phe- nomena, but failing to find an anchorage, and the wind having freshened so that it was unsafe landing through the breakers, he reluctantly turned away and steamed for the Seal Islands. For years the careful observers of the movements of the seal among the early- hunters on 1 he Aleutian Islands had noticed that they went north in spring and returned in the fall, accompanied by their young, and a tradition existed among the natives that an Aleut had once been cast away upon islands to the north, which they called Amik. When in_17Sl the usual catch of fui*s began to de- crease upon the Aleutian Islands, ettorts were made to discover this supposed island. In 1786 the search was joined by Master Gerassim Gavrilovich Pribylof, in the vessel 67. George. But so well has nature hidden these islands, the faVor- ite home of the fur seal, among the fogs of Bering Sea, that Pribylof cruised three weeks in their vicinity, with every evidence of being in the neighbor- 1266 EDUCATION REPORT, 1889-90. hood of land, and j'et unable to discover it. But at length the fog liftecl, and early in June land was sighted, which he called St. George. A party of hun- ters were left on the island for the winter and they in turn discovered the larger island of St. Paul. Over 500,000 skins were taken during the year, and the islands early began to be the '"bank" from which Baranof raised the funds to carry on his gov- ernment in Alaska. If he needed a ship's load of provisions and supplies for his colonies, all he had to do was to kill more seal and pay in seal akins. So great was the slaughter that the Government was compelled to interfere and in 1805 prohibited their killing for a period of five years. Prom 1820 to 1867, the year of the transfer, 42,000 skins were annually exported to England, the United States, and Canada. The first years after the ti'ansfer of Alaska to the United States again witnessed an indiscriminate slaughter by different firms, until Congress was compelled to interfere and authorize the Treasury Department to lease the islands under suitable restrictions to a respon.sible company. This was the origin of the Alaska Commercial Company of San Francisco, which has held the lease for the past twenty years, paying the Government an- nually a rental of $55,000, and a royalty of $J.<>2i on each of the 100,000 skins al- lowed to be taken. This produced a revenue of $317,500 per year. Last spring the islands were relet for another twenty years to the North American Com- mercial Company of San Francisco. By the terms of the new lease the Govern- ment will be the recipient of abaut $1,000,000 jier year. At 9:30 p. m. on June IS, the captain dropped anchor in Southwest Harbor, St. George Island. Beingunable to land through the breakers, the next daj'the ship sailed around the southern end of the island and anchored at noon in Garden Cove. The chart said that there was a trail to the village, 2 or 3 miles distant. At the village they called it 4 miles: the young officers that walked it came to the conclusion that it was nearer 14 miles. At 9:15 p. m. the anchor was weighed and we steamed northward for St. Paul Island. Going on deck about 6 o'clock on the morning of June 20, the ship was abreast of St. Paul Island, in full sight of the village. Behind us was Otter Island with its bluff shoie, and still further behind in the hazy distance the Island of St. George. To our right was Walrus Island, and toour left St. Paul, with its gentle slopes of green grass and moss, its bleak rocks and sand beaches covered in the season with the fur seal. To the right of the village were seen men driving a herd of seal to the killing grounds. Upan a h ill near the v^illage floated the stars and stripes, together with the flag of the North American Commercial Company, the lessees of the island. The stars and stripes also floated over the building occupied by Mr. Charles J. Goff , the United States Treasury agent. From the bay the village presents a more pleasing and inviting appearance than any other in Alaska. The large houses occupied by the North American Commercial Company for their own use, the house of the Treasury agent, the Greek church and the priest's residence, the schoolhouse and the neat white cottages of the people, with their orderly arrangement by streets, ranged as they are on the gentle slope of a hill, make an attractive picture. Before we rose from an early breakfast, Messrs. Goff, Tingle, Redpath, and Elliott were an- nounced. They had come to get their mail, which Capt. Healy had brought up for them. After breakfast I went ashore with Mr. Goff, who with his assist- ant, Mr. Nettleton, of Minneapolis, also Mr. H. W. Elliott, of Washington, and Mr. Tingle, the company's agent, did all in their power to make the day pleasant and profitable to me. Soon after landing Mr. Goff announced that a killing had commenced, and we walked over to the grounds to witness the process. A band of 200 or 300 seals were huddled together in the care of keepers. From this band 15 to 20 seals would be taken at a time, and driven a few yards from the main band. Four or five men with long clvibs then took charge of the small band, and selecting those of suitable size and age, killed them by one blow on the head. The men with clubs wei'e followed by others with knives, who stabbed the seals to let out the blood. They were followed by the skin men, who took off the skin with the layer of fat adhering to it. These in turn were followed by those who separated the fat from the skin. The skins were then carried to the salting house, where they were carefully counted and salted down. While this was going on, a score of women and girls were filling skin bags with masses of fat, which were carried on their backs to their homes, and then fried out into oil (butter) for winter use. The flesh was also carried home, cut into thin strips, and hung on poles to dry. EDUCATION IN ALASKA, 1207 Afterbein,i>- di'ied. it is stuffed into the stomachs of the sea lion, which have been cleaned and prepared foi- the purpose. After lilling it with the dried meat, seal oil is poured in, filling' up all the vacant spaces. You then have a huj^e sausage between two and thrt.e feet in diameter. This is stowed away for winter use. lu passing through the village we saw women at work cleaning the intestines of th'j sea lion, very much as eastern farm-wives prepare intestines for sausages. After being cleansed they are hung out to dry ; when dry they are slit length- wise and form a band 3 or 4 inches wide and from 75 to 100 feet long. From these strips are made the famous kamileka, or waterproof coats worn by these people. These coats are much lighter, stronger, and dryer, resisting rain longer and better than the rubber goods of commerce. Among the Eskimo of the Arctic the larger intestines of the walrus are used, making a correspond- ingly wider, band. The Greek church at this place is the best painted and neatest kept of any that I have seen in the Territory. The silver candlesticks and other ornaments when not in use were kept from the dust by bag coverings. The church is rich, being supported by a certain percentage of the wages of the whole population. In the adjoining graveyard a large Greek cross made from 2-inch plank stood at the head of each grave. With but two or three exceptions, these contained no name or date, nothing to indicate who was buried there. A gentleman who has attended many of their funei-als says he never saw any, even the nearest relative i of the deceased, shed a tear or give any outward sign of grief. They say it is good to die. After the burial all the friends ai-e invited to, the former residence of the deceased to tea. With Mr. Goff I also visited the company's sehoolhouse. It is well built, com- modious, and well furnished in its appointments. Owing to the opposition of the Greek Church, which does not wish the children to learn English, but little progress has apparently bean made. The school has been in operation for twenty years, and yet 1 could not find a child who could converse in the English lan- guage, although I was informed that some of them understood what I said to thsm. I greatly regret that it was vacation time and that I could not see the school in session. Mr. H. W. Elliott, who is here under appointment from the Secretary of the Treasury to report on the present condition of seal life, pointed out to me the location of the leading seal rookeries, and lamented the seeming fact that the seal were greatly decreasing in numbers. At dinner we were all the guests of Mr. Tingle; the principal fresh meat being roasted seal. I found it very pala- table. The population of the island consists of 5 whites and 217 natives. There are 23 boys and 41 girls between the ages of 5 and 17. About 4:30, the tide favoring, we returned to the ship after a very enjoyable day on shore. At 5 p. m. the steamer got under way. We rounded the south- ern end of the island and fetched our course for Asia. SIBERIA. Siberia, the battle-ground of conquering Cossack and free-booting Promy- shlenki in their century's march across Asia, is, in its northern and northwest- ern section, a dreary waste of low-rolling and frozen tundra or rugged, snow- covered and storm-swept mountains, the land of the fierce howling poorga, of wild beasts and scattered tribes of brave, hardy, and half-civilized people. Its bl6ak, ice-skirted, snow-covered shore north of Kamchatka was our next landing place. OiT this coast on the 5th of May, 1885, the whaling bark Napoleon- was caught and crushed in the ice. The disaster came so suddenly that the crew had barely time to spring into the boats without provisions or extra clothing. There were four boats with nine in each. Four days after the wreck two of the boats were seen by the bark Fleetwing, and their crews rescued, five of them dying from the effects of the exposure. The remaining eighteen men after seven days' tossing about in the sea, took refuge upon a large field of ice, where they remained twenty-six days. During this time one-half of their number died from exhaustion and starvation. While on the ice all they had to eat were two small seals, which were caught. One of the men, Mr. .T. B. Vincent, being unable to eat the raw seal, had not a mouthful of nourishment for eleven days. On the 7th of June the nine survivors again took to the boat, and in three days effected a landing on the Siberian coast, to the southwest of Cape Navarin. The day after they landed, five of the remaining died, being so badly frozen that their limbs dropped off. Rogers, the mate, Lawrence, a boat steerer, and Wal- 1268 EDUCATION REPORT, 1889-90. lers, the cooper, were also badly frozen and helpless. These were cared for by the natives, who, though in a half-starving condition themselves, divided their living with them. The three men lived through the winter, subsisting on dried fish until March, when Lawrence died, followed the next day by Rogers, and shortly afterwards by Wallace, leaving Vincent the sole survivor of the party. Vincent, being in bettsr physical condition than the others, was adopted by a family having a herd of domesticated reindeer, and therefore had more to eat. With them he remained for over two yeai^s until found and rescued July 15, 1887, by Capt. M. A. Healy, commanding the United States revenue marine steamer Bear. While among the deer men, Mr. Vincent carved on aboard with a knife the following mes^^ge, and asked his new made friends on the coast to give it to the first ship they saw. On one side was " 18S7 .J. B. V. Bk. Nap. Tobacco give." On the reverse side was " S. W. C. Nav., 10 M. Help Come." This piece of wood ultimately reached Capt. Healy and told the story, "1887, J. B. Vincent of the bark Napoleon, is 10 miles southwest of CapeNavarin. Come to his rescue. Give the bearer some tobacco for his trouble." Capt. Healy was at Port Clarence when he received the message. With his usual promptness, he strained over to the coast of Siberia, and after some diffi- culty in the fog, finally found and rescued the wrecked sailor. During the fullovving winter Congress made an appropriation for the purchase of presents with which to reward the natives for their care of Mr. Vincent and his comi-ades. Capt. Healy was delegated to distribute these presents, and for that purpose we were en route to Siberia. Monday, June 2H, opened very foggy, but ab:iut S o'clock the fog lifted, and Cape Navarin and the coast of Siberia were in full view. A more desolate and dreary scene it is hard to conceive of. A range of mountains with an elevation of about 2,000 feet lined the coast. Cape Navarin itself ended in a precipice 2,512 feat in height, the base of which descended into the sea. Although it was so late in June, the whole country was still covered with snow, except bare spots here and there. Sleds drawn by dogs and reindeer wei-e si ill in common use. Eveji while approaching the coast, snow storms were seen sweeping through the ca- nons of the mountains. The temperature on deck at noon was 45°. A shai^p lo tkout was kept for the native village which was located upon the map, but which was not found upon the coast. At length two tents were seen on the beach, and abreast of them we anchored at 2 p. m. The Captain and Mrs. Healy, Lieut, Dimmock, and myself went ashore. The captain at once sent messengers in every direction on dog-sleds to gather the people together. The main distribu- tion of presents took place on the afternoon of the 21th, and consisted of 1,000 yards of drilling, 500 yards of calico, 100 packages of glovers" needles, 8 dozen hand looking-glasses, 1,500 pounds of ship bread, 2 half-barrels of sugar, 2 barrels of molasses. 1 chest of tea, 6 dozen combs, 5 dozen packages of linen thi^ead, 4 dozen tin pails and pans, 1 dozen iron pots. 2 kegs of nails with hammers, files, gimlets, saws, braces, and other carpenter tools, 1 dozen rifles and one-half dozen shotguns. 125 pounds of powder, 300 pounds lead, 2 bags of shot and 20,000 caps, l,00d'cartridges, axes, hatchets, and butcher knives, 2 dozen fox-traps, 4 dozen pipes, tobacco, snuff, 1 box goggles, one package fish-hooks and lines, beads, and 1 box children's toys. Total value, $1,000. There are three tribes or families of natives on the Bering Sea coast of Siberia : the Kamtchatkans, occupying the peninsula of the same name, the Tchuctchees, occupying the general region west of Bering Straits and the Gulf of Anadir, and the Koriaks, occupying the country between the former two. Our visit was to the Koriaks, although I afterwards met the Tchuctchees at East Cape. The Koriaks can be divided into three classes : the civilized ones that have come more or less under the influence of the Russian settlements in the interior, the coast men, who mainly subsist on the whale, walrus, and seal, and the deer men, who live off their herds of domesticated reindeer. The latter two classes are more or less nomadic and pagan. They are said to oft'er sacrifices of dogs. We met the deer and coast Koriaks. They are a good sized, robust, athletic, and fleshy people, with prominent cheek bones, broad noses, black eyes, and a pleasant, good-natured expression. The men shave the crown of their heads, leaving a fringe of coarse, black hair round the forehead and sides, giving them the appearance of so many monks. They are said to do this that the flying of the hair in the wind may not frighten the wild reindeer when hunting. The women wear their* hair parted in the middle, the two braids hanging down the back. Some braid strings of beads around their necks or pendant from their ears. EDUCATION IN ALASKA. 1269 The women ai'e very gonerally tattooLid down the center of the forehead and along- each side of the no^e to the nostril, and elaborate designs cover the cheek. I also saw tattooing on the hands, wrists, and arms. One girl had two waving lines from the forehead to the nostrils, and nine in a fan shape from the lower lip to the chin. Another, with the other marks, had an " X " on the chin at each corner of her mouth. Occasionally the men were tattooeil. I saw ahusband and wife marked exactly alike. They were dressed exclusively in skins and furs. Neither on their persons nor in the construction of their tents, furnishings, or bedding did I see as much as a thread of wool or cotton. Their clothing, tents, and bidding are made from i-eindeer skins. Their food is lai'gely dried rein- deer meat, supplemented with whaleand seal blubber. Their thread is reindeer sinew, and from the r.;indeer horns aremade many household implements. The dress of both men and women is made of a large skin shirt, so constriy; ted that the fur can be worn outside or next t j the skin, as may be desired, and a pair of skin pants with the fur inside. These extend to the knee. Those of the women are wide, so that when tied at the knee, they j^resent a baggy appear- ance similar to Turkish trousers. Then a pair of fur boots soled with seal or walrus hide. The tops of the boots are tied closely around the bottom of the pants. Suspended by a string around the neck is a fur hood, which can be pulled over the head when needed. The babe is carried inside the parka, or fur coat, on the back of the mother. A belt around the waist of the parka keejis the babe from slipping down too far. The di^ess of the babe consists of a single garment of reindeer skin, but this garment combines hood, coat, pants, shoes, and mittens all in one. When dressed, only a small portion of the face of the child is visible. The sieds are made of birch runners. Over these are- a half-dozen arches made of reindeer horns. These arches connect the runners and support the floor of the sled. At the I'ear end of the sled is a slight railing to support the back of the traveler. No iron is used in making the sled ; all the parts are firmly lashed together with whalebone strips or rawhide. The runners are shod with bjne. Before these are harnessed six dogs in pairs, or two reindeer. The reindeer are also driven side by side. The harness of the reindeer is very simple, being astrap around his neck connected with a trace between his legs. The tents we saw are conical, like those of the Dakota Indians, the poles being covered with reindeer skins or walrus hides. In some portions of the country, where straight i^oles can not be had, whalebones are used for frames, and the tents are oval in shape. Within the tents for the sake of greater warmth are small inner inclosures made by hanging reindeer-skin curtains. These small inclosures are the sleeping places. As they follow their herds from one pasturage to another these tents are easily taken down, loaded on the sled, re- moved to the next camp and set up again. They have two kinds of boats, consisting of a light frame of bircliwoood, over which is stretched seal or walrus skin. The large, open boat is called by the na- tives oomiak, by the Kamtcliatkans bidar. These will carry from 25 to 50 peo- ple. The smaller boat is intended for from 1 to 3 men, and is entirely encased ijjj skin, except the openings left for the men to sit in. These are called kj^aks, kaiak. or bidarka. In hunting whales, walrus, and seals they use spears with ivory points set in bone sockets. Small birds and animals aie trapped. Their gun is a miniature rifle with a barrel not over 2 feet long. To the stock are fastened by a hinge two light sticks, which are used as supports to the gun when firing. Powder and lead are so difficult to obtain and so expensive that the hunter runs no un- necessary risk in using it. It is said that sometimes they hunt to recover the bullet in order to use it again. I tried in vain to purchase one of these guns. They seem to have no chiefs, their organization being largely patriarchal. If one man accumulates more deer than his neighbors, he secures a certain amount of influence on account of his wealth. Poor men, who have no deer of their own, join his band, and assist in caring for his herd, in return for food and clothing. The only law that governs the commimity seems to be the natural law that is found in all barbarous tribes, that of retaliation. A few years ago a feud started bstween a band living on tlie coast, and a band of deer men living in the neighborhood, during which the latter band was exterminated. They impressed me as a very unsiillish i)eople. In the distribution of the presents none seemed to think that someone else was receiving more than he. The more frequent expression of anxiety seemed to be that no one should ba overlooked. They also called attention to some who were unavoidably absent, and offered to take them their share. Evidently some of them had never been 1270 EDUCATION REPORT, 1889-90. upon a ship before, and they were naturally curious to look all over it. Some- times when a family came off in their boat, at first only the men came aboard. After a while, as if gaining confidence, the women and children would venture. Frequently as soon as they were on deck they would sit down as if afraid to stand up. One woman reaching the deck in safety expressed her joy by throw- ing her arms around her husband's neck and they rubbed noses (their method of salutation in the place of kissing). I secured from them for the museum of the Society of Natural History and Ethnography at Sitka, a number of things to illustrate their manner of living. There being a herd of some 1,500 reindeer a few miles up the coast, in order that Ave might visit them and the ship procure some fresh meat, after the dis- tribution of the presents the captain got under way and sailed up to the reindeer herd, where he again anchored. Going ashore, we found the herd on the beach, some of them apparently drinking the salt water. The winter with its unusual amount of snow had been severe upon them, so fhat they were very poor. They were also shedding th:'ir hair and their horns were in the velvet, so they did not make a very impressive appearance. Off to one side two sleds were standing with two deer attached to each. Getting upon one of the sleds, by motions I made them understand that I wanted a ride, and a short one was given me. The X'eindeer were much smaller than I had expected to find them, the majority of thepi being not much larger than the wild deer of other sections. The captain purchased four deer, which were slaughtered and dressed for him. When get- ting ready to lasso the deer the owners family seated themselves in a circle on the ground, where probably some rites connected with their superstitions were observed. Upon attempting to approach the circle we were motioned away. After a little while the men went out and lassoed a selected animal, which was led out on one side of the herd. The man that was lea ling it stationed himself directly in front of the animal and held him firmly by the two horns. Another with a butcher knife stood at the side of the deer. An old man, probably the owner, went off to the eastward, and placing his back to the setting sun seemed engaged in prayer, upon the conclusion of whicli he turned around and faced the deer. This was the signal for knifing the animal. With apparently no ef- fort, the knife was pushed to the heart and withdrawn. The animal seemed to suffer no pain, and in a few seconds sank to his knees and rolled over on his side. While this was taking place the old man before mentioned stood erect, motion- less, with his hand over his eyes. When the deer was dead he approached, and taking a handful of hair and blood from the wound, impressively threw.it to the eastward. This was repeated a secemd time. Upon the killing of the second animal the wife of the owner cast the hair and blood to the eastward. I did not remain to the slaughter of the other two. While the animal was bleeding to death several women and girls gathered around and commenced sharpening their knives on stones preparatory to skinning the animal, which they proceeded to do as soon as the deer were dead. Engineer Meyers photographed the herd. At 4:15 on the morning of the 25th the ship was gotten under way and we started northward. After proceeding about 20 miles we ran into a large field of floating ice. The sun was shining brightly. Off upon the western horizon,, clear-cut against the sky, glistening and sparkling- in their covering of snow, were the Siberian mountains, while all around us, as far as the eye could reach, were great masses of heavy ice, rubbing and grinding against one another. We were six hours steaming through this ice. While in the ice the captain shot three, and secured two, hooded seal. Gi^eat numbers of waterfowl were in the open spaces among the ice. It was. here that the whaling bark Sapjjlio was crushed and sunk in 1882, and the barks Bainbov) and Na'poleon in 1885, and the bark Ladoga in 1889, This last vessel escaped destruction and was repaired. Just to the northward, between us and our destination, St. Lawrence Island, in 1885 the bark Gazelle was crushed and sunk. On Saturday afternoon, June 28, we sighted the snow-covered coast of St. Law- I'ence Island, and dropped anchor off the village Chib-u-chak on the northwest corner of the island. We are now in latitude 64 degrees north. The sun rises at 1:55 o'clock and sets at 10:05 p. m. Temperature at noon 40 degrees. This is the largest island in Bering Sea. It was discovered and named by Bering's ex- pedition in the summerof 1728. In 1775 the island was sighted by Captain Cook and named Clark Island. On the 10th of July, 1817, it was visited by Kotzebuej's expedition in the liuril-, and in 1830 by Etolin in command of the brig C/dcagof. Etolin found five native villages on the island. In 1878 the island was the scene of agreat tragedy. Starvation and pestilence carried away over 400 of the people. EDUCATION IN AJ.ASKA. 1271 When the i-evonue cutter visited the island in 1880 not a man, woman, or child was left to tell the tale. In four villages the corpses of the population alone were found. All the villages on the island with the single exception of Chib-u- chak had been swept out of existence. In 1884 Capt. Hcaly reports, "At the villages along *he north shore no sign of living beings could be found, but the still decaying bodies of the unfortunate Eskimos were lying in and about the falling houses." Before we dropped anchor four or live umuiaks, loaded with natives, were waiting to board us. As soon as the anchor went down they paddled up to the gangway, and from sixty to seventy men, women, and children came aboard, pre- pared to barter walrus tusks, ivory carvings, fur clothing, native boots and shoes, seal skin, etc. The women were more highly tattooed than any we have before met. As the captain wished to take the census of the village he had to go across to Indian Point (Cape Tehapalin), Siberia, for an interpreter. It was a. five-hours run. We reached Indian Point about 6 o'clock in the morning. The natives were soon off in force with the usual things for barter, and a few to secure the services of the ship's physician. The village consisted of some 2 dozen skin tents, also a few underground huts and one small frame house. Above the tide on the beach along the whole front of the village lay 1272 EDUCATION REPORT, 1889-90. the unbroken ice and snow. The village itself is on a low sandspit that pro- jects out into the sea. The mountains back and above the village were covered with snow, and even while we were anchoi-ed there, a driving snow storm was sweeping over them. Small cakes of floating ice were drifting around the vessel. Going ashore, I was gfeatly impressed with the number of the children. In all the journey I have not met so large a number. Being in Russia, our Alaskan school system can not reach them. They are an Eskimo colony, speaking the same language as the natives of St. Lawrence Island. Perhaps they could be induced to remove over there for the sake of schooling their children. At Indian Point we had eider ducks for dinner, and found them good eating. Securing an interpreter, Tommy Tough by name, the captain, on the morning of June 30, returned to St. Lawrence Island. On our way across, although an al- low^ance of 5 miles had been made for the current, the vessel was carried 10 miles farther out of its course, making a drift of 15 miles in a distance of 40. A dense fog having set in, the ship passed north of the island without seeing it. The fog lifting at 10:30 a. m., we retraced our course and soon after dropped anchor abreast of the village, and I went ashore with Lieut. Dimock, Dr. Holmes, and the interpreter. The houses are from 20 to 40 feet in size. For a distance of 5 or 6 feet above the ground the walls are built of driftwood, whalebone, or timbei'S and planks from shipwrecked vessels. These are placed on end side by side, forming an inclosure in a circular or oblong form. The cracks between these planks are stuffed with moss. From the top of these walls rafters made of poles are ex- tended across, meeting in the center. These are supported in the center by a i"idge pole resting upon posts. These rafters are covered with walrus and seal skins, forming the roof. Some roofs are in the shape of a cone and others of a dome. Inside they are partitioned off around the sides with deer skin curtains. The spaces curtained otf form the sleeping places. All around, inside and out- side, are filth, dirt, sleds, spears, snowshoes, and household utensils. The houses and tents are located with no reference to order or street lines. The sleds are shod with bone. On a few small ones, the whole runner was made of a walrus tusk. If the building is a very large one there is a row of supporting poles on each side, midway between the center and sides. Over the rafter poles are stretched walrus hides. These are held in position by rawhide ropes, attached to which and hanging down the sides of the building are the vertebrce of whales, large stones, and old iron from shipwrecked vessels. This anchorage both stretches the skins and prevents them from being blown off. These skins being- trans- lucent let in a great deal of light. There are no windows in the house, and but a small opening, from 2 to 21 feet above the ground, for a "door. Fire, when they have any, is made on the dirt floor in the center of the room. Each building is occupied by several fanaiiies. Near the house is a scaffold made of posts of the jaw bones of the whale. These ara 7 to 10 feet high and 10 feet wide. A series of these make the scaffolds from 20 to 30 feet long. On these are placed the skin boats, harness of the dogs, meat, etc., so as to be out of the reach of dogs. Upon one of these, attached to the whale bone cross beam, was a child's swing made of walrus thong rope. I saw several excavations where underground houses had once been, and one such hous :■ still standing with the roof partially fallen in. The sides were com- posed of walrus skulls laid up like a New England stone wall. In this house were some corpses, together with the spear and arrowheads and personal be- longings of the dead. Large patches of snow and ice still remain in the village, some of them being from o to 4 feet deep. As we passed from house to house we were followed by a crowd of dirty, but bright-looking children. From the eldest to the child which was just able to talk, they asked for tobacco, which is used by both sexes and all ages down to the nursing child. Five little girls, from 4 to 10 years of age, gave me a native dance. They commenced with a swinging motion of the body from side to side, throwing their weight alternately upon each foot. This was accom- panied by an explosive grunt, or squeak, as if "the air was being violently expelled from the lungs. As they warmed up, they whirled around, writhed and twisted their bodies and distorted their faces into all manner of shapes and expressions, until they would fall down with dizziness. The census revealed a total population of 270, of whom 70 were boys and 55 girls, living in 21 houses. This is a good village for a school. One established here ought to draw to it some families from Indian Point, Siberia. They are the same people, and the two villages are about 40 miles apart. During the summer of 1891 the Reformed Episcopal Missionary Society will establish a mis- sion school at this village. EDUCATION IN ALASKA. 1273 KING ISLAND. Returning the interpreter to Indian Point, the captain steamed away for King Island, wliich we reached ahout5 p.m. on July 1. This is one; of tlie most remarkable settlements in America. The island is a great mass of basalt rock, about a mile in length, rising from tlie sea with perpendicular sides from 700 to LOCO feet above the water. On the south side the wall is broken down by a ra- vine rising at an angel of 45 degrees, and is hlled with loos;' rock. A great, per- manent snow bank tilled the bottom of the ravine from the water to the tO]) of the mountain. On the west side of the snow is the villa^^e of Ouk-i-vak, which consists of some 40 dwellings or underground houses, partly excavated in the side of the hill, and built up with stonewalls. Across the top of these wallsare large poles made from the driftwood that is caught tloaling around the island. Upon these are placed hides and grass, which are in turn covered with dirt. A low tunnel or dirt-covered hallway, 10 to 15 feet long, leads directly under the center of the dwelling. This is so low that we had to stoop and often creep in entering. At the end of the hall dii'ectly overhead is a hole about 18 inches in diameter. This is the entrance to the dwelling above. Frequently in summer, these caves bec( me too damp to live in. The people then erect a" summer house upon toj? of the winter one. The summer house consists of walrus hides, stretched over a wooden frame, making a room from 10 to 15 feet square. These summer houses are guyed to rocks with rawhide ropes, to prevent them from being blown ott' into the sea. The entrance is an oval hole in the walrus hide, about 2feetab:ive the lloor. Outside of the door is a narrow platform about 2 feet wic^e. leading back to the side of the hill. Some of these platforms are f i om 15 to 20 feet above the roofs of the huts below them. Across the i-avine from the village, at the base of the perpendicular sides of the island is a cave, into the mouth of which the surf dashes and roars. At the back of the cave is a large bank of perpetual snow. On the side of the mountain above there is a perpendicular shaft from 80 to 100 feet deep, leading down into the cave. This cave is the storehouse for the whole village. Walrus and seal meat is dropped down the shaft, and then stoi ed away in rooms excavated in the snow. As the temperature in the cave never rises above freezing point, meat so stored soon freezes solid and keeps indefinitely. The women gain entrance to their storehouse by letting themselves down the shaft, hand over hand, along a z'aw- hide rope. Capt. Healy had a census taken with the following result : Total population 200. of whom .■!.■> were males and 45 females under 21 years of age. Here, as at the oth'?r native villages, I secured a number of articles of interest for the mu- seum of natural history and ethnology at Sitka. THE WHALING FLEET. At 3:15 a. m. on the 2d of July the ship anchored at Port Clarence, in the midst of the Arctic whaling fleet. Eight steamers and eighteen sailing vessels, all flying the American flag, were an inspiring sight in this far off, uninhabited bay : almost within the Arctic Circle ; and the more so, as a few months ago, in Washington, I heard a gentleman who had just returned from a trip around the world, say in a public address that in all his trip, he had seen but one vessel fly- ing the Stars and Stripes. Many of the whalers leave San Francisco in January, and it is their custom to gather at this point about the 1st of July before enter- ing the Arctic Ocean, to meet a steamer sent from San Francisco with a fresh supply of provisions, coal, etc. Soon after anchoring, the captains of the whalers began arriving in order to get their mail, for the captain of the revenue steamer, among other good offices for humanity, brings up the yearly mail for the 2,000 whalers, traders, teachers, and missionaries, and whoever else may be living in the Arctic regions of the United States. For those who have had no tidings from their loved ones at home or returns from an important business transaction, the coming of the revenue steamer is an important event. Great bundles of letters and papers were piled upon the captain's table, and again and again they were carefully scanned, each captain picking out those that belonged to himself or his crew. Some of them did this so nervously, that though they personally looked over the packet three or four different times, they still missed some, which would be detected and handed out l)y some one following. A few visiting Eskimos were camped upon the beach, some of them being- dressed in bird instead of deer skins. 1274 EDUCATION REPORT, 1889-90. The day before we arrived the mate of one of the vessels had died, and an offi- cer on another vessel was very sick, dying' a few weeks afterwards. In a fleet with hundreds of sailors are some accidental cuts, bruises, etc., so that there were many calls for the professional services of the Government physician. This is another feature of the beneficent work of the revenue steamer. In Arctic Alaska in summer are 2,000 sailors on the whalers, a hundred traders and thou- sands of natives, covering an area of tens of thousands of square miles, and no physician except the one carried around on the annual cruise of this vessel. The value of such services can not be estimated. During our stay at Port Clarence Capt. Healy, in the discharge of his ofJicial duty, as usual, sent officers on board ol every vessel to search for liquors. The large majority of the captains of the whaling vessels are opposed to the trading of liquors to the natives forfurs; but there are some whobslieve in it, and boldly say that if the cutter did not come and search them they would engage in it, and that they do engage in it on the Siberian coast, where the cutter has no jurisdiction. The result of the search was that 11 barrels of alcohol and 6 cases of gin were seized upon one schooner and emptied into the ocean. One captain, seeing the officer coming, emptied a barrel of liquor over the side of his vessel and threw three gallon cans after it. The cans, instead of sinking, floated by the searching officer. He, doubtless thinking them empty kerosene cans, did not take the trouble to pick them up. During the past ten years hundreds of ban-els of vile liquors have been emptied into the sea as the result of the vigilance of Capt. Healy and the officers of the revenue cutter. The amount of crime, suffering, and destitution thus prevented can not be overestima'ed. The country and all who are interested in saving the natives of this coast from the demoralization of rum owe a large debt of gratitude to Capt. Healy, who has practically broken up the traffic on this northwest coast. One of the captains reported a case of assault and battery with intent to kill. On the 30th of June his steward had dangerously wounded one of the sailors, cutting with a razor a gash Si inch^es long and to the ribs in depth. The steward had been in irons ever since. It was a small schooner and there was no suitable place for keeping the prisoner, who had threatened to kill the mate and fire the ship when he i-egained his liberty. Under the circumstances the captain was very anxious to get rid of him, and wrote Capt. Healy, as the nearest Government official, an urgent letter asking him to take the man off his hands. This is another phase of the many- sided work of a Government cutter in this vast land without law or courts. The steward being equally anxious to claim the protection of the Government, he was brought alongside in irons. The irons were taken off and he was assigned work. The commanding officers of all the revenue vessels visiting these out- lying portions of the country should be clothed with the powers of a justice of the peace, so that offenses could be investigated, testimony taken, and offenders arrested and bound over for trial at the United States district court at Sitka. As it is, the captain could not legally have taken this man against his will, and when the vessel arrives at San Francisco the man can go ashore a free man, escaping not only all punishment, but even an official investigation. In the harbor awaiting our arrival was the schooner Oscar and Hattie, Capt. J. J. Haviside master, laden with building material and supplies for the school- houses at Cape Prince of Wales, Point Hope, and Point Barrow. The schooner got under way that same aftei'noon for Cape Prince of Wales, about 30 miles distant. Upon the following day the schooner Jennie arrived with supplies for the whalers. She had on board the four teachers, Messrs. H. R. Thornton and W. T. Lopp for Cape Prince of Wales, Dr. John B. Drigg for Point Hope, and Mr. L. M. Stevenson for Point Barrow. At midnight we witnessed one of those gorgeous sunsets for which the Pacific coast is so famous. On the morning of the 4th of July all the vessels "dressed ship" in honor of the day. At 8 o'clock a, m. we got under way, reaching Cape Prince of Wales at 1:25 p. m. The captain very kindly sent Prof. Thornton and myself ashore at once, and we celet)rated the 4th of July, 1890, by locating at this extreme west- ern end of the western hemisphere the site and laying the foundations of the first schoolhouse and mission on the Arctic co st of Alaska. From this school is visible to the north, the Arctic Ocean; to the south, Bering Sea, and to the west, Bering Straits, the coast of Siberia, and Diomede Islands. The cape is a bold promontory crowned with groups of needle rocks. As we had a teacher on bjard, we could trace the resemblance of one group to a teacher and jJi^ipil*^- Back of the coast the mountain peakfl rise to the height of 2,596 feet. At the base of the promontory is a low .tand spit, upon which is built the native village of King-e-gan. This school is one of the contract schools of the U. S. Bureau of Education and is in charge of the American Missionary Association of the EDUCATION IN ALASKA. 1275 15953 1276 EDUCATION REPORT, 1889-90. Congreg'ational Churcli. The money needed for its establishment was contrib- uted by the Congregational Ghurch of Southport, Conn., Rev. William H. Hoi- nian, pastor. At Port Clarence volunteers vi'ere called for and through the courtesy of the several captains the following carpenters offered their services without pay in the erection of the schoolhouses at Cape Prince of Wales and Point Hope : Charles Johnson, of the steam bark TItrasher: James Hepburn, of the Baleoiai Edward E. Norton, of the Orca, and A. S. Curry, of the Grampus. Capt. Healy sent off 2 carpenters and 10 or 12 men from the Bear. While the house was building Capt, Healy took the ship over to(Krusenstern) Little Dioniede Island to take the census of Imach-leet. Upon our arrival it was storming so badly that he was compelled to continue on over to the Asiatic side for a safe anchorage. On the third day, the storm having abated, we started for Imach-leet. calling at East Cape on our way. We also passed close to Inug-leet, on Ratmanoff Island, but did not go on shore. Bering Straits, which separat-' the American and Asiatic continents, are 40 miles broad. These straits w^ere llrst passed by Capt, Bering in August. 1728, who demonstrated the fact that Asia was separated from America, It remained for Capt, Cook, in August, 1778, to complete Bering's discoveries and give to the world the exact i-elations of the continents to each other. Nearly in the center are Big and Little Diomede (Ratmanoff and Krusenstern) islands. The former belongs to Russia, and the latter to the United States. As these islands are only 2 miles apart, Russia and the United States are here close together. Imach-leet, like Inug-leet and Ouk-i-vak, is built upon the steep side of a mountain, and is the filthiest place yet visited. Being so close to the Asiatic settlements, it is the gateway of much of the liquor smuggled into this section of Alaska. A school with an efficient teacher at this place would prevent much of this illicit traffic and accomplish a great work. As we returned to King-e-gan we sailed close to Fairway Rock, the Indian name of which is Oo-ghe-e-ak, and is said to signify, " Thanks to God," because there is room to shelter two native boats which may be overtaken in this part of the sea by a storm. Fairway Rock is a quarter of a mile in circumference and from 300 to 400 feet high, 'it is one of the natural danger-signal stations of Bering Sea and the Arctic, being occupied by myriads of birds, which, by their continual cries in thick and foggy weather, warn the navigator of his proximity to the rock. At King-e-gan the captain picked vip his carpenters and sailors, who had fin- ished the school building, and on the afternoon of July 12 we started northward through Bering Straits into the Arctic Ocean. Twenty-four hours later we crossed the Arctic Circle and were in "the land of the midnight sun." July 13 Capt, Healy anchored off Schishmareff Inlet to take the census. At the time of Capt. Beechey's expedition in 1826 there was a large native village here. _ Now it is reduced to a very small number. In visiting the camp upon shore I came across the oldest-looking native that I have seen this season. A number of the natives visited the ship. Wild ducks were so plentiful that the captain bought a couple of dozen for the table at the rate of a cent apiece. The next morning we anchored oft' Cape Blossom, in Kotzebue Sound. This sound was discovered on the 1st of August, 1816, by Capt. Kotzebue. in command of the liurik. fitted out by Count Romanoff, of Russia, to discover the noinbwest passage. In September, 1826. it was visited by Capt, Beechey in the British ship BJotimin, who was cooperating with Sir John Franklin, Frank- lin working from the eastern side toward the west, and Beechey from the western side eastward. The two expeditions failed to make connection. While in the sound Capt. Beechey buried a cask of flour. In July, 1850, the ships Herald, Capt. Hellett, Plover, Capt, Moore, and the Investiqator, sent by the British Ad- miralty in search of Sir John Franklin, and the schooner yacht Nancy Dawson, under her owner, Robert Shedder, visited the sound. The flour buried nearly a quarter of a century before was found in good condition, and a dinner party given, at which were cakes and pies made from it. In Eschscholtz Sound, the southwest arm of Kotzebue Sound, are clitfs from 20 to 80 feet in height, which rise into hills between 400 and -500 feet above the sea. At the time of Kotzebue's visit this cliff was supposed to be an immense ice- berg, covered with a foot of soil and grass, but was found by Capt. Beechey to be frozen earth. The interesting feature of the cliff is that it contains a large deposit of fossil ivory, mammoth tusks, teeth, and bones. I secured portions of two mammoth tusks and two teeth. One afternoon Lieut. Buhner and myself started to visit some of the native villages. After going about 15 miles we got on the shoals and were compelled EDUCA'l'ION IN ALASKA. 1277 to return to the ship. While absent we landed and visited some native graves. There is a row of them exteudinof for miles alon^" the beach. As there is a frozen subsoil, rendering- it very difticult to dig graves, the dead are wra])ped' up in seal skins, which are securely tied and then deposited above the ground in the forks of poles or elevated platforms so high above the earth that the wild animals can not reach them. Tlie whole landscape out from under the snow was covered with beautiful wild flowers, and we were covered with mosquitoes that swarmed around us in clouds. We saw very few natives on the beach, they being largely at Sheshalik, on the north side of Hotham Inlet. When the ice leaves Kotzebue Sound in the summer the beluga, or white whale, comes in, and the natives come down the rivers by hundreds from the interior to hunt him and later on to barter with the coaiit tribes.. About the middle of July the run of the whales is over, and that of the salmon commences on the Cape Blossom side of the inlet. The popula- tion then change their tents from the north to the south side of the inlet. In the mean time the Alaskan and Siberian coast natives are arriving day by day. until in August from 1,500 to 2,500 people are gathered on the spijb north of Cape Blossom, fishing and trading. This is the great international annual fair and market of Arctic Alaska. The natives of the interior here barter their beautiful furs with the natives of the coast for seal oil, walrus hides, and seal skins, and with the natives of Si- beria for reindeer skins, whisky, and breech-loading firearms, cartridges, etc. Formerly these gatherings were visited by schooners, fitted out at San Fran- cisco and Sandwich Islands, with cargoes of liquor in bottles labeled " Florida Water," "Bay Rum," "Pain Killer," "Jamaica Ginger," etc. This traffic has largely been broken up by the visits of the revenue cutters. A schooner was at anchor off Cape Blossom when we arrived. Seeing the cut- ter it weighed anchor and sailed away, but not before an officer had been sent on board to search her. Although no unusual supply of liquor was found on board, yet that afternoon a native and his wife were found drunk from liquor received from this vessel. They were brought aboard the cutter, testified where they se- cured the liquor, received a reprimand, and upon the promise of not drinking again, were let go. On the north side of the sound is the entrance to Hotham Inlet into which empty two large rivers, the Kowak and the Noatak. Although the existence of these rivers was known in a vague way by reports from native sources, they were first explored and mapped in 1883, 1884, and 1885 by expeditions fitted out by Capt. Healy, commanding the Corwin. As the larger number of natives whom I wished to see had not yet arrived the captain concluded to go on and fulfill his duties farther north and return here before the people should separate, conse- quently, on the morning of the 16th, with a fair wind, he sailed northward. We were soon abreast of Cape Krusentern, where, in July, 1886, the John Carver was crushed in the ice. On the morning of the 17th we dropped anchor off Cape Thompson to water ship. The ship's boats were taken ashore and filled with fresh water from a creek. The boats were then rowed back to the ship and the water pumped from them into the ship's tanks. By noon the tanks were full and we had on laoard a month's supply of water. In the afternoon the sailors were allowed to go ashore and wash their clothes. Soon after anchoring the natives began to come on board and the deck was covered with them all day. Cape Thompson is a bold, rocky bluff 1,200 feet high. It is a remarkable cliff geologically, showing a great fold of the earth's crust. The face of the cliff is also a great bird rookery, birds by the thousand and tens of thousands nesting in the cracks and upon the projections of the rocks. Wishing some eg^ shells a party of natives were hired for a few crackers to get some eggs. Taking a rope with them, they scaled the cliffs, and letting one of their number down the face of the precipice with the rope he soon gathered two bushels and a half of eggs. Leaving Cape Thompson at 5 o'clock p. m. we reached Point Hope about lip. m., and dropped anchor in the midst of twelve vessels, largely belonging to the New Bedford whaling fleet. The captain immediately dispatched a boat for mail to the bark Thomas Popo, that had come up from San Francisco with sup- plies to the whalers from New Bedford. In due time the boat returned with a batch of papers as late as June 10, but no letters. It then being nearly midnight I concluded to remain up and see the midnight sun, which dipped about half way into the water and then commenced to rise again. At the setting it was ])artially obscured by a cloud, but the risina" was cloudless and beautiful. Point Hope is a narrow stretch of land extending out into the Arctic Ocean, some 1 () miles from the genei-al line of the coast. This gives it its native name Tig-e-rach (Finger.) It has evidently been formed by two great fields of ice 1278 EDUCATION REPORT, 1889-90. grounding on the bottom and pushing the sand in a ridge before them, until the ridge rises above the ocean. Between these parallel ridges is a lake extending nearly the entire length of the peninsula. Formerly the cape extended still farther into the ocean, but one year the ice pack came along with such force as to cut the end off, sweeping away with it a number of underground houses. For three days we lay at anchor riding out a southern gale. Ten days later (July 28), at the same place, in a similar storm, the Thomas Pope, having not yet fin- ished discharging her freight was driven into the breakers and wrecked, and her crew was received on board the revenue cutter by Capt. Healy. On Mon- day, July 21, the storm having abated, the ship was moved nearer the village and I went ashore to inspect the school building, which was in process of erec- tion by Capt. Haviside and the volunteei'ing carpenters who had preceded us from Cape Prince of Wales, where Capt. Healy had remained to finish up the work on that scliool building. Capt. Healy sent his carpenter and a num- ber of sailors on shore to assist in the work. By night the building was finished and ready for occupancy. This is the second of our new schools in the Arctic. It is a contract school under the supervision of the Mission Society of the Prot- estant Episcopal Church. The teacher is John B. Driggs, M. D. The advisa- bility of the establishment of a school at this point was represented to me last fall by Lieut. Commander Charles H. Stockton, U. S. Navy, who had just re- turned from a cruise on this coast. Bringing the matter to the attention of Hon. W. T. Harris, LL. D., United States Commissioner of Education, and through him to the honorable Secretary of the Interior, I had the privilege of securing the establishment of schools for the Arctic Eskimo at that place. While at Point Hope I visited the native village, but few of the people being home. I also visited the cemetery; the dead, tied up in deer and walrus skin blankets, are laid on platforms above the reach of dogs and wild beasts. The present population is about 300. But in the year 1800, when this was the lead- ing tribe on the Arctic coast, the village is supposed to have had a population of about 2,000. In that year their power was broken by a great land and sea fight near Cape Seppings, between them and the Nooatoks of the interior. In this disastrous battle their leading hunters being killed, a famine set in which car- ried away half of the remaining inhabitants. During the day a number of na- tives came on board. Among them were three from Cape Prince of Wales. Last winter while out on the ice after seals, the ice broke loose from the shore and tioated out to sea, carrying them with it. They were on the ice drifting helplessly about in the Arctic Ocean for a month or six weeks, when the floe finally went ashore at Cape Thompson. 150 miles north of where they started from. The party of five were reduced to the greatest straits for food, even eat- ing up their boots. One died on the ice, and a second soon after landing, leav- ing three to be returned on the cutter to their friends and homes. Last winter two men on the ice hunting were drifted away from this place and have never been heard from. Pour ships have been wrecked here in late years. The Louisa and the bark John Hoidand in 1883; the Thomas Pope in 1890, and the Little Ohio in 1888. In connection with the latter wreck, the officers and 30 men were drowned. Among those that were saved was a sailor, who took a position at the whaling station. Last winter while en route from Cape Lisburne coal mines to Point Hope, he froze his feet so badly that mortification set in. Upon the arrival of the Bear he was received on board for medical attendance, and his toes were amputated by the surgeon. In 1887 a San Francisco firm established a whaling station several miles from the village, the influence of which has been demoralizing. The natives ai^e now recruiting their numbers by purchasing children from the interior tribes, which children, as they gTOw up, become a part of the tribe. The market price for a child is a seal skin bag of oil, or a suit of old clothes. Having attended to everything that was necessary at Point Hope, and paid oft' the natives who assisted in the erection of the schoolhouse, our mail was sent over to the Thomas Pope, which was soon to sail for San Francisco, and at 10 o'clock a. m. on the 22d of July we sailed north with a fair wind, passing Cape Lisburne at 1:.35 p. m. From Cape Lisburne the coast turns to the east- ward at almost a right angle, the general trend being to the northeast until Point Barrow, the most northern limit of the continent, is reached. Cape Lis- burne, 8J:9 feet high, is a bold bluff of flint and limestone, abounding with fossil shells and marine animals. It is also in its season a noted rookery for birds. The imi,aediate vicinity is said to be the flower garden of the Arctic (Koog- Moote) on account of the number and variety of the wild flowers. From Cape Lisburne there is a uniform descent and breaking down of the hills for 50 miles EDUCATION IN ALASKA. 127JI to Cape Beairfort. At Cape lieauloct is the last point where the hills reacli tin' coast. Soon after leaving the cape, the ice has pushed up tlie sand, foi-ming- a shingle or outer coast, running parallel with the real coast. This outer coast is a strip of sand with a varying width of 900 to 1,000 feet, about (5 feet above the level of the sea, and extending 120 miles north. The body of water inclosed be- tween the two coasts is from 2 to miles wide. Prom Cape Lisburne to Cape Beau- fort are extensive coal mines, at which some of the steam whalers re])lenish their exhausted supplies. This season over 500 tons have been mined by the whalers. At Cape Beaufort the geological formation is sandstone, inclosing petrified wood and rushes, with veins of coal. Di'ift coal was found on the beach almost MAP OF S.E.ALASKA ft-epared for U.S.Bureau of Education Bj tJ.S. Coast & Geodetic Survrf' Statute Miles up to Point Barrow. During the night the wind gradually grew stronger until towards morning, when we encountered a heavy southwest gale, causing the ship to roll until it was almost impossible to keep in bed. At 11 o'clock a. m., on the 24th of July, we were in the midst of floating ice. and at noon anchored olT Cape Collie. Soon the musquitoes began to swarm on board, and the captain moved his anchorage farther out to sea. We were again in the midst of the whaling fleet, and at the edge of the ice pack which prevented farther progress to the north. The Arctic '' pack '" is the name given to that large body of perpetual solid ice in the Ai'ctie Ocean extend- ing from the coast of Alaska across to Siberia. Its southern limit is constantly 1280 EDUCATION REPORT, 1889-90. changing with the severity of the season, and the course of winds and cun-ents. Its southern edge is also irregular, sometimes containing openings or canals ex- tending into the pack for miles, these are called "leads."' A wider and shorter opening is called a " pocket." In August, 1778, Capt. Cook found the soutliern edge of the pack resting on Icy Cape, 40 miles south of our present anchorage. It was a comjiaet wall of ice, 10 feet above the v/ater and from70to90 feet under the surface, extending west of north and east by south, from continent to continent. In 1826 Capt. Beechey did not meet it- until near Cape Smyth, 120 miles farther north. August 20, 1879. the fleet reached the pack at Blossom Shoals, off Icy Cape. August 10, 1885, the pack was at our present anchorage. Cape Collie is at the north side of the entrance to Wainwright Inlet, an extensive lagoon into which empties a considerable river from the interior. After lunch I accompanied Lieut. Dimock and the interpreter ashore, on a visit to the native village of Koog-moote. On account of the shore ice making out some distance from the beach, we had great difficulty in landing and still greater danger in embarking again. Along the outer edge was a mass of detached pieces of ice that under the influence of the waves were bobbing up and down and constantly shifting their position. The greatest care had to be taken lest our small boat should be caught and crushed. And when we got upon the ice and attempted to make our way from one cake to another the peril was still greater. Although our heads and faces were covered with mus- quito netting, the little insects managed to get inside and make our stay ashore a torment. Arctic ptarmigan were abundant. The first party of natives we met were eating reindeer meat. Taking a large chunk in the left hand and fastening upon it with the teeth, a knife held in the right hand was passed up- ward close to the mouth, severing a piece as large as could be conveniently chewed. I think a beginner at this method of carving meat would slice off the end of his nose. I counted twelve underground huts in the village, none of which "were occu- pied. The larger portion of the people were inland hunting reindeer. The few remaining at the village were living in tents, their winter houses being partly filled with water. While on shore I walked out on the ice to the hull of the Qeorge & Susan. This bark was wrecked on the 10th of August, 1885, to- gether with the Mabel. Three of the crew were drowned in getting ashore, and some of those that escaped were in an exceedingly critical condition for several hours after they were rescued by Capt. Healy and taken aboard of the revenue cutter Corwin, which was anchored in the neighborhood. Early on July 25 we started in search of the "ice pack," which we found 5 miles away. After skirting the pack a short distance, the captain returned in shore and anchored off Point Belcher. At this point is another small village (She-rah-rack) of twelve winter hunts, which I visited. But three or four fam- ilies remained in the place, the others being off hunting the reindeer. On July 26 it snowed nearly all day. At 11 p. m. the captain again started out to examine the condition of the ice. After skirting the edge of the pack for some distance we returned and anchored of Cape Franklin. In the after- noon the captain changed his anchorage a few miles north, off Sea Horse Is- lands. While lying here at anchor Capt. Healy secured for me two nests and eggs of the eider duck. We are now in the midst of the Arctic graveyard of ships. In the last 20 years from 75 to 80 vessels connected with the whale trade have been wrecked on the American side of the Arctic coast, and fi'om 15 to 20 on the Asiatic side. In 1871 33 ships were caught in the ice near here and abandoned, and 1,200 sailors were cast helplessly on this sterile coast, with an insufficient snpply of provisions, and for 100 miles ^he ice pack was solid between them and escajDe. There was then no refuge station at Point Barrow, but fortunately they were able to get south along the coast until they met some ships that took them off. Again, in 187G, 13 whaling vessels were caught in the ice off' these same Sea Horse Islands and drifted helplesslj' to the north of Point Barrow, where they were abandoned. To the northward the Daniel Webster was crushed in the ice in 1881, the steamer North Star in 1882, and schooner Clara Light in 1885. A little to the south of this point the bark .lohn Howland was stove in by the ice off Point Lay in 1883, steamer Boa^ Head off Point Belcher in 1884, the Mabel and George and Susan off Point Collie. A little wegt of this point the barks Mt. Wolldston and Vigilant were caught in the ice in 1879, and no tidings have ever come from vessels or crews. On the 8th of August, 1888, the barks Fleetuing, Young Phoenix, Mary and Susan, and schooner Jane Gray were lost in the ice off Point Barrow, 160 of their crew being rescued by Capt. Healy. who was in the vicinity. It is when a ship reaches the ice that extreme watchful- Refuge Station, Point Barrow, Alaska. (See page 1281.) (Courtesy of Scribner's Magazine.; .i^mm-'rs^yjKmittim^- TVmiWfi f« mia aBRfeewwHfe U. S. Revenue Cutter " Bear" Connmunicating with Siberian Deermen. (See page 1293.) (Photo, by Dr. S. J. Cal;. From The Californian.) EDUCATION IN ALASKA. 1281 ness and care is demandecl ; the smallest change of wind, currents, or ice being- noted and weighed, which means to the commanding officer days and nights of sleepless anxiety. It was in one of these seasons of anxiety that Capt. Healy spent 75 cou8ecutive hours in the orow's nest at the masthead, his food being taken up to him. On the 30tli of July Ave were getting tired of our enforced delay. We had been a week off Point Belcher and Sea Horse Islands, waiting for the ice pack to swing off the shore and let us forward. That night, as wc were upon deck watching the midnight sun, a large field of shore ice was seen drifting toward us. For a little the good ship held fast as the great cakes broke on her bow and ground against her sides ; Ijut by and by the pressure became too great and she dragged her anchor, and commenced drifting toward the shoals. Steam was at once raised, the anchor weighed, and the ship set at work bucking her way through the ice. Once under way the captain concluded to go on until again stopped by the ice. Threading his way carefully through masses of float- ing ice, he reached and anchored on the morning of July 31 off the village of Ootkeavie, near Point Barrow. Upon communicating with the shore it was found that the ice had left two days previous, and that the first vessels had ar- rived a few hours before. Masses of ice were still floating by in the current and grounded icebergs lay between the ship and the beach. Ootkeavie, next to Cape Prince of Wales, is the largest village on the Arctic coast, numbering about 300 people. In 1881, 1882, and 1883 it was occupied as one of the stations of the In- ternational Polar Expedition. The house built by Lieut. P. H. Ray for the use of the expedition has been leased to the Pacific Steam Whaling Company, and ■ is used by them as a whaling station and trading post, the gentleman in charge being Mr. John W. Kelly, who has given the world an interesting monograph on the Arctic Eskimo, together with an Eskimo-English vocabulary. Both were published last spring by the United States Bureau of Education. This is also the location of the Government refuge station for shipwrecked whalers. Within the past 10 years some 2,000 sailors have been wrecked on this Arctic coast. So far they have been fortunate in finding vessels within reach to carry them south to civilization, but the occasion is liable to come any season when they will be compelled to winter here. This to a large body of men means slow starvation and death. They could not subsist on the country, and there is no adequate provision within 1,500 or 2,000 miles; and when the long Arctic winter sets in no power on earth could reach them with help. To provide against any such horrible tragedy Capt. Healy early saw the necessity of having an ample supply of provisions stored at some central place in the Arctic. The plan grew and took shape in his own mind. He enlisted his friends and the men interested in the whaling industry, particularly in New Bedford and San Francisco, and finally, after many vexatious delays that would have discouraged a less pei'sist- ent man, Congress voted the money for the erection of the buildings and the procuring of the provisions. Last year Capt. Healy brought up the materials and erected the main build- ing, which is a low one-story building, 30 by 48 feet in size. The walls, roof, and floor are made double, as a protection against the intense cold of this high, north- ern latitude in winter. It will accommodate 50 men comfortably; it can shelter J 00 if necessary. The house has provisions for 100 men 12 months, and is ap- mirably adapted for its purpose. This year Capt. Healy had on board the ma- terial for the construction of a storehouse, also an additional supply of pro- visions, clothing', and coal. The Ootkeavie is one of the villages selected by the United States Bureau of Education for the establishment of a school, the contract for which was given by Dr. Harris to the Board of Home Missions of the Presbyterian Church. The money necessary for its establishment was generously contributed by Mrs. Elliott F. Shepard, of New York. The teacher is Prof. L. M. Stevenson, of Versailles. Ohio, who reai-hed the place on .July 30, 1890. Owing to the short- ness of the time and the gi'eat distance from the source of supplies, and the dangers of Arctic navigation, I was able to secure material this season for only- two of the school buildings and teachers' residences to be erected in the Arctic. These were placed at Cape Prince of Wales and Point Hope. Next season I hope to erect one at Point Barrow. In the mean time, through the courtesy of Capt. Healy, representing the Treasury Department, I secured a room for the school in one of the Government buildings. This is the most northern school in Amei'ica, and with but one exception in the world, being in latitude 71° 23' north. At this point the trend of the continent turns to the eastward. However, on this point the ice has pushed a low ridge of sand, which exiends from 8 to 10 miles farther north. On the end of this sand spit is a small village called Nu- 1282 EDUCATION REPORT, 1889-90. wuk. On the sand spit midway between the villages is a hunting station, where the natives congregate for weeks in summer to kill ducks, as they pass to and fro from water to water over the sand spit. Thousands upon thousands are killed hei'e every season. On the day of our arrival I spent the whole time on shore arranging for the school. That evening the wind that had been freshening up all afternoon increased to a gale. The barometer was going down, down, down : heavy masses of ice were drifting by when the captain gave orders to weigh anchor and make a lee on the northeast side of Point Barrow, whither 16 vessels of the whaling fleet has preceded us. In a similar storm last summer, shortly after the Bear left her anchorage at Ootkeavie, the ice came in and piled up 30 feet high on the very spot the vessel had left. The storm proved the severest we had en- countered this season, changing the configuration of the coast line for miles. At Ootkeavie, 20 tons of coal just landed for the use of the Government school, was either swept out to sea or buried 'deep under the sand — no trace of it could be found. All day long, on the 1st of August, the gale howled and shi'ieked through the rigging, but the Bear rode it out in safety. In the evening a new danger pre- sented itself. It was found that the great ice pack, which was only 5 to 7 miles . distant was closing in upon the shore, and soon we would be prisoners shut up in an ice trap. From this there would be no escape until the wind changed and drove the ice again off shore. This was the condition of things on August 1, 1888. A number of the whalers had shifted, for protection, their anchorage from the west side of Point Barrow to the east side. The wind that had in- creased to a gale suddenly veered around from the southwest to the north, caus- ing a heavy sea to break upon the bar. At 9 o'clock that night, the schooner Jane Gray, parted her cables and drifted against an iceberg — knocking a large hole in her side. She filled rapidly and sank, the crew taking to the small boats. The next to slip her moorings was the bark Phoenix. She struck the bar and sunk. Her crew drifted about in small boats for six hours in that terri- ble storm before they were picked up. Then the barks Mary and Susan, and Fleetvnng went on to the bar and pounded to pieces. Several other vessels parted their cables, sustaining more or less danger. In that fearful storm, when the waters of the Arctic were lashed into billows of foam, hurling masses of ice about like driving snow flakes, in the midst of snapping chains and crushing spars and tattered sails, when it seemed certain destruction to lower a small boat, the revenue cutter Bear rode the storm in safety, and her trained crew, under the direction of Cap. Healy, were ventuinng their lives and. performing prodigies of valor in rescuing shipwrecked sailors. When the storm abated, 160 rescued men were on the decks of the Bear. On this occasion, fortunately for us, the storm abated before the ice reached us, and August 2 gave us a beautiful afternoon, of which I availed myself to go ashore. The western and northern coast of America terminates at Point Barrow in lati- tude 71° 23' north and longitude 156° 10' west. Beyond this the coast trends to the eastward and southward. On the east side of the point is the native village of Nuwuk, which consists of a number of underground houses. But few families were home at the time of our visit, and they were mainly living in tents outside of their winter huts. The first white man to visit this place was Master Elson. of H. M. S. Bossom (Capt Beechey's expedition), in August, 1826. One hundred and forty-six miles to the eastwai'd in Return Reef, the westernmost point reached by Sir John Franklin in his journey to form a junction with Capt. Beechey's ex- pedition. The next visit by white men, was that of Capt. Simpson, of the Hudson Bay Company, who. in 1837, made the journey from the Mackenzie River. During the winters of 1852, 1853, and 1854 H. M. S. Plover wintered in Elson Bay to the east of the point. Now a United States revenue marine vessel and many whaling ships visit the place annually. Soon after returning to the Bear from the village, the captain was visited by Capt. Sherman, of the steam whaler William Lenris, and informed that the tender of the New Bedford whaling fleet, the bark Tfiomas Pope, which we had left but a few days before at anchor at Point Hope, was wrecked in the breakers at that point, on the 28th of July, and that the crew wished to be received on board the Government vessel and taken back to civilization. Consent having been obtained, the ten shipwrecked men were soon after sent on board. As the captain had on board the Bear the materials for a Government storehouse at the Point Barrow refuge station, he concluded to return at once t(» that place, and discharge his freight, that more comfortable quarters might be made for the shipwi'ecked sailors. EDUCATION IN ALASKA. 1283 The weather was beautiful, the oceau smooth, and the sail exhilarating. At midnight the sun was visible in the northwest, and the full moon in the south- east. At 1 a. m., August 3, the ship anchored atOotkeavie, where we remained a week while tlie ship's carpenters were building the Government storehouse, and the captain inspecting the refuge station. During the week, among the callers was Mr. J. B. Vincent, the hero of the shipwreck of the bark Napoleon, off the cost of Siberia. Mr. Vincent is now second mate on the whaling bark Abram Barker. One afternoon Capt. Gifford, of the bark Abram Barker, oame on board and represented that his engineer, a Russian, had made two or three attempts to dis- able the engine, upon which the safety of the ship depended, that he had the man in irons, and requested Capt. Healy to take him oft' his hands, as a dan- gerous character. The accused man himself joined in the request, and was re- ceived on board. This is another instance of the many sided and anomalous character of the officers of a revenue vessel in these waters beyond the reach of courts and law. This is another instance where the commanding officer of the revenue service should have power to investigate, arrest, and commit criminals to the United States district court for trial. As it is, a man who endeavored to wreck a ship, and endangered many lives, goes free. In 1882 Lieut. Ray's party dug a well to the depth of 37.5 feet for observing the temperature of the earth. The entire distance was made through frozen sand and gravel. At the bottom of the shaft the temperature remained, win- ter and summer, uniformly at 12° F. At the depth of 20 feet a tunnel was run 10 feet and then a room 10 by 12 feet size excavated for a cellar. In this room the temperature never rises above 22^ F. Birds and meat, placed in this room, freeze solid, and remain so until taken to the kitchen and thawed out for cook- ing. While at the station I descended into this unique storage house. The carcasses of several reindeer and dozens of eider ducks were taken from it, and presented to the ship, making a very welcome addition to our table fare. In the spring of 1883, 500 ducks were stored there at one time. At Ootkeavie the captain, at the request of the father, received on board a half-breed Eskimo boy, about 5 yeai*s of age, who is to be forwarded to the industrial training school at Sitka, for an education. On Saturday, August 9, the inspection of the refuge station being completed, the storehouse finished, and arrangements for the school perfected, preparations were made to return southward. At 4:10 p. m. the anchor wasweighed and the vessel steamed north a few miles to procure the last letters of the whaling fleet. The Stars and Stripes were hoisted to the top of the mainmast as a signal that we were about sailing. Soon after anchoring in the midst of the fleet the boats l>egan arriving, bringing oft" packagesof letters. At 9:15 p. m. the flag was low- ered, the anchor weighed, and the Bear steamed slowly away en route to civili- zation. As we passed by the ships, one after another dipped their flags and bade us an Arctic farewell, with many wishes for a safe voyage. Great masses of heavy black clouds lay along the whole northern horizon, like a curtain to hide the unknown regions beyond. To the east of us lay the low land spit that marks the northern limit of the continent, the native village of underground huts, and the white canvas and skin covered tents of the visiting natives from the interior. To the west of us the sun was preparing, at 10 o'clock p. m., for a most gorgeous sunset ; and south of us, as if symbolical of the lands of light, privilege, and comfort, to which we were to return, there was not a cloud to be seen in the beautiful sky. At 10 o'clock p. m. we passed the school and refuge station, and soon they faded from sight and were left far behind us, in their Arctic solitude, until the Bear again visits them a twelvemonth hence. On the 11th of August the captain anchored off Cape Sabine to water ship. In this vicinity are extensive and valuable coal banks. On the beach were several deserters from the whaling ships, who begged hard to be received on board and taken out of the country. One of their number had been drowned. Every year men desort from the whalers ; some of these die from exposure, othei's are picked up by the Bear, as in the present case, and a few remain in the country, descending at once to the level of the natives, demoralizing and doing them much more harm than a missionary can do good. On the 12th, in rounding Cape Lisburne in a gale, the jib boom and sails were carried away, and the ship ran back and anchored in the lea of the cape. The country in the vicinity of the cape has been called the flower garden of the Arctic, on account of the number and variety of beautiful wild flowers. On the 13th, although the storm had not fully subsided, the Bear was got under way, and that afternoon anchored by the hull of the wrecked Thomas Pope, abreast of the schoolhouse at Point Hope. 1 went ashore, but found the schoolhouse locked up, and Dr. Driggs, the teacher, absent. 1284 EDUCATION REPOETy 1889-90. On the morning of August 15, we bade good-by to Point Hope, and the fol- lowing morning, at 8:4:0 o'clock, dropped anchor off Cape Blossom, Kotzebue Sound. The day being pleasant I accompanied an officer to the gi-eat interna- tional fair of the Arctic, some 12 miles distant from our anchorage. There were about 1,500 natives assembled from many and widely separated sections of the country— from Alaska and Siberia. Many were living in tents, but fully half had constructed shelters by turning their umiaks or boats upside down. As I passed their shelters, my attention was again and again called to the sick. To he sick beyond the reach of a physician, with poor care and poorer accommoda- tions, and without knowledge of even the commoner remedies, is distress itself. As I see these people, so kindly disposed in life, with a smile of welcome to the stranger, and then see them languishing in their comfortless shelters, with but a few days or weeks removed from death, my heart goes out to them in inex- pressible longing, and I wish I could tell them the story of the Cross and intro- duce them to the hopss and joys of the gospel. Perhaps I may, at no distant day, secure for their children a mission and boarding school. The beach was covered with racks, upon which hung long rows of salmon, drying for winter food. At 3:35 p. m., on the 27th. having a fair wind, the cap- taiii weighed anchor and sailed for Cape Prince of Wales. On the afternoon of the 19th. we passed through Bering Strait, and bade good-by to the Arctic Ocean. The sea was so rough that the captain gave up all hope of being able to land at the cape. But during the afternoon the wind died out and the sea calmed down, so that he was able to run in shore and anchor abreast of the vil- lage at 6 o'clock p. m. We could not have landed through the surf the day before, the day after, or at any other time that day. God's pi'ovidence stayed the waves sufficiently long for us to visit the shore and transact our business. Had we passed by without stopping the teachers would have been unable to send down their orders for the annual supply of provisions, and next year they would have been unsupplied. As it was I had four hours with them. The wind increasing, at 10 o'clock we were again under way. On the 20th we steamed by King and Sledge islands (the sea being too rough to land), and at noon on the 21st dropped anchor off St. Michael, Norton Sound. Soon after we had a call from Mr. Henry Newmann, agent of the Alaska Commercial Comi)any, and Rev. William H. Judge, a Jesuit priest, who has lately come to the country to engage in the school work of the Roman Catholic Church on the Yukon River. St. Michael is located on the first good site for a trading post north of the delta of the Yukon River, and is the headquarters of the trade of the Yukon valley. To this point the furs collected at the trading posts in the interior, some of them 2,000 miles distant, are brought for reshipment to San Francisco. About half a mile fvom the trading jDost is a small native village. The trading post was established by the Russians in 1835, and is now occupied by the Alaska Commercial Company. A blockhouse and some of the original buildings are still standing. Through the courtesy of Mr. Henry Newmann, two small Rus- sian cannon, one of which was originally used in the defense of the place and the other in protecting the boating expeditions up the I'iver. were secured for the (collection of the Alaska Society of Natural History. At St. Michael 1 received a good account of the schools, nine of which receive their supplies and mails at this point. It is said of one of the missionaries, who is some 2,000 miles, more or less, up the river, t-hat when he saw his freight bill of $125 per ton for transportation from St. Michael to his station, he added a petition in his praj'er that freight might be reduced. During the stay at St. Michael two interesting boys, Wil- liam and George Prederickson, from Anvik, on the Yukon River, were received on board to accompany me East. Their father, a trader, is sending them to New York iov an education. After a pleasant visit of two days, the Bear took her leparture for Nunivak island. On the following Sabbath night, and thi'ough all Monday, we were steaming around the island, that the captain might secure the census. Finding that the people were scattered, hunting and fishing, and be- ing warned by the few natives he met of dangerous rocks and reefs, and the waters being uncharted j^ on Monday evening the captain turned around and steamed for St. George Island, which we reached on the morning of August 27. Nearing the island, a schooner was seen crowding on all sail to get out of our way. As the captain had not yet received his instructions, which were await- ing his arrival at Unalaska, and had no authority to make any seizures, the schooner was allowed to proceed unmolested. She was one of the many pirati- cal vessels that are fitted out at Victoria, British Columbia, and San Francisco, to hunt seals in Beijing Sea contrary to law. In 1886 there wej*e 21 such ves- sels from Victoria alone, and the catch was 35,556 skins. In 1887 there were EDUCATION IN Af.ASKA. 1285 20 v(\ssels from Victoria, 8 of which were seized ; tlie catch was 27,624 skins. In 1888 there were U» British vessels, with a total catch of nearly 30,000 skins. In 188i), 2:5 British vessels, and this year 22 British and 12 American vessels en- gaged ill, seal ])iracy. Their methods of operation are so wasteful that theniim- ber of skins taken does not begin to represent the number of seals killed. They necessarily hunt out to sea, where they largely kill the females heavy with their young. A large percentage of the seals shot sink before they can be secured, so that many authorities state that the 20,000 to 30,000 secured rei)resentfrom 150,- 000 to 200,000 seals destroyed. This wasteful method is rapidly annihilating the fur seal, so that if our granddaughters are to have seal -skin sacques the Govern- ment will need to take more stringent measures for the protection of the seal. The indiscriminate slaughter of the seal while passing to their breeding grounds has caused such a scarcity on the seal islands, that while the Government allows 100,000 males to be taken annually, this year the vessels have been able to se- cure but 21,000 skins. The piratical vessels fitted out at Victoria, British Columbia, to hunt seal have caused the international complications known as the " Bering Sea ditifi- culty," which are now the subject of negotiations between the State Depart- ment and Great Britain. WHALING INDUSTRY. - As early as the year 1841 fifty whaling vessels had found their way from New Bedford and Boston to Bering Sea. From 1842 and onward for a number of 3^ears annual complaints were made to the Russian Government by the Russian- American Fur Company of the encroachments of the Yankee whalers. In 1852 the whaling fleet had increased to 278 vessels, and the value of the catch to $14,000,000. This was probably the most profitable year of the whaling industry in Alaska. Since then it has, in the main, decreased, until in 1862 the value of the catch was less than $800,000. This increased again in 1867 to $3,200,000. In 1880 the first steamer was added to the whaling fleet, being sent out from San Francisco. Last year there were 26 vessels from San Francisco and 23 from New New Bedford engaged in the trade. They captured 151 whales, which yielded 213,070 pounds of whale bone and 12,243 barrels of oil. This season there are 10 steamers and 38 sailing vessels employed in these northern waters with a vex'y light catch up to midsummer. The whaling vessels are manned upon the co- operative plan ; the men instead of being paid regular wages receive a percent- age of the profits. The captain on the sailing vessels receives a twelfth, the first mate a nineteenth, the second mate and boat headers each a twenty-fifth, the third mate a thirtieth, thefoui'th mate, carpenter, cooper, and steward each a fiftieth, and the sailors each a one hundred and seventy-fifth. On steamers the rates are a little lower. A captain's wages range from nothing to $7,000 or $8,000, according to the number of whales taken. If the shijj gets six whales during a cruise the captain will have about $1,400 and a sailor $100. The sailors usually receive an advance of $60, and during the cruise are allowed to draw cloth- ing, tobacco, etc.,- from the ship's supplies (called the "slop chest") to the amount of $60 to $80. Consequently if there are no profits to divide the sailor is sure of about $140. The captains and higher officers are usually men of more than ordi- nary character and intelligence — typical American seamen of the best kind. The common sailors on a whaler are made up largely of Portuguese, Italians, South Sea Islanders, and others of an inferior grade, some of them being, em- phatically, hard cases. A few years ago whales wore plentiful in the North Pacific, Bering, and Ok- hotsk Seas. Then they were followed through Bering Straits a little way into the Arctic. Then farther and farther the whales have been driven into the inaccessible regions of the North, until now the whaling fleet annually rounds the most northern extremity of the American continent, and this year, for the first time, a few of them will winter in the Arctic, at the mouth of the Makenzie River. To escape this deadly pursuit the whales try to hide in the ice, and after them the whalers boldly force their way. The business is so dangerous that dur- ing the last 20 years more than 100 vessels have been lost. The value of the whale fisheries consists not so much in the oil taken, as in the whale-bone, which is taken from his mouth; this is worth between $4.50 and $5 per pound. The product of a fair sized, bowhead whale, at Dresent prices, is worth about $8,000. A good sized whale weighs about 150 tons", and contains about 2,000 pounds of whalebone after it is cleaned. His tongue is 15 feet long, from 6 to 8 feet in thick- ness, and contains 12 barrels of oil. His open mouth is from 15 to 20 feet across ; 1286 EDUCATION REPORT, 1889-90. his tail from 15 to 18 feet across. The blubbei- foriiis a coat around liim from 10 to 22 inches thick. It is 4 feet from the outside of the body to his heart, and the heart is 216 cvibic feet in size, while the brains will fill a barrel. While lying at anchor at St. George, the United States Revenua Marine steamer Bush, Capt. Coulson commanding, dropped anclior near us, and we re- ceived two and one-half months later news from the outside world. With visit- ing on shipboard and on land, the day slipped by very rapidly and pleasantly, and the following morning we were under way for Unalaska, reaching there on the 29th of August. At Unlaska I received letters from Eastern friends, the latest being dated June 2. THE ESKIMOS OF ALASKA. During June, July, and August, I cruised 5,000 miles along the coasts of Asia and America, from the Aleutian Islands to Point Barrow, the northern limit of the continent, and back to Unalaska. I visited all the principal settlements of the coast, and saw much of the native people. These people all belong to the Innuit or Eskimo family. They occupy not only the Arctic and Bering Sea coasts, but also that of the mainland coast of the North Pacific, as far east as mount St. Elias, and number in all aboutl7.000to 20,000. In the extreme north, at Point Barrow, and along the coast of Bering Sea, they are of medium size. At Point Barrow the average height of the males is 5 feet 3 inches, and average weight 153 pounds ; of the women, 4 feet 11 inches, and weight 135. On the Nushagak River the average weight of the men is from 150 to 167 pounds. From Cape Prince of Wales to Icy Cape, and on the great inland rivers emptying into the Arctic Ocean, they are a large race, many of them being 6 feet and over in height. They are lighter in color and fairer than the North American Indian, have black and brown eyes, black hair (some with a tinge of brown), high cheek bones, fleshy faces, small hands and feet, and good teeth. The men have thin beards. Along the Arctic coast the men cut their hair closely on the crown of the head, giving them the appearance of monks; this is done so that when crawl- ing up to the deer, the latter will not be frightened away by the flutter of the hair in the wind. Some of the young are fairly good looking, but, through ex- posure and hardship, become old at 30 years of age. They are naturally intelli- gent, ingenious in extricating themselves from difficulties, fertile in resources, and quick to adopt American ways and methods when they are an improvement on their own. Physically they are very strong, with great powers of endurance. When on a journey, if food is scarce, they will travel 30 to 40 miles without breaking their fast. Lieut. Cantwell, in his explorations of the Kowah River, makes record that upon one occasion when he wanted a heavy stone for an an- chor, a woman went out, and, alone, loaded into her birch bark canoe, and brought him a stone that would weigh 800 pounds. It took two strong men to lift it out of the canoe. Another explorer speaks of a woman carrying off on her shoulder a box of lead weighing 280 povmds. This summer, in erecting the school buildings in the Arctic, there being no drays or horses in that country, all the timber, lumber, hardware, etc., had to be carried from the beach to the site of the house on the shoulders of the people. The women carried the same loads as the men. They are, as a rule, industrious; men, women, and children doing their individual part toward the family support. The hard struggle for a bare existence in the sterile region where they live compels it. In a general way they are honest. Property intrusted to them by the whites is kept secure. Property stowed away in a cache or tent needs no lock or watchman — it is safe. Small articles left ly- ing around uncared for are soon picked up and carried off. Perhaps they look upon them as if they had been thrown away. A white man can leave with one of them who is an entire stranger to him $100 or $200 worth of goods, saying, " Buy me some furs and I will be back here next year." The following season the na- tive, with the furs, is in waiting for the expected arrival. This is done evei'y sea- son. I have the account-book of one of these native traders in which he has re- corded every skin purchased, and how much of each article paid for it. As the native can neither read, write, nor speak English, and his own language is an unwritten one, of course the accounts are kept by symbols and signs. They are shrewd traders. No matter how much is offered for an article, they ask for more. If they set the price themselves, and the purchaser accedes to it, they frequently attempt to raise it. They are exceedingly dirty and filthy in their persons and clothing. But perhaps this is somewhat excusable in a country where, in win- ter, water is scarce and soap scarcer. I remember once hearing a very successful missionary, who had spent many years north of the Arctic Circle, say that he EDUCATION JN ALASKA. 1287 ti'ied to make it a rule, when tcaveling with a dog sled, to wash his face at least once a week, but that he had not always been able to do it. The Alaska Eskimo is a good-natured, docile, and accommodating race. Wherever I met them, and under whatever circumstances, they liad a smile of welcome, and in many ways showed a friendly spirit. They have also manifested an unexpected interest in the establishment of schools among them, which promises well for the future. ORNAMENTATION . Among' the Thlinket people of southeastern Alaska thelabretis worn by the women only. Among the Eskimo of northwestern Alaska, on the contrary, it is worn by the men alone. The use of it is almost universal. During boyhood a hole is cut through the lower lip below each corner of the mouth and -an ivory plug inserted until the wound heals. After healing, the hole is stretched from time to time until it reaches about half an inch in diam- eter. Into this they insert the labret. These labrets ai^e made of stone, jade, coal, ivory, bone, and glass. They are shaped like a silk hat in miniature. The labret is three-fourths of an inch in diameter, 1 inch in diameter at the rim, and 1 inch long. The rim is kept in- side of the mouth and holds the labret in place. Many wear this form of labret on the one side of the mouth, and on the other a much larger one, resembling a large sleeve-button, II inches in diameter on the outside, li inches on the inside rim, and one-half inch neck. Formerly they wore a large labret in the center of the lower lip. I secured a beautiful one of polished jade that has an outside surface 2i inches by I inch. The girls have their ears and sometimes their noses pierced, wearing pendant from them copper, ivory, and bone ornaments, also strings of beads. Sometimes these beads extend from one ear to the other, either under the chin or back of the head. Both sexes tatoo, more or less elaborately, their faces, hands, and arms. Both sexes wear bracelets, amulets, and sometimes fancy belts. DRESS. They make waterproof boots of seal skin, with walrus or sea-lion hide soles. For cold weather the boots are made of seal or reindeer skin, tanned with the hair on, and walrus-hide soles. The foot portion is made many times larger than the foot, in order to give I'oom for a padd ing of grass. These boots are so much warmer and more comfort- able than the ordinary leather ones that they are almost universally used by whalers and others who have occasion to visit Arctic regions. A fur shirt and a pair of fur pants complete the toilet. The shirt is called a parka, and fre- quently has a hood attached, which can be pulled over the head in a storm. Others have a fur hood which, when not on the head, hangs around the neck. Ordinarily in summer the head is uncovered. In winter two suits are worn, the inner one with the fur next to the body, and the outer one with the fur to the weather. The difference between male and female attire is in the shape and ornamenta- tion of the parka. Among some of the tribes the pants and boots of the women are in one garment. Thei'e is also a fullness in the back of the woman's parka to make room for the carrying of the baby inside between the shoulders of the mother. These clothes are made largely of the skins of the reindeer, squirrels, and birds. Prom the intestines of the seal and walrus and also from salmon skins ai"e made the famous kamleika, a waterproof garment, which is worn over the others in wet weather. The kamleika is lighter in weight and a better waterpi-oof garment than the rubber garments of commerce. The native dress, when well made, new and clean, is both becoming and ar- tistic. FOOD. They live principally upon the fish, seal, walrus, whale, reindeer, and wild birds of their country. Latterly they are learning the use of flour, which they procure from the Government revenue vessels or barter from the whalei's. They have but few household utensels. A few have secured iron kettles. Many still use grass- woven baskets and bowls of wood and stone. Occasionally is found a jar of burnt clav. In these native dishes water was boiled by drop- ping in hot stones. r288 EDUCATION RltPOET, 1889-90. Among the more northern tribes much of the food is eaten raw, and nothing is thrown away, no matter how rotten or offensive it has become. Some of their choicest delicacies would be particularly disgusting tons. Hav- ing, at one of the bird rookeries in the Arctic, gathered a number of eggs, it was found that many of them contained chickens. When about to throw them overboard, the native interpreter remonstrated, saying : " No I me eat them. Good ! " All classes have a great craving for tobacco and liquor. Even nursing babes are seen with a quid of tobacco in their mouths. During the summer large quantities of fish are dried, and the oil df the seal, walrus, and whale put up for winter use. The oil is kept in bags made of the skin of the seal, similar to the water-skins of Oriental lands. The oil is kept sweet by the bags being buried in the frozen earth until wanted for use. DWELLINGS. The coast Eskimo have underground permanent houses in villages for winter, and tents that are frequently shifted for summer. The Eskimo of the interior, being largely nomads, live in tents much of the time. The tents are covered with reindeer skins, walrus hides, or cotton can- vas. In making a winter house, a cellar from 20 to 25 feet square is dug, from ."! to 5 feet deep. At the corners and along the sides of the excavation are set posts of driftword or whalebone. On the outside of these, poles of driftwood are laid up one upon another to the top. Other timbers are placed across the top, •foi'ming the roof or ceiling. Against the outside and upon the roof, dirt and sod are piled until the whole has the appearance of a large mound. In the cen- ter of the dome is an opening about 18 inches across. Across this is stretched the transparent bladder of the seal or walrus. This opening furnishes light to the room below. A narrow platform extends along one or more sides of the room, \ipon which are stowed the belongings of the family and the reindeer-skin bedding. The platform is also the sleeping-place of the family. Lai'ge, shallow dishes of earthenware, bone, or stone, filled with seal oil, are the combined stove and lamp of the family. Some lighted moss makes a dull line of flame along the edge of the dish. Frequently a piece of blubber is sus- pended over the flame, the dripping of which keeps the lamp replenished. Many of the houses were so warm that we found our usual outdoor clothing burdensome. At one side of some rooms, and in the floor near the center of the room in others, is a small opening about 20 inches square. This is the doorway, and leads to a hall or outside room. If the opening is in the side of the room, a rein- deer skin curtain hangs over it. This outer place is sometimes a hall 12 to 15 feet long and 2 feet wide and high, leading to a well or shaft. This shaft is 6 or 7 feet deej), and leads up a rude ladder into the open air. In other cases it is a large room 12 or 15 feet square, containing, on either side of the passageway through the center, a place to store the winter supplies of oil, fish, and flour. The exit from the storeroom is similar to that from the hall, up a ladder and through a small hole. When a storm is raging outside this hole is covered with a board or flat stone or large, flat whalebone. All villages of importance contain a public room or town hall. This is built in the same manner as the private dwellings, only much larger. Some of these are 60 feet square, 20 feet high, and contain three tiers or platforms. This build- ing is called the kashima or kashga. In them are held the public festivals and dances. They are also the common workshop in which the men make their snowshoes, dog sleds, spears and other implements. The villages, from the deck of a coasting vessel, have the appearance of so many hillocks or dunes along the beach. IMPLEMENTS. The Eskimo of Arctic Alaska ave still in the stone age. The manufacture of arrows and spear heads from flint is a living industry. Stone lamps, stone ham- mers and chisels, and to some extent stone knives, are still in ordinary use among them. Fish lines and nets and bird snares are still made of whalebone, sinew, or rawhide. Arrows, spears, nets, and traps are used in hunting, although im- proved breach-loading arms are being introduced among them, and will soon supersede, for the larger game, their own more primitive weapons. For transportation on land they have the snowshoe, dog team, and sled ; and on the water the kiak and umiak. EDUCATION IN ALASKA. 1289 The kiak is a long-, narrow, light, g-raceful, skin-covered canoe, with one, two. or throe liole.s, according td the number of people to be carried. It is the uni- versal boat of the Eskimo, and is found from Greenland around the whole north- ci-n coast of America, wherever that people are found. l"'he umiak is a long, skin-covered boat. This is the family boat or carryall. I'liose in usc^ around Bering Straits are about 24 feet long and 5 feet wide. They will safely carry 15 persons and 500 pounds of freight, coasting in the sea. Those n K'otzebue Sound, in the Arctic Ocean, are 35 feet long, 6 feet wide, with a Oapaoity of ."5,000 pounds of freight, and a crew of (5. There are exceptionally clarge ones that will carry from 50 to 80 people. Both the kiaks and umiaks arc made of walrus, sea lion, or white whale hides stretched over light frames of spruce wood. MARRIAGE. There seems to be no special ceremony among them connected with marriage. If the parties are young people, it is lai'gely arranged by the parents. Among some of the tribes the husband joins his wife's family and is expected to hunt and fish for them. If he refuses to ' give his father-in-law the furs he takes he is driven out of the house and some one else more active or obedient is installed as husband of the girl. Sometimes a young woman has tenor twelve husbands before she fairly settles down. Under this condition of things it is not strange that the women become indifferent and often untrue to their husbands. Love and mutual afiection has so little to do with the relation that upon occa- sion husbands and wives are intei'changed. For instance, in one of the northern villages dwelt a family of expert fishers and another that was successful at hunting the reindeer. One year the fisher- man thought he would like to hvmt reindeer. Finding that his neighbor would like to try fishing, they exchanged wives for the summer. The woman who was a good hunter went off v/ith the fisherman and vice versa. Upon reaching home in the fall, they returned to their i*espeetive husbands. Again a certain man wished to make a long journey into the interior. His wife being sick and unable to endure the hardships of the fip; he arranged with a friend, who had a strong, healthy wife, for an exchange until he should re- turn. This was done with the consent of all parties. Wives are frequency beaten by their husbands, and sometimes, to escape abusf!, commit suicide. lii the winter of 1889 a woman at Point Hope who had been beaten and stabbed by her jealous husband one night during a raging blizzard harnessed the dogs to the sled, then fastening one end of a rope to the sled and the other as a noose around her neck, she started up the team and was choked and dragged to death. Oc- casionally a wife resists, ai^d, if i^hysically the stronger, thrashes tbe husband. Polygamy prevails to a limited extent. Frequently the second wife is looked on and treated as a servant in the family. Among some of the tribes the custom prevails of the sons having the same number of wives as the father, without reference to their ability to maintain them. No more, no less, than a species of hereditary polygamy. Among the Eskimo, the same as among all uncivilized people, woman's is a hard lot. One of the missionary ladies writes: "My heartaches for the girls of our pai't of Alaska. They are made perfect prostitutes by their parents from the time they are 9 Or 10 j'ears old until that parent dies. And yet, notwith- standing all their disadvantages, they have a voice in both family and village aft'airs. The husband makes no important bargain, or plans a trip, without con- sulting and deferring to his wife." The customs pertaining to childbirth are barbarous, and it would not be strange if both mother and child should perish. Large families of children are the ex- ception; few have above four. The drudgery of women is such that they often destroy their unborn and sometimes born offspring, particularly if the child is a girl. A missionary gives the following incident : "Some one tied a helpless little child of about two years down to the water's edge at low tide. Its cries attracted the attention of a passer-by, who found the water already nearly up to his back. The man took it to his home and cared for it. It was recognized as a child that had been left in the care of an old woman: the child was sickly, and doubtless was too much of a care for her. The only surprise expressed by the people was that any one should want to drown or kill a boy." If a family is very poor they sometimes give away to childless neighbors all their children but one. Thus, during childhood, a boy may pass from one to another to be adopted by several families in turn. Children are also sold by tlieir parents, the usual market price of a child being a sealskin bag of oil or an 1290 EDUCATION jfePOKT, 1889-90. old suit of clothes. During infancy children are carried under the parka, astride of the mother's back, being held in position by a strap under the child's thigha and around the mother's body across the chest. When out from under the parka, they are carried seated on the back of the mother's neck and shoulders, with the child's legs hanging down in front on both sides of the neck. The children are given the names of various animals, birds, fish, sections of country, winds, tides, heavenly bodies, etc. Sometimes they have as many as six names. Chil- dren are rarely punished — generally have their own way, and are usually treated with gi-eat kindness by their own or foster parents. Prominent events in the life of a boy, such as having his hair cut for the first time, like a hunter — his first trip to sea in a kiak — his first use of snowshoes, etc. — are celebrated by a feast if the family are not too poor. FESTIVALS. Different tribes have different festivals. Among others there is usually one for every animal hunted by the people. A whale dance, seal, walrus and rein- deer dances, etc. There are festivities for the spirits of wives, land and sea, dead friends, sleds, boats, etc. Some of these are held during the long winter darkness, and others, with dancing, wrestling, and foot-racing, at the great an- nual gathering in summer. SUPERSTITIONS. Like all other ignorant people, they are firm believers in witchcraft and spirits generally. They also believe in the transmigration of souls. That spirits enter into animals and inanimate nature, into rocks, winds, and tides. That they are good or bad according as the business, the community, or the individual is suc- cessful or unsuccessful, and that these conditions can be changed by sorcery. By suitable incantations they firmly balieve that they can control the wind and the elements, that they can reward friends and punish enemies. The foundation of their whole religious system is this belief in spirits and the appeasing of evil spirits. This demon or evil spirit worship colors their whole life and all its pursuits. Every particular animal hunted, every phenomenon of nature, every event of life, requires a religious observance of its own. It is a heavy and bui'densome work that darkens their life — it leads to many deeds of unnatural cruelty. At the mouth of the Kuskokwine River an old woman was accused of having caused the death of several children — of being a witch. This was so firmly believed that her own husband pounded her to death, cut up her body into small pieces, severing joint from joint, and then consuming it with oil in a fire. SHAMANS. The head and front of this great evil is the Shaman, or sorcerer. He is be- lieved to be the only one that can control the evil spirits and protect the people from them. Mr. John W. Kelly, who has written recently an interesting mono- gram on the Eskimo, represents the Shamans as divided into seven degrees, being graded according to their knowledge of spiritualism, ventriloquism, feats of legerdemain and general cunning. It is claimed that those of the seventh degree are immortal, and can neither be killed nor wounded ; that those of the sixth degree can be wounded, but not killed. The ordinary Shaman belongs to the lower degrees and only claims to go into trances, in which state his spirit leaves the body and roams abroad procuring the information his patrons are in search of. As a rule the Shamans are unscrupulous frauds, thieves, and murderers, and should be put down by the strong hand of the General Government. SICKNESS. The prevailing diseases among the Eskimo are scrofula, diphtheria, pneu- monia, and consumption, and the death rate is large. They have a superstitious fear with reference to a death in the house, so that when the sick are thought to be nearing death they are carried out of the home and placed in an outhouse. If they do not die as soon as they expect, they ask to be killed, which is usually done by the Shaman stabbing them in the temple or breast. The aged and help- '■< Point Barrow Natives. (Page 1290.) (From the U. S. Revenue Marine.) EDUCATION IN ALASKA. 1291 less are also sometimes killed at their own request. A jn-ominent man in a tribe not long since tried to hire men to kill his aunt, who was insane and dejiendent on him. Failing to have her killed, he deliberately froze her to death. The cr\ielty of heathenism is almost beyond belief. The dead are wrapped up in reindeer or seal skins and drawn on a sled back of the village, where they are placed upon elevated scaffolds, out of the reach of animals, or upon the ground and covered over with driftwood, or, as among some of the tribes, left upon the ground, to be soon torn in pieces and devoured by the dogs of the village. GOVERNMENT. The Eskimos have no tribal organization and are without chiefs. The most successful trader among them becomes the wealthiest man and is called Umailik. By virtue of the influence that riches exert he is considered the leader in busi- ness transactions. In special exigencies, affecting a whole village, the old men assemble and determine upon a plan of action. The Shamans also have great influence among the people. It often happens that the Umailik and Shaman are the same person. POOD SUPPLY. From time immemorial they have lived upon the whale, the walrus, and the seal of their coasts, the fish and aquatic birds of their rivers, and the caribou or wild reindeer of their vast inland plains. The supply of these in years past was abundant and furnished ample food for all the people. But fifty years ago American whalers, having largely exhausted the whale in other waters, found their way into the North Pacific Ocean. Then commenced for that section the slaughter and destruction of whales that went steadily forward at the rate of hundreds and thousands annually, until they were destroyed and driven out of the Pacific Ocean. They were then fol- lowed into Bering Sea, and the slaughter went on. The whales took refuge among the ice fields of the Arctic Ocean, and thither the whalers followed. In this relentless hunt the remnant have been driven still farther into the inacces- sible regions around the north pole, and are n© longer within reach of the natives. As the great herds of buffalo that once roamed the western prairies have been exterminated for their pelts, so the whales have been sacrificed for the fat that encased their bodies and the bone that hung in their mouths. With the destruction of the whale one large source of food supply for the natives has been cut off. Another large supply was derived from the walrus, which once swarmed in great numbers in those northern seas. But commerce wanted more ivory, and the whalers turned their attention to the walrus, destroying thousands an- nually for the sake of their tusks. Where a few years ago they were so numer- ous that their bellowings were heard above the roar of the waves and grinding and crashing of the ice fields, this year I cruised for weeks without seeing or hearing one. The walrus as a source of food supply is already practically ex- tinct. The seal and sea lion, once so common in Bering Sea, are now becoming so scarce that it is with difficulty that the natives procure a sufficient number of skins to cover their boats, and their flesh, on account of its rarity, has become a luxury. In the past the natives, with tireless industry, caught and cured for use in their long winters great quantities of fish, but American canneries have already come to one of their streams (Nushagak) and will soon be found on all of them, both carrying the food out of the country and by their wasteful methods destroy- ing the future supply. Five million cans of salmon annually shipped away from Alaska — and the business still in its infancy — means starvation to the native races in the near futui'e. With the advent of improved breech-loading firearms the wild reindeer are both being killed off and frightened away to the remote and more inaccessible regions of the interior and another source of food supply is diminishing. _ Thus the support of the people is largely gone and the process of slow starva- tion and extermination has commenced along the whole Arctic coast of Alaska. Villages that once numbered thousands have been reduced to hundreds : of some tribes but two or three families remain. At Point Barrow, in 1828, Capt. Beechey's expedition found Nuwuk a village of 1,000 people ; in 1863 there were 15953 4 1292 EDUCATION REPOET, 1889-90. 309 ; now there are not over 100. In 1826 Capt. Beechey speaks of finding a large population at Cape Franklin : to-day it is without an inhabitant. He also mentions a large village of 1,000 to2, 000 people on Schismareff Inlet ; it has now but three houses. According to Mr. John W. Kelly, who has written a monograph upon the xVrctic Eskimo of Alaska. Point Hope, at the commencement of the century, had a population of 2,000; now it has about 350. Mr. Kelly further says: '"The Kavea county is almost depopulated owing to the scarcity of game, which has been killed or driven away. * * * The coast tribes between Point Hope and Point Barrow have been cut down in popvdation so as to be almost obliterated. The Kookpovoros of Point Lay have only three huts left ; the Ootookas of Icy Cape one hut : the Koogmute has three settlements of from one to four families ; Sezaro has about 80 people.". Mr. Henry D. Woolfe, who has spent many years in the Arctic region, writes : "Along the seacoast from Wainright Inlet to Point Lay numerous remains of housestestify to the former number of the people. * "' * Prom Cape Seppings to Cape Krusenstern and inland to Nounatok River there still remain about 40 people, the remnant of a tribe called Key-wah-ling-nach-ah-mutes. They will in a few years entirely disappear as a distinctive tribe." I myself saw a number of abandoned villages and crumbling houses during the summer, and wherever I visited the people I heard the same tale of destitution. On the island of Attou. once famous for the number of its sea-otter skins, the catch for the past nine years has avei'aged but 3 sea-otter and 25 fox skins, an annual income of about $2 for each person. The Alaska Commercial Company this past summer sent $1,300 worth of provisions to keep them from starving. At Akutan the whole catch for the past summer was 19 sea otters. This repre- sents the entire support of 100 people for twelve months. At Unalaska both the agent of the Alaska Commei'cial Company and the teacher of the Government school testified that there would be great destitution among the people this winter because of the disappearance of the sea otter. At St. George Island the United States Treasury agent testified that there was not sufficient provisions on the island to last through the season, and asked that a Government vessel might be sent with a full supply. At Cape Pi-ince of Wales, Point Hope, and Point Barrow was the same account of short supply of food. At the latter place inti- mations were given that the natives in their distress would break into the Gov- ernment warehouse and help themselves to the supply that is in store for shi2> wrecked whalers. At Point Barrow, largely owing to the insufficient food supply, the death rate is reported to the birth rate as 15 to 1. It does not take long to figure out the end. They will die off more and more rapidly as the already insufficient food supply becomes less and less. INTRODUCTION OF REINDEER. In this crisis it is important that steps should be taken at once to afford relief. Relief can. of course, be afforded by Congress voting an appropriation to feed them, as it has done for so many of the North Americftn Indians. But I think that every one familiar with the feeding process among the Indians will devoutly wish that it may not be necessary to extend that system to the Eskimo of Alaska. It would cost hundreds of thousands of dollars annually, and, worse than that, de- grade, pauperize, and finally exterminate the people. There is a better, cheaper, more practical, and more humane way, and that is to introduce into northern Alaska the domesticated reindeer of Siberia, and train the Eskimo young men in their management, care, and propagation. This would in a few years create as permanent and secui'e a food supply for tlie Eskimo as cattle or sheep raising in Texas or New Mexico does for the peo- ple of those sections. It may be necessary to afford temporary I'elief for two or three years to the Eskimo, until the herds of domestic reindeer can be started, but after that the people will be self-supporting. x\s you well know, in the Arctic and sub- Arctic regions of Lapland and Siberia the domesticated reindeer isfood, clothing, house,furniture, implements, and trans- portation to the people. Its milk and flesh furnish food; its mari'ow and tongue are considered choice delicacies; its blood, mixed with the contents of its stom- ach, is made into a favorite dish called in Siberia "manyalla;" its intestines are cleaned, filled with tallow, and eaten as a sausage; its skin is made into clothes, bedding, tent covers, reindeer harness, ropes, cords, and fish lines; the hard skia of the forelegs makes an excellent covering for snowshoes. EDUCATION IN ALASKA. 1293 Its sinews are dried and pounded into a str()ii<>- and lasting thread; its bones are soaked in soal oil and bui-ned for fuel: its horns are made into various kinds of household implements, into weapons for hunting and war, and in the manu- facture of sleds. Indeed, I know of no other animal that in so many different ways can minister to the comfort and well-being' of man in the far northern regions of the earth as the reindeer. The reindeer form their riches; these their tents. Their robes, their beds, and all their homely wealth supply; Their wholesome fare and cheerful cups. Under favorable cii'cumstances a swift reindeer can traverse 150 miles in a day. A speed of 100 miles per day is easily made. As a beast of burden they can draw a load of 300 pounds. 'They yield a cupful of milk at a milking; this'sniall quantity, however, is so thick and rich that it needs to be diluted with nearly a quart of water to make it drinkable. It has a strong flavor like goat's milk, and is more nutritious and nourishing than cow's milk. The Laps manufacture from it butter and cheese. A dressed reindeer in Siberia weighs from 80 to 100 pounds. The reindeer feed upon the moss and other lichens that abound in the Arctic regions, and the farther north the larger and stronger the reindeer. Now. in Central and Ai'ctic Alaska are between :{00, 000 and 400,000 square miles (an ai*ea equal to the New England and Middle States combined, together with Ohio, Indiana, and Illinois) of moss-covered tundra and rolling plains of grass that are specially adapted by nature for the grazing of the reindeer and is prac- tically useless for any other purpose. If it is a sound public policy to bore artesian wells and build water-storage reservoirs, by which thousands of arid acres can be reclaimed from barrenness and made fruitful, it is equally a sound public policy to stock the plains of Alaska with herds of domesticated reindeer, and cause those vast, di-eary, desolate, frozen, and storm-swept regions to minister to the wealth, happiness, comfort, and well-being of man. What stock-raising has been and is on the vast plains of Texas, Coloi'ado, Wyoming, and Montana, reindeer-raising can be in north- ern Alaska. In the corresponding regions of Lapland, in Arctic Norway, and In Sweden and Russia are 27,000 people supporting themselves (besides paying a tax to the Government of $400,000, or $1 per head for their reindeer) and i)ro- curing their food and clothing largely from their 400,000 domesticated reindeer. Also in the corresponding regions of Siberia, with similar climate, soil, and en- vironment (and only 40 miles distant at the straits), are thousands of Chukchees, Koraks, and other tribes fed and clothed by their tens of thousands of domesti- cated reindeer. During the summer I visited four settlements of natives on the Siberian coast, the two extremes being 700 miles apart, and saw much of the people, both of the Koraks and Chukchees. I found them a good-sized, robust, fleshy, well-fed, pagan, half-civilized, nomad people, living largely on their herds of I'eindeer. Families own from 1,000 to 10,000 deer. These are divided into herds of from 1,000 to 1,500. One of these latter I visited on the beach near Cape Navarin. In Arctic Siberia the natives with their reindeer have plenty; in Arctic Alaska without the reindeer they are starving. Then instead of feeding and pauperizing them let us civilize, build up their manhood, and lift them into self-support by helping them to the reindeer. To stock Alaska with reindeer and make millions of acres of moss-covered tundra conducive to the wealth of the country, would be a great and worthy event under any circumstances. But just now it is specially important and urgent from the fact that the destruc- tion of the whale and walrus has brought large numbers of Eskimo face to face with starvation, and that something must be done promptly to save them. The introduction of the reindeer would ultimately atford them a steadj' and permanent food supply. INTRODUCTION' OF CHRISTIANITY. In the Tenth United States Census Report, on page 2, it is recorded: *' That no trace or shadow of Christianity and its teachings has found its way to these desolate regions; the dark night of Shamanism or Sorcery still hangs over the human mind. These people share with their Eastern kin a general belief in evil t 1294 EDUCATION REPORT, 1889-90. spirits and powers, against whom the Shaman alone can afford protection by sac- I'ifices and incantations. No philanthropic missionary has ever found his way to this Arctic coast, and unless some modern Hans Eg'ede makes his appearance among them in the near future there will be no soil left in which to plant the Christian seed." Such was the dark but true picture in 1880, but the dawn was near at hand. The needs of the Eskimos had long been upon my mind, and various plans for reaching them had been considered. In the spring of 1888, having an opportunity of visiting Bethlehem, Pa., I secured a conference with the late Edmund de fechweinitz, D. D., a bishop of the Moravian Church, and urged upon him the es- tablishment of a mission to the Eskimo of Alaska. A few days later the request was repeated in writing, which letter, on the 23d of August, 1883, was laid before the Moravian Society for Propagating the Gospel among the Heathen. The request was favorably considered, and Rev. A. Hartman and Mr. Wm. H. Wein- land were appointed a committee to visit Alaska and report on the advisability of commencing a mission. This tour of exploration was made in the summer of 1884, and is given in my annual report for 1885-'86. Upon their return they rec- ommended the establishment of a mission on the Kuskokwim River, near the native village of Mumtreklagamute, 75 miles above the mouth of the stream. In the spring of 1885 Rev. and Mrs. Wm. H. Weinland, Rev. and Mrs. John H. Kil- buck, and Mr. Hans Torgersen were sent to the Kuskokwim River as the first missionaries to the Eskimo of Alaska. The present mission force consists of Rev. and Mrs. John H. Kilbuck, Rev. and Mrs. Ernst L.Webber, and Miss Lydia Lebus. In the summer of 1886 the Moravians sent out the Rev. Prank E. Wolff, who located a station and erected a mission station at the mouth of the Nushagak River. He then returned to the States for the winter. The mission was for- mally opened in the summer of 1887 with the arrival of Rev. and Mrs. F. E. Wolff and Miss Mary Huber. To the original number have since been added Rev. J. H. Schoechert and Miss Emma Huber. Both of these schools have been assisted by the United States Bui'eau of Education. On the 1st of July, 1886, an agreement was entered into between the Commis- sioner of Education and the Missionary Society of the Protestant Episcopal Church for the establishment of a school in the great Yukon Valley. Owing to the im- possibility of getting the supplies into that inaccessible region the school was maintained for 1886-'87 at St. Michael, on the coast, by Rev. and Mrs. Octavius Parker. In the summer of 1887 Rev. John H. Chapman was added to the mission and the station was removed to Anvik. The present force of teachers consists of Rev. John W. Chapman and Mr. Marcus O. Cherry. In 1886-'87 the Roman Catholics entered the Yukon Valley, and have estab- lished missions and schools at Nulato, Kosoriffsky, and Cape Vancouver. In 1886 the Evangelical Mission Union of Sweden established a station among the Eskim.os at Unalaklik with Rev. Axel E. Karlson, missionary. He is now as- sisted by Mr. August Anderson, and it is proposed that next year the school will be assisted by the United States Bureau of Education. The new stations among the Arctic Eskimos at Point Barrow, Point Hope, and Cape Prince of Wales, have already been mentioned. During the summer of 1890 I established three schools and missions in Arctic Alaska. One at Point Barrow, with Mr. Leander M. Stevenson, of Versailles, Ohio, in charge. This is, next to Upernavik, Greenland, the northernmost mission in the world. Its establishment was made possible through the liberality of Mrs. Elliott F. Shep- ard. Mr. Stevenson, who volunteered to go to that distant point, oi'ganize the mission and erect the necessary buildings, will return in the summer of 1892 to his family. A permanent missionary for that place is desired. He should be a young married man, and both his wife and himself should be of sound constitu- tion and good bodily health. They should be of a cheerful disposition, " handy " with various kinds of tools and work, ready in resources, and possess good prac- tical common sense. A consecrated Christian physician accustomed to evangel- ical work would be more useful than an ordained minister without the medical training. Applicants can address me at the United States Bureau of Education, Washington, D. C. They will not be expected to leave home until the spring of 1892. The Point Barrow Mission is under the auspices of the Presbyterian Board of Home Missions. The second school in the Arctic is at Point Hope, and is under the supervision of the Protestant Episcopal Church. The teacher is Mr. John B. Driggs, M. D. The third is at Cape Prince of Wales, Bering Straits, with Messrs. H. R. Thorn- ton and W. T. Lopp, teachers. It is under the control of the American Mission- ary Association of the Congregational Church, KDUf'ATlON IX ALASKA. 125:);") In the harbor at Unalaska, in Septojnber, 1890, lay at anchor the revenue cut- ters Bear &nd Hush. The Jhar was soon io return to the noi-thward and cruise around the Seal Islands ; the Bush to arrest two men accused of murder, and convey them to the United States district court at Sitka. As the Bush was to call in at the principal villag-es en route, and would afford me an opportunity of inspect- ing: the schools at Unga, Kadiak, Afognak, and Southeastern Alaska, Capt. W. C. Coulson kindly invited me to take passage with him. Accordingly on the Cth of September, I removed my quarters from the JJear to the Bush, taking with me the boys William and George Fi-edericks, and M. Healy Wolff. We were to have sailed at 3 p. m., on the 7th, but a southeast gale pi'evailing out- side, the captain concluded to remain at anchor. It was nearly a week before the storm abated and we got started. Aftt;r getting outside of the harbor the fog shut down so thick that the ship ran into the harbor of Akatan. This is a small village of 87 souls, 'M of whom are children, and greatly in need of a school. They live in the barabaras, or native sod houses. The Alaska Com- mercial Company have a small store at the place. The people are exceedingly poor ; their whole catch for the past summer was 19 sea otters. This represents the moneyed support of the whole village for 12 months. In addition to the clothing and su])plies which the otter skins procure them at the store, the bay yields them fish, which is their principal food. The next day we started out, but found the fog so dense that the ship again returned to anchorage. The sec- ond attempt was more successful, and we passed from Bering Sea into the North Pacific Ocean. Turning to the eastward, we steamed past the volcano of Shis- haldin, its beautiful toj) covex'ed with snow and its smoking crater alike hid in the clouds. On Sabbath we were abreast of Belkofski, at one time the richest village in Alaska. With the decline of the sea-otter trade its ]ieople are much impoverished. The population is about 250. This is one of the villages where a good school should be established as soon as the annual appropriation will jus- tify it. Our stay at this place was just long enough for the surgeon to go ashore and visit the sick. That night we dropped anchor An Coal Harbor. Monday morning found us at Pirate Cove, a cod-fishing station of Lynd & Hough, of San Francisco. It was understood that a Mr. Clark, accused of murder, was there waiting to give himself up. Not finding him at that place we passed on to Sand Point, another fishing station, and from thence to Unga, where he was found. At Ung-a I made a thoi'ough inspection of the school property and school sup- plies . The school was not in session, but a number of the children were brought together and examined. A meeting of the parents was also called and a general conference had with regard to school matters. Monday evening, with the pris- oner and two witnesses on board, we sailed for Kadiak, which we reached early Wednesday morning. In company with Mr. Roscoo, the teacher, an inspection was made of the new schoolhouse, and many educational matters discussed and considered. During the forenoon, a pilot having been secured, the captain steamed over to Afognak, in order that I might visit that school also. The school being in session, an opportunity was afforded of seeing the good work done at that village by Mr. Duff', the teacher* A comfortable school building and teacher's residence had been erected during the summer. Returning 1x) Kadiak, the evening was spent with friends. At Kadiak a Creole accused of assault with intent to kill was taken on board, to be conveyed to Sitka for trial. His victim was taken along for medical treatment and as a witness. Mr. M. L. Washburn, superintendent of the interests of the Alaska Commer- cial Company, gave me for the collection of tb.e Alaska Society of Natural His- tory an ancient Eskimo stone lamp that had been dug up on one of the islands. The traditions of the people are that 400 years ago their fathers came from Ber- ing Sea and settled Kadiak Island, whichthey found uninhabited. The Eskimo settlements of the North Pacific coast extend from Nuchek Island on the east to Mitrofania Island on the west. On the trails between two settlements are frequently found at the highest point two heaps of stones, from 50 to 70 feet apart. These heaps are from 4 to 6 feet high, and were many years in building. Their purpose is not known. Every passer-by was expected to add a stone to the heap, but the custom of late years seems to have fallen into disuse. There is a very pleasant custom connected with the stone heaps and stone lamp. A couple engaged to be married select a stone suitable for the manufac- ture of a lamp. This stone, with a flint chisel, is deposited at the foot of one of the stone heaps. Parties carrying loads or traveling from one city or another naturally sit down to rest at the stone heap at the top of the hill. Spying the stone, the traveler says to himself, "My hands may as well work while my feet rest. As some one worked my lamp, I will work for some one else.*' And pick- ing up the flint, with a song, he chisels away at the stone. When he is rested, 1296 EDUCATION REPORT, 1889-90. he lays down the stone and chisel and goes on hig way. Tne next traveler re- peats the operation, and the next, and the next, until in about two years the lamp is done which will last hundreds of years. Thus the whole community shows its good will to the young" couple. In these lamps they burn seal oil, with a cotton wick. If the cotton can not be procured, then the wick is a bit of moss. In former days, as soon as one lamp was finished and removed, another stone was placed there, so that one was always in process of making. These lamps furnish both lig-ht and heat. Early Thursday morning, September 17, the captain weighed anchor and put out to sea. bound for Sitka. During the day the wind increased to a gale, and on Friday night the sea was so rough that the ship was hove to, and oil was strained over the bows into the sea to lessen the force of the waves. Nearly the entire trip of a week across to Sitka was in the face of a heavy equinoctial storm. It was so rough that several times the table could not be set in the captain's cabin, and we took our meals in our hands in the pilot house as best we could. Off Mount Edgecombe, the ship was again compelled to heave to. However, we finally reached the quiet harbor of Sitka on Thursday, September 25, and the rough part of our journey was over. The remainder of our journey was made in the smooth waters of the Alexandrian Archipelago. I remained two weeks at Sitka, attending to school matters. Then being joined there by the Hon. James Sheakley, superintendent of schools in the Sitka district, we made a tour of inspection through southeastern Alaska, visiting, either separately or together, every school in that district, except those at Met- lakahtla and Klawack. At Chilkat a location was selected and arrangements comijleted for the erec- tion of a cheap but substantial log schoolhouse. On November 11 I reached Washington, after an absence of seven months, having traveled 17,825 miles. The success of the long trip was greatly promoted by the many facilities that were extended by Capt. Michael A. Healy, of the steamer Bear, and Capt. W. C. Coulson, of the steamer Bush, with whom I sailed, also of the several officers of their command. NEW OFFICERS. In accordance with the provisions of the rules approved by the Secretary of the I*nterior April 9, 1S90, the following persons have been appointed to com- mence service on July 1, 1890 : The members of the school committees will continue in office until June 30 of the year set against their names. Assistant agent, William Hamilton ; superintendent for Sitka district, Hon. James Sheakley. LOCAL, SCHOOL COMMITTEES. Sitka.— Edward Be Groff, 1892 : N. K. Peckinpaugh, 1893 ; John C. Brady, 1894. Juneau— Karl Koehler, 1892; John G. Held, 1893; Eugene S. Willard, 1894. Douglas.— 'P. H. Fox, 1892; G. E. Shotter, 1893; S. R. Moon, 1894. Fort Wrangel.—'W\\\\&-m. G. Thomas, 1892 : William Millmore, 1893 ; Allan Mackay, 1894. Jac/csOTC.— James W. Young, 1892: W. Donald McLeod, 1893; G. Loomis Gould, 1894. MetlaTiolitla.—'Dz.wid J. Leask, 1892 : Dr. W. Bluett, 1893 ; William Duncan, 1894. Kadiak. — Nicolai Kashavaroff , 1892 ; Henry Bowen, 1893 : Charles Brown, 1894. Urjfira.— Nehemiah Guttridge, 1892; John Caton,1893; Edward Cashel, 1894. Unalaska. — N. S. Reesofl, 1892 ; Nat. B. Anthony, 1893 ; Rudolph Neumann, VISITORS. Of late years tourists have commenced to learn of the attractiveness of the trip from Puget Sound to southeastern Alaska, and increasing numbers from year to year ai'e availing themselves of it. This season over 5,000 round-trip tickets have been sold. As the steamer fai^e from Puget Sound up and return is $100, only the wealthier and better classes make the trip. It is a cause for regret that the tourist season occurs during the vacation of the schools. If the tourists could see the schools in actual operation it would greatly assist in creating a healthy public sentiment that would react in favor of larger appropriations by Congress. As it is, the industrial school at Sitka, which is in continuous operation, is the only one visited. This, however, shows what can be done, and is an object lesson that will not be forgotten by tourists. EDUCATION IN ALASKA. 1297 One of them, aftv^r describing her visit to the homes oi the natives and the sick- ening lilth and squalor which she witnessed in Alaska, writes : "And now, quito by accident, I had the most interesting experience of my whole trip, certainly one tliat has made an everlasting impression on my mind; au object lesson which often and oftiui will set me thinking, a subject whicli would require a volume to do it approximate justice. The joyous shouting of half a hundred boys, some of them dashing across the road in pursuit of a foot- ball : well-clothed, well-fed boys ; healthy, vigorous, intelligent boys ; Indians, half-breeds. Muscovites, and a few Americans. What did it mean? From whence had they so suddenly come '? From school. These were the beneficiaries of the Presbyterian Board of Home Missions, and the large building on the right of the road is the schoolhouse. "Of course I had r^ad about this mission. All the books on Alaska refer to it more or lesrs. Yet the knowledge of its existence had brought no special desire to visit the place. To me Sitka was the vestige of a departed empire; the home of a decaying race of aborigines; a depot for the sale of Russi-Indian relics and curios; a pretty little town timidly hiding away in among the mountains, and for that 1 had come to sea it and had been amply repaid. But the mission I had never thought of. Perhaps the book-writer had failed to attract me to it; perhaps my faith in missions generally was not very confirmed; perhaps I did not believe what I read about them. Be that as it may, hei'eafter no man, nor woman either, shall outdo me in words of praise and thanks for the glorious, godlike work which is being performed by the good people who are rescuing the lives, the bodies, and the souls of these poor creatures from the physical and moral deaths they are dying. I am not a Christian woman; my faith is that of a chosen peoxjle who were led out of Egyptian tyranny and darkness by the pillar of fire and the pillar of cloud ; but my whole nature is in accord with these Christian men and women, whose immolation and sacrifices to regenerate their fellow-creatures will surely meet with heavenly reward, no matter what their creed. I wish I had had more time at my disposal to spend with the teachers and the scholars, so that I might now give even a skeleton outline of their daily life. "There are about 100 boys and 50 girls in the institution, some of them being only 3 years of age and others as old as 22. The boys are instructed in carpen- try, shoemaking, and blacksmithing ; the girls are taught dressmaking and the use of the sewing machine. I went first into one of the class rooms, where I saw perhaps 20 dark-skinned Siwash Indian boys, whose Mongolian faces and almond- shaped eyes had assumed an expression of intelligence so different from the stujiid, blear-eyed appearance of the same age and race whom I had seen in the rancherie that it was difficult to realize that they could possibly be twigs of the same tree. Upstairs we found the dormitories, "like evei^ything else about the establishment, orderly, neat, clean, due regard being paid to the number al- lotted to each room and to the subject of heating and ventilation. In the sew- ing department were several girls operating skillfully upon the sewing machine, others cutting from the piece, and younger ones basting for the sewing girls. "It is said somewhere that it is only a single step from civilization to bar- barism. Perhaps so ; but I, and those ladies and gentlemen who accompanied me through the rancherie and the schools at Sitka, can vouch for the fact that it is only half a mile from savage, uncivilized ignorance, superstitution, filth, and immoi-ality to education, deportment, thrift, domestic felicity, and all human happiness." NEW BOOKS. The growtk of the public interest in Alaska is manifested by the number of books which are issuing from the press. Since the list given in my report for June 30, 1888, the following books have come under my observation : " Fifth Avenue to Alaska," by Edwards Pierrepont, B. A. Published by G. P. Putnam's Sons. New York. 1884. Maps and illustrations. 329 pages. Price, $1.75. "Letters from Alaska," by Horace Briggs, PH. D. Published by Mrs. Dora B. North. olParkPlace, Buffalo, N. Y., 1889. 87 pages. Paper cover. Price, $1. "Cruise of the Bush, 1889," by Isabel S. Shepard. Published by The Ban- croftCompany, San Francisco, 1889. Maps and illustrations. 257 pages. Price, $1.50. "Picturesque Alaska," by Abby Johnson Woodman. Introduction by Whit- tier. Published by Houghton, Mifllin & Co., Boston. Maps and illustrations. 212 pages. Price, $1.50. 1298 EDUCATION REPORT, 1889-90. "New Eldorado, "by Mr. M. Ballou. Published by Houghton. Mifflin & Co., Boston, 1889. Price, $1.50. " The Wonders of Alaska," by Alexander Badlam. Published by the Ban- croft Publishing Company, San Francisco, 1890. Maps and illustrations. 151 pages. Price, $1.50. "Pacific Coast Scenic Tour," by Henry T. Pinck. Maps and illustrations. Published by Charles Scribner'sSons, New York, 1890. 309 pages. "A Woman's Trip to Alaska," by Mrs. Septima M. Collis. Published by The Cassel Publishing Company, New York, 1890. Maps and illustrations. Heavy paper. 194 pages. Price, $2.50. "Arctic Alaska and Siberia," by Herbert L. Aldrich. Maps and illustrations. Published by Rand, McNally & Co., Chicago, 1889. 234 pages. Price, $1.50. "Thirteen Years of Travel and Exploration in Alaska," by W. H.Pierce. Published by J. H. Carruth, No. 1312 Ohio street, Lawrence, Kans., 1890. 224 pages, illustrated. Paper, 60 cents. Cloth, $1. "Prom Yellowstone Park to Alaska," by Francis C. Sessions, president of the- Ohio Historical and Archseological Society. Published by Welch, Fracker & Co., New York, 1890. 186 pages. Price $1.50. " Reconnoisance in Alaska, 1885," by Lieut. Henry T. Allen, U. S. A. Maps and illustrations. 172 pages. Government Printing Office, Washington, 1877. ■•Contributions to Natural History of Alaska," by L. M. Turner. 1866. 226 pages. Illustrated. Government Printing Oftlce. Washington, 1886. "Report on Natural History Collections made in Alaska, 1877-'81," by E. W. Nelson. Illustrated. 337 pages. Government Printing Office. Washington, 1887. " Fur Seal and other Fisheries of Alaska." Maps and illustrations. 324 pages. Government Printing Office. Washington, 18S9. "The Coast Indians of Southern Alaska," by Ensign Albert P. Niblack, IT. S. Navy. Maps and illustrations. 158 pages. Published by the Smithsonian In- stitution, National Museum. Government Printing Office. Washington, 1890. "Cruise of the Revenue Marine Steamer Corwin in the Arctic Ocean, 1884." Maps and illustrations. 128 pages. Government Printing Office. Washington, 1889. "Cruise of the Revenue Marine Steamer Corwin in the Arctic Ocean, 1885." Maps and illustrations. 202 pages. Government Printing Office. Washington, 1887. "Bean's Report on the Salmon Fisheries of Alaska." Maps and illustrations. Government Printing Office. Washington, 1890. From Yellowstone Park to Alaska, by Francis C. Sessions. 8vo. 196 pages. Illustrated. Published by Welch, Fracker & Co. New York, 1890. "California and Alaska, "by William S. Webb, M. D. Quarto, 190 pages. Vel- lum paper. Illustrations, India proof etchings, and photogravures. Price, $25 ; popular edition of the same, $2.50. Published by G. P. Putnam's Sons. New York, 1891. "Alaskana. T^e Legends of Alaska," in verse, by Prof. Bushrod W. James. Illustrated. 368 pages. Published by Porter & Coates. Philadelphia, 1892. Price, $2. " Kin-da-Shon's Wife. A Story of Native Customs Among the Chilkats of Alaska," by Mrs. Eugene S. Willai^d. Illustrated. 281 pages. Published by Fleming H. Revell. New York and Chicago. Recommendations. The three most urgent needs of education in Alaska at present are: FIRST— LARGER APPROPRIATIONS. Fifty thousand dollars is a sum Avholiy inadequate for the establishing and main- taining of good schools for the 10,000 children of Alaska. The utmost care ia taken to make it go as far as possible, and yet a number of communities are ask- ing for schools, which cannot be granted because of the insufficiency of the ap- propriation. I would most respectfully recommend that an appropriation of $75,000 be asked for the coming year. The efficiency of the school service would be greatly increased if a permanent appropriation could be made for a term of five years, which would increase in regular amounts up to $100,000. This would enable the Bureau of Education to keep pace with the steady growth of the work. It would also enable the Com- missioner of EdueatioiTto more wisely plan his work. EDUCATION IN ALASKA. 1299 The appropriation for education in Alaska is placed in the sundry civil bill. Every alternate year during the lonj? session of Congress this bill is not enacted into law before July, August, or September. But the last vessel for the year that communicates with the teachers in northwestern Alaska leaves San Francisco about the 1st of June. Consequently the Commissioner of Education can not ap- point teachers for that section until ten or twelve months of the school year have expired. Or, in other words, the teachers are compelled to teach the entire school year without knowing whether any appropriation has bjen made to pay them. This is an injustice to the Commissioner of Education and to the teachers. SECOND— OBLIGATORY ATTENDANCE. There is no one subject connected with the Alaska schools that teachers, su- perintendents, "committeemen, and citizens are moi^e united upon than that the highest interests of the children and, the schools require that there should be some authoritative regulations that will secure the more regular attendance of the native children. Attention has been called to this in every annual report. Mr. John H. Keatley, ex-judge of the United States district court of Alaska and ex-member of the Territorial board of education for Alaska, in an article in the Atlantic Monthly for August, 1890, on " The Race Problem in Alaska,"' says : •'The natives of Alaska realize that everything is changing about them, and are anxious to pattern after the whites in better dwellings, more comfortable clothing, and a greater diversity of food, but they fail to realize yet the im- portance of education. The adults are serious obstacles to the education of the children, and no radical change is possible until attendance at the Government schools is compulsory. It is not enough to provide schools and teachers at the public expense, but Congress must go further and authorize the employment of Indian policemen at every village to compel the attendance of the children. "Some of the native schools have an enrollment of 60 pupils,^ with an average daily attendance of 10. This is due to the total lack of means of enforcing at- tendance. The race problem presented in the subject of their education and possible participation in the political affairs of the country is of too serious a character to be thus ignored by those who are now responsible for their future development." THIRD— AGRICULTURAL EXPERIMENT STATION. Passing from northern Alaska, with its adaptation to reindeer-raising, we find the whole southern coast, stretching for thousands of miles, to possess a tem- perate climate. This is due to tl^e " Kuro-siwo" or S' Japan Current " of the Pacific Ocean. In this ' ' temperate belt " it is probable that there are areas of greater or less extent that are adapted to agriculture. At least it is known that there are small farms or vegetable gardens on Kadiak and Afognak Islands, on the shores of Cook's Inlet, and in southeastern Alaska. It is also known that wild berries grow in great profusion and abundance in many sections. But no intelligent and continued experiments have been made to test the agricultural and horticultural capabilities of the country. Until a quite recent period (1867) the European population were fur-trading Russians. They were followed by fur-trading Amei-icans, and more recently by the gold-seekers. No one expected to remain long in the country, and there has been no incentive to carry forward intelligent experiments in agriculture. As early as my first report to the Commissioner of Education (1885) I called attention to the fact that there was a very wide diversity of views concerning the agricultural and horticultural capabilities of Alaska, and necessarily very great ignorance; that no systematic effort intelligently prosecuted had ever been made to ascertain what could or what could not be raised to advantage; that it was of very great importance, both to the people of Alaska and the coun- try at large, that careful experiments should be made, extending over a term of years, to ascertain the vegetables, grains, grasses, berries, apples, plums, trees, flowers, etc., best adapted to the country; the best methods of cultivating, gathering, and curing the same; the planting and grafting of fruit trees ; the development of the wild cranberry; cattle, hog, and poulti-y raising ; butter and cheese-making, etc. In 1886 my recommendation was taken up by the U. S. Commissioner of Agriculture, who, in his annual report for that year (page 20) says: " Something in the line of experimental woi'k might also be undertaken iThls l3 true of a few, not of many schools. 1300 EDUCATION REPORT, 1889-90. in Alaska, possibly with profit. It is well known that the Department of the Interior has established an agency for the promotion of education in that terri- tory." "It has been suggested that a line of experiments, to be undertaken by this Department, would easily prove whatever of agricultural and horticultural ca- pability may exist in the Territory. No careful attention seems to have been given there, as yet, to this branch of industry, and the resources of the coun- try are quite unknown and undeveloped. " The industrial training school at Sitka would furnish an admirable basis for a station, where could be conducted careful experiments to ascertain the agricultural products best adapted to the climate and soil of the Territory, and what breeds of cattle and other domestic animals are most suited to its climate and soil. " Such an experiment ought to extend over a series of years, and the result would amply repay any expenditure that Congress may choose to make in this direction." In view, therefore, of the national importance of introducing the domesti- cated reindeer of Siberia into northern Alaska, and testing the agricultural capacity of southern Alaska, I most earnestly recommend that you secure the establishment of an " agricultural school and experiment station" in connec- tion with the system of industrial education in Alaska. By an act approved July 2, 1862, Congress made provision for schools for the " benefit of agriculture and the mechanic arts." By an act approved March 2, 1887, provision was made for " agricultui'al experiment stations " in connection with the agricultural schools. And by the act approved August 30, 1890, cer- tain of the proceeds of the sale of public lands were set aside for the better sup- port of these agricultui'al schools. These acts of Congress require the assent of the legislature of the State or Territory in order that their provisions may become available. But Alaska has no legislature, and is governed directly by Congress. On this account, and partly because nineteen-twentieths of the children to be benefited belong to the native races. Congress has committed to the Secretary of the In- t,erior the duty of making ''needful and proper provision for education in Alaska." would therefore recommend that an application be made to Congress to direct -■-he Secretary of the Interior to extend to Alaska the benefits of the agricultural *acts of 1887 and 1890, and secure the establishment of a school that can introduce reindeer into that region, and teach their management, cai'e, and propagation, and also to conduct a series of experiments to determine the agricultural capa- bilities of the country. To reclaim and make valuable vast areas of land otherwise worthless ; to in- troduce large, permanent, and wealth-producing industries where none pre- viously existed ; to take a barbarian people on the verge of starvation and lift them up to a comfortable self-support and civilization, is certainly a work of national importance. In the closing year of the existence of the Territorial board of education thu fullowing rules were enacted, viz : First. Prom and after this date (October 27, 1888), corporal punishment in the public schools of Alaska is entirely and wholly prohibited. Second. All religious services are prohibited in all the public schools of Alaska exceptHowkan Klawack,Metlakahtla, Fort Wrangell, Jun.sauNo. 2, and Haines. The above rules wei-e carried by the deciding vote of the chairman. If Mr. Duncan, the absent member of the board had been present, they could not have been passed. With the reorganization of the Alaska school system on April 9, 1890, the above rules were rescinded, and both school punishments and religious exercises left discretionary with the teacher and the local school committee. To still further popularize the schools and create in the several communities a feeling of responsibility for the conduct of the schools and a personal interest in their success, I would recommend that in the villages containing a number of white people, such asJuneau, Sitka, and Douglas, the voters be allowed to elect their local school committee, and said committee be authorized to select teach- ers of the white schools, subject to the approval of the Commissioner of Educa- tion. I remain with great respect, yours, truly, ' Sheldon Jackson, General Agent of Education for Alaska. Hon. W. T. Harris, LL. D., Commissioner of Education. O [ Whole Xmnhtr 203 U. S. BUREAU OF EDUCATION. REPKINT OF CHAPTER XXV OF THE REPORT OF THE COMMISSIONER OF EDUCATION FOR 1890-91 EDUCATION IN ALASKA 1890-91. SHELDON JACKSON, T>. D. GENERAL AGENT. WASHINGTOIT: GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE. 1893. CHAPTER XXY. REPOET ON EDUCATIOi^ IN ALASKA. By Kev. Sheldon Jackson, General Agent of Education for Alaslca. Department of the Interior, Bureau of Education, Alaska DnisiON, Washington, D. C, June 30, 1891. Sir: In compliance witli the requirements of the office I have the honor of sub- mitting the following annual report of the general agent of education, for the year ending June 30, 1891 : NUMBER AND GENERAL CONDITION OP THE SCHOOLS OF ALASKA. There is in Alaska a school population of from 8,000 to 10,000. Of these 1,847 were enrolled in the 31 schools in operation during the year closing June 30, 1891. Thirteen day schools, with an enrollment of 745 jjupils, were sujiported entirely by the Government at an expense of $20,639.39, and 12 contract schools, with an en- rollment of 1,102, wore supported jointly by the Goveruuieut and the missionary societies of the Presbyterian, Methodist, Congregational, Episcopal, Moravian, Lu- theran, and Roman Catholic churches. Of the pniiils in the contract schools, 810 were day pupils and 292 industrial pupils. These latter were clothed, housed, fed, and taught. The boys were taught shoemaking, house-building, furiiiture-malving, coopering, baking, gardening, and the care of cattle; the girls were taught cooking, baking, washing, ironing, sewing, dressmaking, and housekeeping. Towards the support of these contract schools the Government contributed $29,300.61, and the missionary societies $74,434.29. Unalaska District. public schools. Owing to the inaccessibility of the schools in this district, only having communi- cation with the outside world and a mail once a year, and the cousequeut difficulty of supervision, no public schools have been established except on tlie island of Unga. But wherever it was desii'ed to locate a school arrangements were made with the leading missionary societies of the country to share with the Government in the responsibility and expense. These schools are called "contract schools." 923 924 EDUCATION REBOET, 1890-91. CONTRACT SCHOOLS. In the spring of 1890 1 made a call' through the newspapers for volunteer teachers to go to the barbarous Eskimo of Arctic Alaska, which resulted in the following persons offering themselves: Messrs. L. M. Stevenson and P. N. Killbreath, Mr. and Mrs. James K. Eeeve, and Misses H. L. Harv\ cod and Martha McQuarll, of Ohio; Mr. and Mrs. James F. McKce, Mr. E. M. Calvin, and Miss Ella Blair, all of Pennsylvania; Misses Ella Dudley and Martha L. Taylor, of Missouri; Mr. and Mrs. Warren Norton, of Tennessee ; Kev. and Mrs. S. H. King, of Minnesota ; Mrs. Rebecca Wilklow, of Illi- nois; W. T. Lopp, of Indiana; H.E.Thornton, of Virginia; George Drenford, m. c, of District of (Jolumbia; and Thomas H. Hang, of South Dakota. Of the above, Messrs. Stevenson, Lopp, and Thornton were selected. Point Barrow, Presbyterian; population, Eskimo; L. M. Stevenson, teacher: This is the northernmost school in America and, with the possible exception of Uper- navik, Greenland, the most northern in the world. Mr. Stevenson arrived at his station on the .30th of July, 1890, on board a whaler. The next day I reached the place on board the U. S. Eevenue Cutter Hear, and at once began making arrange- ments with Mr Stevenson for the establishment of the school. Having been unal)le to secure transportation for the necessary buildings from San Francisco, I procui'ed, through the courtesy of Capt. M. A. Healy, commander of the Bear, the use of the rear room of the Government J^efuge Station for the school. On the 6th of October, 1890, Mr. Stevenson opened school with 3 pupils. By the end of the month 15 were in attendance, and the number continued to increase until 38 were enrolled. The school was begun under adverse circumstances, but a beginning had to be made. Five men from a stranded schooner were (j^uartered in the room used as a schoolroom, and the teacher held them subject to the rules of the school for conduct, and required them to set the example of order, thus using them as a means of assist- ance in the government of the school. None of the pupils had any knowledge of the English language, speaking only their native lingo, consisting of heterogeneous sounds, produced something after the ventriloquist method of using the vocal chord, the other organs of speech not being permitted to participate in the production of sound. Those who came to school seemed to manifest a great desire to learn, and the acquisition of making "i>af)er talk" Avas like the entrance to fairy land. They made rapid progress, being able to spell and pronounce all the words on the chart lesson by the end of the second week. Nearly all the pupils, after the first day or two, manifested a strong desire to learn, and in this they were both patient and persevering, repeating the same word many times in trying to acquire a correct pronunciation. At first they were shy and feared to make a start, but after one or two letters were memorized, so that they could form a short word, they were proud of the acquisition, and upon the snow, the frost, anywhere where they could make an impression, the words were traced. Mr. Stevenson reports it very interesting to see their black eyes flash and their dusky 1 Washington, D. C, March 13, 1S90. TEACHERS WANTED FOB CONTRACT SCHOOLS AMONG THE ESKIMOS OF ARCTIC ALASKA. All unexpected opportunity oflers for the establishment of a contract mission school among the Eski- mos at Point Barrow, and also at Cape Prince of Wales. Point Barrow is the northernmost point of the mainland of the continent. It has a permanent population of about 500 Eskimos. Last summer the Government erected at that point a refuge station for shipwrecked whalers. During the summer there are 1,5U0 to 2,000 sailors of the whaling fleet in the vicinity. This season 20 of these men are wiii'ering there. Cape Prince of Wales, at Berings Strait, is the westernmost point of the mainland of the continent. It has a permanent population of about 300 Eskimos with no white men. During the summer sea.son hundreds of the nomad Eskimos of the interior visit these points for the purpose of trade. The coming of these strangers greatly increases the influence and importance of the ■work at the station. At each of these stations it is proposed to erect a comfortable one-story frame building, containing a schoolroom in one end and a teachers' residence in the other. The schools are to be taught in English. As the people have never had schools and know no Eng- lish, the schools will, for a long time to come, be iu the primary grade. There is no communication with the outside world except once a year, ships arriving and departing in midsummer. For the first year at Cape Prince of Wales it is advisable that a male teacher go without his family. At Point Barrow the teacher should be a married man without children, and can take his wife with him. The teachers should be of good sound health, and from 28 to 40 years of age. The teachers should be prepared to remain at least two years. As they wdll need to leave home next May, prompt .a(;tion will be required. The work being both educational and missionary, applicants will send not only certificates as to their aptness as teachers but also testimonials Irom their pastor or others as to their Christian activity. The rigors of the arctic winter, and the self-denial and patience required in dealing with the natives demands a missionary spirit in the teachers. None other will succeed or bo willing to remain there, even if sent. Address .all applications, with accompanying papers, to Kev. Sheldon Jackson, 1025 Kiath street NW., Washington, D. C. . EDUCATION IN ALASKA. 925 countenances brijjbten as tlioy learned a new word or a new combination of fi^jnres. They seem to pride themselves on knowinj;- English, bnt manifest little desire to speak it, as that wouhl bo breaking off from their traditions, and their Im-ut-koots (doctors) wonbl b't the evil one take full possession of tliem for thus abandoning the style of former days. The attendance for the most part Avas very irregular, owing to the trips that had to be made out to the caches ' where the deer were stored, and which they brought in, as required, for food, as well as to the catcliing of seals i'or both food and fuel. After the age of 4 is reached, no parent is able to tell the ago of liis children, and they are not ])()sitively certain beyond 3 years, so that the classilication by ages in school is mere guess work. Knowledge of the past is summed up in the single word "I-pan-ee," which maybe yesterday or ten thousand years ago, or any indefinite period. Five seems to be the l)asis and almost the extent of their mathematical compre- hension, and beyond the limit of 15 the best of them become confused, and cut oft' further count by a single word, Am-a-lok-tuk, which may be anything from 1 up- wards. It seems to mean plenty. If there is enough for the present meal it is Aia- a-lok-tuk. The hindrances to the work are many. The association of the natives with white men have not been ennobling, but, on the contrary, debasing, the products of which are fornication, adultery, disease, and death. Another hindrance is the lack of livelihood. The natives are under the necessity of hunting and wlialing, and these two occupations keep them busy nearly the entire year, and away from the village the greater part of the time, sometimes scattered many miles over tlie (country bunt- ing and fishing, or over the ice catching seals, whales, bears, and walrus. The deer furnishes food and clothing, the walrus boot soles and skins for canoes, the seal food, ilour, and clothing, the whale food, dour, and bone for trade. The coldest weather reported was 494^^ below zero. The long, dark (for the night extends from November 19 to January 2.3) Arctic winter wore away until April 14, when the report of "whales seen in the lead"- set every one wild with excitement, nearly breaking up the school. All the pupils large enough left immediately to hunt whales, and a few weeks later the remaining boys and girls left to drive the dog teams that were transporting the wluilebone and meat to the village from the edge of the ice, from 12 to 20 miles out to sea. In the spring of 1891 a schooner was chartered at San Francisco and loaded with lumber and materials for a school building and teacher's residence at Point Barrow; but the great Arctic ice pack not leaving the shore in time, the vessel was unable to reach the place, and the school has been compelled to remain another year in the Refuge Station. Point Hope, Episcopal; population, Eskimo; John B. Driggs, M. D., teacher: Dr. Driggs reports the population of the village as unusually small, the scarcity of food during the preceding winter having scattered them along the coast in more favored villages for hundreds of miles. In taking a census of the population in April he found only 161, being one-half the usual population. Out of that number, however, he had 68 pupils. Six of these were compelled to drop out in order to pro- vide food for their families. The others attended through the winter with great regularity. Three of the pupils died during the season, one being carried off on the ice and never heard from, probablj^ being frozen to death and eaten by the bears ; another was frozen to death, and a third died from hemorrhage. The school was opened on the 1st of October. The day brought with it a blizzard and snow storm that lasted for nine days. During the luorning the teacher occupied the schoolroom alone, but as time wore on and no pupils came he put on his furs and started for the village to hunt up the children. Upon goiug outside the house he found a boy walking the beach. Taking him into the schoolroom, he commenced school. At the close of the afternoon he presented his pupil with a couple of pan cakes left from his own breakfast. The effect was tjiiual to any reward of merit. That boy proved one of the most regular in attendance during the entire winter season. The next morning 4 presented themselves, and from that tlie school grew to 68. A mixture of dour, molasses, and water made a sort of cake, a little of which was given to the pupils each evening, i)roving not only a very cheap and efficient method of securing regular attendance, but also discipline, as they had to be both present and perfect in their dej^ortnient and recitations to be entitled to cake. The scholars usually arrived from 6 to 7 in the morning and remained all day. Owing, perhaps, to their long-continued diet of frozen meat and snow eatiug, tln-y had constantly to be excused to run out doors and get more snow, as the teacher found it impossible to melt water fast enough on his stove to keep them in drink. The sun disai)peared on the 10th of December and returned on the 3d of January, giving them a night of twenty-four days. Lanij^s were required in the schoolroom from November 12 to Feb- 'A hiding place for storiiin- food. ''An open chanucl iu tlie ice. 926 EDUCATION REPORT, 1890-91. ruary 9. The thermometer varied in the coldest weather from 27° to 31° helow zero, the average of the winter being probably about 15° below zero. During February and a portion of March a series of blizzards set in that were beyond description. The ice was solid across the ocean to Cape Prince of Wales, 200 miles distant. The efl'ect of the gales was such that at times it seemed as if the schoolhouse nmst be blown away. Snow flew in perfect sheets. The schoolhouse was located 2 miles Irom the village, and yet, notwithstanding the storms and distance, the attendance was good. For a few days the teacher hired men to see the little ones safely home through the storm (the 2 miles distance), but soou found that the precaution was unnecessary; that they were accustomed to take care of themselves. Not being used to any seats or chairs at home, the children found it very hard to sit on benches, and greatly preferred to occupy the floor, so that, looking over the schoolroom in writing time, a little girl could be seen on her knees and elbows writing in one place, and in another a boy lying with his face downward on the floor, also writing, and so through the room every imaginable ]iosition could be seen. If beginners made a mistake they tried to rectify it by scratching with their finger nails. They readily learned the alphabet and made some progress in reading, singing, and writing, the teacher being very much encouraged with his school. Cape Prince of Wales; American Missionary Association (Congregational) ; popu- lation, Eskimo ; Messrs. W. T. Lopp and H. R. Thornton, teachers : .School was opened on the 18th of August, 1890, with only about one-fourth of the population returned to the village from their summer's hunt. The school being established among a wild people, that had never known any re- straints, that conld not comprehend the purposes of the teachers in coming to them, and could not understand their language, through misapprehension there was a good deal of trouble at first. On the 19th of September, Elignak, one of the wealthiest men of the village, aiid one of his wives, both in ai state of beastly intoxication, tried to force their way into the house. On the 23rd of September some of the stu- dents became so boisterous and unruly in the schoolroom that they also had to be excluded from the house. And again, in November, drunken parties tried to break in and make a disturbance, so that, for two months, the teachers taught, ate, worked, and slept with loaded arms at hand, not knowing at what moment they might have to defend the property committed to them, and their lives, their minds constantly harassed with questions as to when resistance should begin and how far it would be justifiable, debating in their own minds whether it would be better to allow themselves to be robbed or murdered without resistance, or through resistance make the savages respect their manhood. The danger to the station was greatly increased by an ejiidemic of the grip, which carried away 26 people in two months, which was by the superstitions of the people attributed to the presence of the white men among them. However, through tact and good management and the providence of God hostilities were prevented, and by January the strained situation was greatly relieved. Mutual confidence sprang up between the natives and the teachers. Having heard, beibre going to the place, of the bad reputation of the people (which, however, it was found they did not de- serve), and feeling that a people who knew nothing of schools would not endure for any length of time the restraints of a schoolroom, and the cost of building being very great (all lumber and material being sent from San Francisco, between 3,000 and 4,000 miles), the schoolhouse was built, to commence with, on a small scale (a room that would hold about 50 pupils), and it was thought that if 50 pupils could be obtained among such a ]ieople, under such circumstances, it would be a very great success. But to the astonishment of the teachers themselves and to the astonishment of the friends of education that are interested in these Arctic schools, it was found that the total enrollment for the first year was 304 pupils out of a population of 539 people. The average daily attendance for the last seven months of the school was 146 and the average daily attendance for the whole session of nine mouths was 105. As the schoolroom wouhl hold only about 50 at a time, the teachers were compelled to divide the pupils into three classes and hold morning, afternoon, and evening ses- sions of school. And then, to prevent the children who belonged to the afternoon or evening school from smuggling themselves into the morning session, or the morning children from remaining to the afternoon or evening session, it was found necessary to build two parallel snow walls some distance from the schoolroom door, and when the bell stopj^cd ringing for school the teachei's ranged themselves oia either side, in order to sift the children that were trying to get into the schoolroom. It was with great difficulty that the pu]nls were nuule to understand that it was not proper to talk and laugh and jump over the benches in the schoolroom during school as much as they pleased ; nor could they understand why 30 or 40 visitors could not lounge about the room which was needed for those who desired to study ; so that upon sev- eral occasions it l>ecame necessary to exclude certain parties from the schoolroom, but this exclusion of a few days was all that was necessary. It was considered a great punishment not to be able to come to school. During the epidemic a number o < J LU EDUCATION IN ALASKA. 927 of sl.atofl of tho children that they had been allowed to take home at nifjht were re- turned by order of tho inediciuo men, who ascribed that much of the sickness was due to the slates and the iiictures which the children made tipon them — they were "bad medicine." The teachers began their school work by learning the Eskimo names of the most important objects in daily use and training their ])upils iu the English equivalents. From words they proceeded to phrases and from phrases to sentences, teaching them to transl.ite from Eskimo into English and rice versa. They gradually added English letters and numbers, together with some elementary geography and arithmetic. Although they had had a combined experience of thirteen years in the stdioolroom iu the States, the teachers declare that they never had more quick-witted, intelli- gent pupils than these wild Eskimo children. At the beginning of tho school year only a low could count ten in a blundering fashion, and nine-tenths of the pupils knew practically no English whatever. At the close of tho tirst school year they had a good working vocabulary, knew something of geography and map-drawing Eskimo bov in a savage state. David Skuvinka. Eskimo bov. at school. understood thoroughly the decimal basis of our numbers, could count up to one thousand, work examples in simple addition, write and read simple English words, and carry on a conversation in English on eyeryday practical matters. " The pupils showed a remarkable desire to learn for learning's sake. Anvik Christ Church Mission, Protestant Episcopal; Rev. O. Parker and Rev. John W. Chapman, teachers ; enrollment, 6 boarding and 38 day pupils; population Atha- baskau. The summer of 1890 was spent by the teachers in clearing the ground nec- essary for the establishment of their school and residence buildings and in erecting a small building, 15 feet square, to serve for tho school. Upon the opening of school they found that they had built too small. It was, however, a great improvement upon the accommodations of tho previous year. The school opened in the new build- ing on the Ist of October, and tho success was very gratifying, the attendance being nearly double that of the previous year. The teachers report some very encour- aging instances of Indians at a distance bringing their children to get the advan- tages of the school. On the 22d of January a trip was made to several villages ou 928 EDUCATION RlJtORT, 1890-91. Chagelook Slough, for the purpose of interesting the people in the scTiool. They only succeeded, however, in reaching the lirst village, the roads beyond that point being imiiassable. During the winter season the four walls of a house, 26 by 23 feet in size, were raised. The new house will serve for a dwelling, and the present resi- dence will be turned into a schoolhouse, utilizing the present small schoolhouse for a carpenter shop for the boys. EosoriffsXi/ Bohj Cross Mission, Roman Catholic; Rev. P. Tosi, teacher, assisted by two sisters of the Order of St. Ann; enrollment, 83; population Eskimo. They report the attendance of 53 boarding and 30 day pupils. This is the largest and best equipped Roman Catholic school in the Territory. iV((7a/o, Roman Catholic; population Indian. No report. Bethel, Moravian; Rev. J. (I. Kilbuck in charge, with four assistants; enrollment, 31; population Eskimo. Owing to the lack of a sufficient food supply, they were unable to keep the school in operation more than three terms (or 150 days) out of the school year. The schoolroom has been mainly in charge of Rev. E. L. Weber. The Moravia Mission at Bethel, Alaska. [From Chrislian Herald.] Kev. J. H. Kilbuck, Bethel, Alaska. [ From Christian Herald.] pupils made decided progress in the usual branches taught in schools with the excep- tion of speaking English. Owing to the fact that English is not heard in the com- munity outside of the school aud mission, it is very ditticult to secure its speaking by the pupils. In addition to the ordinary school studies taken, instruction was given in descriptive and physical geography and in physiology and hygiene. Three of the boys were given music lessons. Out of school hours the boys in connection with the home are busy in providing fuel aud water, also in hunting for food. Thus they are kept in touch with the methods necessary for them to employ to support themselves when they leave school. Two of the jiromisiug boys were sent East ami found places in the Indian school at Carlisle, Pa. This being the oldest school among the Eskimo of western Alaska, it has made corresponding progress and secured ai great iuHnence among the people. Carmel, Moravian, in charge of Rev. F. E. Wolf, with three assistants; enrollment, 18; population, Eskimo: The teacher reports that they have received much ojiposi- tion from the Greek priest; that there were from 15 to 18 children whose parents ex- MRS. KILBUCK, TEACHER AT BETHEL, WITH HER DAUGHTER KATIE, EDUCATION IN ALASKA. ^ 929 pressed a desire to have them attend the school, but were afraid of the priest, wlio had forbidden tliem; that some of those who did send chihlren were persecuted for it. A protest was sent by the teachers, indorsed by the ollicers of tbe Moravian Mis- sionary Society, asking the interference of tlie Bureau of Education. At the request of the U. S. Commissioner of Education, the honorable Secretary of the Treasury issued instructions for the captain of the U. S. revenue-cutter lha>- to visit the place and inquire into the matter; but circumstances beyond control i)reveuted this being done. Unalasla (Jessie Lee Memorial Home), Methodist Episcopal, John Tuck, in charge, with one assistant; attendance, 16 boarders and 31 day scliolars; population, Aleuts and Creoles : A great deal of interest has been manifested in tbe school by the com- munity, the grown-iip daughters of the Russian-Greek priest being among the pupils. There was also less interference with the regular attendance of soliool on account of the church holidays than is usual in communities under the influence of the Russian- Greek Church. The progress of the pupils is all that could be desired. Indeed, Prof. Tuck, who is a teacher of many years experience in New England, reports that he never saw better progress made in any school. Capt. M. A. Healy, commander of the United States revenue-cutter Bear, has taken a great interest in the school be- cause of its successful management, and very kindly gave free passage to 6 orphan girls that were sent Irom St. Paul Island to Unalaska to attend school. Prof. Tuck still labors under the very great disadvantage of insufficient room for the school. Kadiak District, public schools. Kadial; William E. Roscoe, teacher; enrollment, 80; population, Russian Creoles: The teacher reports a very successful year. The children who came with any degree of regularity made excellent progress. Some trouble, as usual, was experienced from the opijosition of the priest of the Greek Church, and the taking away of the children for almost daily services of the church during certain months of the year. •Afognah, John Dull', teacher; enrollment, 39; population, Russian Creoles and Eskimo: School was opened on the 3d of October, a number of children coming in from neighboring villages to enjoy its advantages. During the year a comfortable school building and teacher's residence were erected. The teacher reports that, while the people are quiet and inoffensive, yet a hundred years of misrule has broken their spirit and left them without hope or courage to better their condition; that intemperance is very rife among them, and that many of the pupils of the school, during the winter, were on the verge of starvation because their parents had wasted nearly all their living on intoxicating liquors. On visiting his pupils at their homes, he often found both parents dead drunk and the hungry children shivering with cold. Until some efficient means can be employed to prevent the introduction of liquors among them, the school work will be carried on under very great disadvan- tages. Karluk, Nicholas Faordorf, teacher ; enrollment, 33 ; population, Eskimo : A comfort- able teacher's residence and school building have been erectedat this place. The chief industry is canning salmon, which gives employment to children as well as adults, so that during the run of the salmon in summer school is suspended. It is an impor- tant center for a school, and it is hoped that much can be accomplished in the future. Among the children are a large number of orphans that ought to be placed in an orphans' home, where they can be properly fed and clothed as well as taught. It is hoped that this end will be accomplished when the women of the American Baptist Home Missionary Society establish their proposed home on Wood Island. Sitka District. Juneau, Xo. 1,'Rhoda, A.Lee, teacher; enrollment, 33 ; population, Americans: The children have made very gratifying progress during the year. They work under the grave disadvantage of being crauiped in their schoolroom. Through the growth of the community a much larger school building is needed. It is also important that a small sum be allowed for draining and tixing up the school grounds. Juneau, No. 2, Mrs. Seth Tozer, teacher; enrollment, 51 ; population, Thlingets : The native children that reside with their parents have been very irregular in their at- tendance. The tendency f"- '^he parents to take the whole family with them when they go off fishing, huntiu , or in search of work greatly interferes with the progress of the children in their school work. Some 25 of the children, however, are occupants of the Presbyterian Home conducted by Rev. Eugene S. Willard and three assistants. These children, attending school everyday and having special training out of school hours, made very commendable progress. The difference in the progress between these children Irora the Home and the children from the native village is so great 930 EDUCATION REfORT, 1890-91 that it emphasizes the need of more Homes, to secure the very best results from school work. During the year a good bell has been furnished the school. Douglas, No. .1, Mrs. W. S. Adams, teacher; enrollment, 23; population, Amer- icans: This is the white school for the mining settlement on Douglas Island, Mrs. Adams was indefatigable in her efforts to interest and advance the pupils under her care. Douglas, No. ^, Charles H.Edwards, teacher; enrollment, 68; population, Thlingets: The enthusiasm and skill of Mr. Edwards as a teacher has made his native school equal to any in the Territory. KilUsnoo, W. A. McDougall, teacher; enrollment, 68; population, Thlingets, with a very few Russian Creoles. Sitica, No. 1, Casfy.a Patton, teacher; euiollment, 54; population, whites and Rus- sian Creoles: This school, being attended by the children of the Government otiQcials in Alaska, has scholars in more advanced studies tlian any other in the Territory. Miss Patton has proved herseK a very efficient and successful teacher. Sitka, No. S, Mrs. Lena Vanderbilt, teacher; enrollment, 55; population, Thlin- gets: Owing to the want of cooperation on the part of the governor, who failed to use his influence with the native population to secure the attendance of their chil- dren at school, the results have been less satisfactory in this than in any other school. Instead of an enrollment of 55 it ought to be at least 200, and this could have been brought about if the proper influence had been exerted in the community, Wrangel, Mrs, W. G. Thomas, teacher; enrollment, 93; poj)ulatiou, Thliugets: This school has during the year past entered the second stage of its existence, the earlier pupils having largely grown up and goiie oft' for work ami left a second and younger set of children to come into the school. Mrs. Thomas, haviug been the first and only teacher of the school from the date of its organization as a Goverument school, has had the great satisfiiction of seeing the fruit of her work. Klaioach, H, C, Wilson, teacher; enrollment, 50; population, Tlilingets: During the year the schoolhouse has been repaired and made very comfortable. Jacl'son, Mrs. Clara G. McLeod, teacher; enrollment, 100; poimlation, Hydai: This school, like the one at Wrangel. having had but one teacher during its whole history, has made much progress. CONTRACT SCHOOLS, The SWca Industrial Training ScJiool: This, largest of all the industrial schools in Alaska, was established in 1880 by the Board ot' Home Missions in the Pi-esbyterian Church, United States of America, aud has since become a Government contract school, although the entire plant, consisting of more than a dozen buildings, is owned exclusively by the board. The total number of pupils enrolled from the commencement of the school year was 99 boys aud 60 girls, making a total of 159. The average attendance for the year was 140. The ages of pupils ranged from four to twenty- one years. The buildings are admirably situated on an elevation back some 200 feet from high-water mai'k, Avith a gently rolling beach in front, and about centrally located between the village and Indian River. An abundant supply of j)ure water is brought in pipes a distance of three-fourths of a mile. The water is forced to a height of 80 feet into a large tank by means of a pump run by water power, and from this source all the buildings, including hospitals, are supplied. The model cottages are eight in number, where the married couples from the school begin housekeeping in "Boston style," as the natives express it. Funds for the erection of some of the cottages were loaned (without interest) by the Indian Rights Association, and funds for the erection of others were contributed by indi- viduals in full sympathy with a rational system of dealing with the Indian problem. The young people who occupy the cottages have a life lease of the ground, and are expected to pay for the building they occupy in annual installments. The average cost of a cottage is $350, Of 9 couples married, some of whom were in school only four years, 8 are doing well, and are trustworthy, reliable citizens. Like all true homes, we expect these to be the centers of purity from which will radiate blessed influences tliat shall be far-reaching aud lasting in their results. Here family life is established, and family ties are held sacred; here industry, frugality, persever- ance, and thrift are developed; here old customs have no place — no Indian doctors, no witchcraft, no pot laches, no indemnity payments, no plural wives, no driuking, no gambling, no imjirovident want, no reckless living. In these model homes the young husbands have a chance to develop into manly, self-supporting men, and the young housewives have opportunity to develop into tidy, industrious, womanly women. In the winter of 1887-88 the Society of Alaskan Natural History and Ethnology was organized and incorporated. The purpose is to collect and preserve in connec- EDUCATION IN ALASKA. 931 tion with the Sitka Industrisil antl Training School specimen illustrations of the natural history and ethnok)f;y of Alaska. Ho8i)ital8: There are two wards, capable of accommodating 12 patients each. During tlie summer tlie death rate was not high. The wards, however, were never vacant. The approach of a rainy winter brings colds, pneumo: ia, rlicuniatism, con- sumption, and epidemic diseases. Chronic troubles, sore eyes, scrofula, syphilitic taints, and tubercular disease are common among native parents and are visited upon the children. Patients receive tlie remedies, but owing to neglect of guidance they disreg.ard the laws'of health. It is a task to keep convalescents from exposure to drafts and violating sanitary regulations. The preparation of food, admiuisteriug of medicine, care of the wardrobe, dressing of cuts, wounds, and sores, the watching and anxiety, are all exliausting to the nervous system, but when disease yields to treatment the school physician and nurses feel repaid for all their services. Language: Tlie children speedily acquire an English-speaking vocabulary when strictly prohibited from using their native dialects. For five years English has been the exclusive language of the school. Experience has removed all doubt as to its expediency. The use of their vernaculars ( Thlhuiet, Tsimpshean, Hydia) seriously retards their progress and does them no essential benefit. No schoolbooks have ever been printed in any of their native dialects. Each distinct people has a dialect of its own, local in character, and in course of time the vernacular dialects of the tribes of southeastern Alaska will become obsolete and English will everywhere prevail. As a matter of preservation the Society of Alaskan Natural History and Ethnology has lately commenced to reduce the Thlinget language to writing, which we hope to accomplish through the instrumentality of Mrs. Paul and Miss Willard, two native teachers of the industrial school. Culinary department : This department is a place of great interest to the pupils, both boys and girls, small and large. All want to come into the lytchen to work andto learn to cook. The boys wish to know how to cook good meals and bake good bread, pies, and cakes. They often ask if they can come into the kitchen to work, and this stirs up a spirit of emulation among the girls so that they beg to work in the kitchen; consetxuently, there is no lack of those who desire to work in these departments. In the bakery the work is too heavy for the girls, and is done entirely by the boys. During the past year they have averaged 140 pounds of flour baked daily turning out from 90 to 100 loaves of delicious bread a day. When the girls serve in the kitchen they bake the pies and cakes, and the boys in their turn do the same, which is during the winter season, that being the hard period of work. Much attention has been given to the quality of food, and in the past few years it has been greatly improved. One great victory won in the battle of work in these departments is cleanliness. In this direction there has been a vast improvement made. It is a pleasure now to be with them and hear them say, " Oh, this must be very clean; I want it to be clean and nice." Viewing these dejiartmeuts, they have made rapid progress in the last year. The kitchen is supplied with both hot and cold water. The greatest obstacle in the work of these departments is the annoyance of having green wood much of the time. The sewing room has been enlarged and nicely papered. The light is admitted from the east, so that they get the benetit of the morning sun. This department is well equipped, and the amount of work done each week is surprising. The girls over 7 years of age knit their own stockings. In the sewing department they learn quickly and accomplish much. Sewing machines are in daily use, and the girls soon learn to use them. Almost every graduate has a machine of her own. All the shoes are made by the boys, apprenticed under the direction of a master workman. Considerable custom work is also done. Laundry : Mrs. Simpson, in charge of this department, says in her report : " Nearly all of the large boys that formerly had charge of the machinery have gone from the school, and two of the younger boys have charge of all the machinery, and are getting along nicely." The steam laundry, with its labor-saving machinery, relieves the teachers and pupils of much hard drudging work incident to a school of this character where water and soap must be used in such copious quantities. Carpentry department : All of the buildings on the mission premises, twenty or more, have been built by boys apprenticed to this trade, under the supervision of a competent foreman. Shopwork consists in the making of furniture, bookcases, clothespresses, screens, chests, curtain poles, picture frames, hand-sleds, bric-a-brac work, and undertaking. The outdoor work consists of joining, framing, contract- ing, and building. Sail-making and boat-building are among the useful industries of this department. Among our carpenter apprentices a number have shown special aptitude as artists and designers. The spirit of earnest industry is most praise- worthy, and the boys appreciate their opportunities. 932 EDUCATION REPORT, 1890-91. Gardening: Mr. John Gamble, gardener and general worker, has three medium- sized plats of arable land. One garden, which has been cultivated for several years, produces lettuce, beets, peas, and onions in abundance. Of the other gar- dens, which are new, one is planted in potatoes and the other sown in turiiips. Cereals, for lack of warmth and sunshine, do not ripen. Currants, rhubarb, rasp- berries, cauliflower, and celery are easily grown. Fruits, such as apples, plums, and pears, have not been fully tested, but it is believed that they could be grown with success. Blacksmithing can hardly be classed among the trades by wliich a man can earn a living in Alaska, yet there is much work in this line, doing repairs about the mis- sion, mending machinery, repairing stoves, making stovepipes, camp hooks, sharpen- ing tools, and doing miscellaneous jobs for the citizens of the quaint little capital. Soldering and a little tin work are also done. The constant wear and tear in most of the work departments require much repairing, nearly all of which is done by the boys. Painting : Two or three of the boys have received instruction in this useful branch of industry, and are kept busy painting, papering, glazing, and kalsomining. Recreations and amusements : The home life of the school is particularly pleas- ant. Their games and plays are such as white children enjoy, consisting of games of "marbles, baseball, townball, playing soldier, flying kites, sailing ships, target prac- tice with bow and arrow, authors, checkers, dominoes, rope-jumping, hide-and-seek. Coasting and skating are indulged in by both sexes. Then there is an organ for the girls and another for the boys, and violins, guitars, fifes, bugles, and the irrepressible mouth organs are among the amusements and recreations of each day. A rational system of discipline is easily and well maintained. Those in charge aim to make the industrial training school just what its name implies. Manual occupations are in reach of the pupils as fast as they acquire suf- iicient knowledge of the English language to enable them to prosecute the learning of a trade with success. To accomplish anything permanent and of material benefit in the way of mastering trades, they must first acquire a fair, common school educa- tion, before which they are not prepared to serve an intelligent apprenticeship. After certain initiatory advancement has been made, industrial training is then made coequal with school-room work. While the boys are taught trades, the girls are taught all branches of household industry. Indeed, the appointments and work of the school are such as to familiarize them with American ways of living and to ingraft into their lives industrious habits. Hoonah, Presbyterian, John W. McFarland. teacher; enrollment, 171 day pupils; population, Thlingets: Mr. McFarland was assisted in his work by Mr. Fred- erick Moore, a native Alaskan, who had been educated in Sitka and had also been three or four years in Mr. Moody's school for young men, at Mount Herman, Mass. MeiJalahtla, William Duncan in charge; enrollment, 172; population, Tsimpsean: The school this year has been placed in charge of Mr. and Mrs. .Tames F. McKee, experienced teachers from Pennsylvania, assisted by some of the more advanced of the native pupils. PRIVATE AND MISSION SCHOOLS. Unalal'lilc, Swedish Evangelical Mission Union, Rev. Axel E. Karlson and Rev. August Anderson in charge; enrollment, 96; population, Eskimo : The station was strengthened during the past year by the arrival of Mr. David Johnson and Miss Hannah Swenson. The school opened on the 1st of October with an attendance of 36; by Christmas the enrollment had reached 96. A number of them came from distant villages, one family coming 300 miles across country from the Arctic re- gion. During the long winter evenings the children were taught various kinds of industrial work, and a number of the boys as well as the girls took lessons in sew- ing. Invitations have been received by the teachers for the establishment of branch schools in distant villages. Takutat, Swedish Evangelical Mission Union, Rev. K. J. Hendrickson and Rev. Albin Johnson, teachers; enrollment, 14 boarding and 60 day pupils; population, Thlingets. During the year Mrs. Anna Karlson, Selma Peterson, and Agues Wallin have been added to the mission force. Miss Wallin was from Jankaping, Sweden, and had made a journey of 9,000 miles to join Rev. Mr. Johnson, of the mission, to whom she was married upon her arrival at the mission, on the 18th of May. A large, substantial boarding-house, 35 by 14 feet in size, and two and a half stories high, has been erected. During the winter the church attendance at this station numbei"ed 250. Nuklukahyet, St. James Mission, Church of England; Rev. and Mrs. T. H. Cannan in charge; enrollment, 75; population, Indians: The school has been carried on regularly for two years, with an average attendance of from 25 to 30 in winter and a much larger number durijig the spring mouths. The school has been much crip- • EDUCATION IN ALASKA. 933 pled in its efficiency by the want of suitable school nuitcnal, their supplies until recently having been received from Loudon by ship to Hudson Bay, and then by dog sled, a six months' journey from Hudson Bay to the headwaters of the Yukon. Seal Lslaiids, i>t. I'aul and St. George Islands, Simeon Milevedof, teaclier at St. Paul, and A. L. Noyes, m. d., teacher at St. Georj^e; population, Aleuts: Each of these schools report an attendance of 20. They are conducted by the North Ameri- can Commercial Company under contract with the Treasury Department. They have met with very great difficulty in instructing the children to speak and use the Eng- lish language. Juneau, Prcsbyiei-ian, Rev. Eugene S. Willard in charge, with three assistants; enrollment, 25; population, Thlingits: The Willard Home during the past year has been caring for boys and girls who, rescued from heathenism, are being trained for lives of Christian usefulness. The only limit to the work is the size of the building, but arrangements are being provided for increased tacilities. The work of Mr. and Mrs. Willard, Miss Matthews, and Miss Dunbar is one of unselfish devotion for the elevation of the Alaskans. Juneau, Roman Catholic: A school is carried on under the auspices of the. Sisters of St. Ann. No report. Douglas City, the Friends, teachers, Mr. and Mrs. Silas R. Moon; enrollment, 51; population, Thlingits : A successful home for orphan children is carried on at this place under the ausjiices of the Kansas Yearly Society of Friends. No report has been received. JacAson, Presbyterian : The Home for Girls, in charge of Mrs. A. R. McFarland, has proved a very helpful institution for that community. A new school and home building has been erected during the year, and the work is in a flourishing condition. RUSSIAN-GREEK CHURCH SCHOOLS. (Supported by the Imperial Government ol lluseia.) St. P««7, Kadiak Island, Russian-Greek Church Parish School; attendance, 40; taught by the priest: A school session is held from 4 to 6 p. m., each day. Ikogmute, Yukon River; attendance, 15: The school session lasts from 9 to 1 o'clock, and was maintained 150 days during the year. Unalaska; enrollment, 46; population, Russian Creoles; school year, 160 days: These schools have been largely for the teaching of the lituirgy to the children of the Greek Church. Sitka, Alaska; population, Thlingets: This school is one of the largest and best conducted of the Russian-Greek schools in the Territory. No report received. RULES AND REGULATIONS. •In accordance with the rules and regulations for the conduct of schools and edu- cation in Alaska, approved by the Honorable Secretary of the Interior, creating the office of assistant general agent, Mr. William Hamilton, of Bethlehem, Pa., was appointed to the position. It was also deemed advisable to secure the services of Governor Lyman E. Knapp and .Judge John S. Bugbee, counselors of the Bureau of Education, in matters per- taining to education in Alaska, at a salary of $200 each per annum. 934 EDUCATION EE^ORT, 1890-91. STATISTICS. Table 1. — Enrollment and monthly attendance, 1890-91. Sept. Oct. Nov. Dec. Jan. reb. Mar. Apr. May. Scliools. = 1. II ;2i 3 o H 6 "a 1 4) k <1 O to a o > H u < 1 g 9 < 1 & 2 a > 1 6 3 bfl > "a Public. Sitka— No.l No 2 . 187 165 195 192 192 192 192 192 193 150 197 195 193 195 98 159 10(1 54 55 33 51 23 68 68 93 100 50 80 33 37 164 173 38 44 68 30 18 51 45 29 50 35 22 36 20 46 47 46 59 22 55 29 28 164 40 16 16 20 16 21 17 27 14 6 35 29 23 50 35 23 26 19 37 45 51 59 15 55 29 25 164 86 22 35 65 27 13 49 38 15 15 21 16 22 22 33 25 7 38 29 21 '33" 8 21 21 24 11 46 40 17 29 20 30 40 69 79 34 20 14 19 15 17 29 36 20 47 40 16 36 20 23 29 21 77 29 20 12 22 15 16 19 17 37 48 24 18 33 20 26 25 26 37 23 53 32 30 142 123 20 26 52 18 9 50 38 12 14 21 17 16 15 22 19 15 32 32 25 '38' 12 15 26 15 8 45 40 20 28 20 27 37 26 49 28 53 32 27 142 90 24 24 51 32 15 17 20 18 18 18 22 22 13 34 32 22 '15 16 11 32 36 15 18 21 19 17 52 22 20 22 56 33 24 143 25 12 16 19 16 15 21 18 16 8 29 33 20 36 15 21 23 21 19 40 21 21 26 53 •33 23 143 24 10 Juneau — No.l No. 2 Douglas- No.! No.2 Killisnoo "Wraugel Jacksou 24 34 20 41 46 40 52 52 47 29 23 164 17 21 17 22 15 26 14 14 22 29 15 17 18 16 15 17 19 13 11 Kadiak Karluk Afognak Contract. Sitka Indus- trial Scliool 56 29 27 164 115 28 37 50 25 11 49 33 29 23 'si' 14 21 20 23 11 53 32 28 142 122 32 38 50 23 12 50 25 32 24 '38' 11 15 20 19 11 28 33 18 15 18 52 26 13 49 7 12 15 23 9 30 21 58 12 10 33 12 5 Point Hope.. '^04 49 9 Bethel . . . 114 186 273 25 7 49 19 7 Carmel Kossriffsky.. Nulato 9 50 9 10 51 9 10 51 10 TJnalaska Cape Prince of Wales... Metlakahtla . 195 179 176 43 304 172 28 47 97 25 19 49 33 119 130 29 35 84 35 222 151 32 103 99 36 183 143 33 79 89 39 200 143 30 169 78 39 237 82 36 181 41 37 211 67 31 163 44 38 196 72 27 123 42 34 211 65 27 143 32 EDUCATION IN ALASKA. 935 Table 2. — Xumher in sundry hranvhes of atudij. Schools. Public day. Sitka— Ko. 1 . . No. 2 . . Juneiui — No. 1 . . No. 2 . . Douglas — No. 1 . . No. 2 . . Killisnoo. . Wrangel.. Jacksou — Klawack.. Kadiak .-. Karluk ... Albgnak . . Contract. Anvik Point Hope Metlakahtla Bethel Carmel , Hoouab. Sitka Point Barrow , Unalaska Kosoviffsky and Nulato Capo Prince of Wales.. M'»5 30 16 50 116 27 50 40 24 16 116 ■"2' m 40 24 23 16 45 10 69 39 45 56 32 30 24 4 151 27 13 32 10 32 32 32 '237' 39 "237 39 237' Table No. 3. — Highest enrollment, 1885-1891. Public schools. A f ognak Douglas City — No.l N0.2 Fort Wrangel Haines J ackaon - Jnneau — No.] N0.2 Kadiak Karluk Killisnoo Klawaek Sitka— No.l No. 2 Unga Contract schools. Sitka Bethel' Carmel Nulato Kosorififdky Anvik Metlakahtla Hoonah Point I?arrow Cape Priucc of Wales Unalaska Point Hope Enrollment. 1885-86. (a) (a) (a) (a) (a) (a) (a) (a) (a) 1886-87. 1887-88. (a) (a) 106 43 123 (a) (a) 125 184 60 138 35 100 13 24 («) 106 144 110 (a) 186 17 21 (a) 90 128 105 36 58 (a) (a) 170 26 20 (a) (a) 164 39 31 1890-91. (a) (a) 164 30 18 30 106 29 35 179 51 44 171 171 38 304 47 64 a No school. 936 EDUCATION REPORT, 1890-91 Table 4. — Amounis contributed hij the clnnxlies and Government to the contract schools. Contract schools. Anvik Point Hope Metlakahtla Bethel Carmel Hoonah Sitka Industrial School Point Barrow , Unalaska Nulato Kosorift'sky Cape Vancouver Cape Prince of "Wales TJnalaklik Pupils, 1890-91. Board- ers. 164 "ie "si Day. 38 64 164 31 304 47 Expended by Government. 1887-88. 1888-89. 1889-90. 1890-91. $500 («) («.) 500 300 («) (a) (a) (a) (a) (a) (a) W (a) $1, 000 («) 2,500 ],000 1,000 (.a) 12, 500 (a) (a) (a) [a) (a) (a) (a) $1,000 :$i,ooo^ 1,000 j 2,000 5 3,000 1,000 1,000 (a) 18, 000 1,000 1,200 1, 500? 1, 500^ (a) 1,000 (a) 3,000 1,000 1,000 2001 15, 000 2,000 2,000 3, 000 ( (a) ! 2 000 (a) Expended by societies, b 1890-91. Name. Episcopal .". Independent Moravian Presbyterian Methodist Catholic Congregational . . Sweaisli-Evangel ical. Amount. $661. 81 5, 000. 00 5, 475. 84 37, 118. 69 1, 953. 53 9, 499. 03 7, 400. 39 7, 325. 00 a No school or no subsidy. 6 Amounts expended by missionary associations, in addition to subsidies received from the Govern- ment. PERSONNEL, SALARIES, ETC. General agent of education for Alaska, Dr. Sheldon Jackson, Alaska, $1,200; as- sistant agent of education for Alaska, William Hamilton, Pennsylvania, $1,200; su- perintendent of schools for the southeastern district, James Sheakly, Pennsylvania, $480. ADVISORY BOARD. Hon. Lyman E. Knapp, governor of Alaska, Vermont, $200; Hon. John S. Bughee, United States district judge, California, $200. LOCAL SCHOOL COMMITTEES (WITHOUT SALARY). Sitka, Edward de Groflf, N. K. Peckinpaugh, John G. Brady; Juneau, Karl Koehler, John G. Heid, Eugene S. Willard; Douglas, P. H. Fox, G. E. Shotter, S. R. Moon; Wrangle, W. G. Thomas, W. Millmore, Allan Mackay; Jackson, James W. Young, W. D. McLeod, G. Loomis Gould ; Metlakahtla, David J. Leask, Dr. W. Bluett, Wil- liam Duncan ; Kadiak, N. Kashavaroif ; Unga, N. Guttridge, John Catou, Edward Cashel; Unalaska, N.B.Anthony. Teachers of puMic schools. Name. State. School. Salary. $720 1,000 900 "N" "P'-inHnrff Karluk 1,000 900 720 Mrs C G McLeod 900 Sitka, No. 1 900 1,200 900 Mrs Seth Tozer 720 Unalaska 1,000 Ohio 1,000 Mrs L Vanderbilt Sitka No. 2 720 EDUCATION IN ALASKA. . 937 TEACHERS AND EMPLOYl5s IN CONTHACT SCnOOLS. Anvik (Episcopal). — Rev. John AV. Chapman, Vermont; Kov. O. Parker, Oregon. Point Hope (Ei>iscopal). — .lohu B. Driggs, m.d., Delaware. Kosoiiffsky (Konian Catholic). — Kev. Paschal Tosi, Sister Mary Stephen, Sister Mary Joseph, John Burke, John Nagro, Mrs. Emma Bandouiu, Sister Mary Paulina. Cape Vancouver (Homan Catholic). — Rev. Joseph Treca, Rev. Paul Muset, Mr. John Rosati. Nnlato (Roman Catholic). — Rev. Rohant, Rev. Ragaru. Bethel (Moravian). — Rev. John H. Kilbuck, Rev. Ernst L. "Weber, Mrs. John H. Kilbuck, Mrs. E. L. Weber, Miss Lydia l>ebus. Carmel (Moravian). — Rev. F. E. Wolff, Mrs. F. E. W^olfif, Miss Mary Huber, Miss Emma Hnber, Rev. J. A. Schoechert. Cape Prince of Wales (Congregational). — Mr. H. R.Thornton, of Virginia; Mr. W. T. Lopp, of Indiana. Point Barrow (Presbyterian). — Mr. Leander M. Stevenson, of Ohio. Sitka (Presbyterian)! — W. A. Kelly, principal; Rev. E. A. Austin, chaplain; Miss Anna R. Kelsey, matron of girls' department; Mrs. E. A. Austin, matron of boys' department; Mrs. S. A. Saxman, assistant matron of boys' department; Mrs. M. C. De Vore, teacher of schoolroom No. 2; Mrs. Clarence Thvving, teacher of schoolroom No. 1; Miss Frances Willard (native) primary teacher; Miss Mate Brady, in charge of sewing department; Mrs. Maggie Simson, in charge of laundry department; Miss Kate A. Rankin, in charge of cooking department; Mi'S. Josie Overend, in charge of girls' hospital; Mrs. Tillie Paul (native), in charge of boys' hospital; Miss Georgie Guest, in charge of teachers' cooking department; Mr. .J. A. Shields, carpentry dejiartmeut; Mr. A. T. Simson, boot and shoe department; Mr. Ernest Strnven, cooper department; Mr. .John (iamble, general work; Dr. Clarence Thwing, physi- ciau; William Wells (native) interpreter. IJnalaska (Methodist). — Mr. John A. Tuck, Mrs. John A. Tuck, and Miss Lydia F. Richardson. Metlakahtla: Mr. William Duncan, Mr. James F. McKee, Mrs. James F. McKee. TEACHERS IN PRIVATE AND CHURCH SCHOOLS. Unalalaklik (Swedish Evangelical): Rev. Axel E. Karlson, Augustus Anderson, David Johnson, Miss Hannah Sweuson. Yakutat (Swedish Evangelical) : Rev. Albert Johnson, Rev. K. J. Henrickson, Miss Anna Carlson, Selma I'eterson. Agnes Wallin. Hoonah (Presbyterian) : Rev. John W. McFarland, Mrs. M. D. McFarland, Fred- eric L. Moore (native). Juneau (Presbyterian): Rev. Eugene S. Willard, Mrs. E. S. Willard, Miss Eliza- beth Matthews, Miss Margaret Dunbar, Rev. S. H. King, Mrs. S. H. King. Juneau (Roman Catholic) : Rev. John Althoft", Sister Mary Zeno, Sister iSIary Peter, Sister Mary Bousecouer. Jackson (Presbyterian) : Mrs. A. R. McFarland, Miss C. A. Baker, Rev. J. Loomis Gould, Mrs. J. L. Gould. Douglas (Friends) : Mr. S. R. Moon, Mrs. S. R. Moon, Mr. E. W. W^eesner, Mrs. E. W. AVeesner, Mr. C. H. Edwards. St. Paul Island (North American Commercial Company) : Simeon Milevedoff. St. George Island (North American Connnercial Company) : A. L. Noyes, m. d. Nuklukahyet Yukon River (Church of England) : Rev. and Mrs. T. H. Canham. Buxton, Yukon River (Church of England) : Rev. J. W. Ellington. Rampart House, Yukon River (Church of England) : Rev. C. G. Wallis. SCHOOL BUILDING. During the year a small cheap schoolhouse was erected at the Kake village on Kupreanof Island. EDUCATION OF ALASKAN CHILDREN IN THE EAST. The Alaskans at eastern schools are distributed as follows : Edward Marsden (Tsimpsean), Marietta College, Ohio; William S. Fredericks (American) and George Fredericks (American), Middleburg, Vt. ; Frederick Harris' (Thlinget), Henry Philips (Thlinget), David Skuviuk (Eskimo), and George Nocoohluke (Eskimo), Indian Scho(d, Carlisle, Pa.; Shawan Sheshdaiik (Thlinget), Educational Home, Philadelphia, Pa.; Mattie Salamatoft' (Aleut), Nornyil, San Jose, Cal. ; Olga Hilton > Trederick Harris died at Carlisle, June 10, 1890. 938 EDUCATION REPORT, 1890-91. 9 (Russian), Young Ladies' Seminary, Northfield, Mass. ; Florence Wells (TMinget), Young Ladies' Seminary, Northtield, Mass.; Flora Campbell (Thlinget), Young Ladies Seminary, Northiield, Mass. ; Bluuelie Lewis (Tlilinget), Young Ladies' Sem- inary, North Held, Mass. Of Henry Philips, Capt. R. H. Pratt, of the Carlisle School, writes : " I have had Henry Philips for nearly a year in a machine shop in the town of Carlisle, where he has made most wonderful progress in his knowledge of machinery. He is bound up in it, far more interested in it than he was in the printing rooms. There is very little about an engine that he cannot now attend to. Moreover, he has become a very strong, sensible boy. His brain power has developed wonder- fully, and he is, I believe, a sincere Christian, and leads the students in that feature of our school work. Now, I have not talked with him on the subject of yonr letter. The opportunity for him to go into this work came through his Sunday School teacher, who is the head of one of our firms in the town of Carlisle. It came natu- rally, and its worth has been fully established. I believe that Henry may go back to Alaska, able to go into any of their great mining machinery departments, or he may tind profitable employment in the country at large. SUPERVISION. In accordance with your directions, I left Washington on the 19th of May, reach- ing Port Towusend on the 25th. Immediately going on board the U. S. S. Bear, I was assigned quarters in the captain's cabin. From May 24 to 291 was very busy securing barter goods for the purchase of reindeer and supplies for the schools at Cape Prince of Wales and Point Barrow. At Port Towusend, Mr. J. P.Russell and party, of the U. S. Bureau of Ethnology, were received on board for transportation to the base of Monnt St. Elias. At 4 a. m. on the 30th of May anchor was weighed and we left for the north. On the 4th of June we caught our first glimpse of Mount St. Elias, one hundred and forty miles away. We coasted all day along the Fair-weather range of mountains, covered with snow and large glaciers. We also passed a number of sealing vessels. At 11.45 p. m. dropped anchor on the south side of Fort Mulgrave, and were soon after visited by Mr. Henrickson, one of the Swedish missionaries at that place. On June 5, immediately after breakfast, I went ashore and inspected the school and mission station. The teachers in charge were Rev. K. J. Henrickson and Rev. and Mrs. Albin Johnson. I found the missionaries living in a small one and a half story house (20 by 30 feet) of four rooms on the ground tioor. Into this house they had taken eight boys and six girls as lodgers. During the past winter they reported 250 people in attendance at church and 60 children at school. They have erected and inclosed a complete and substantial frame building (35 by 45 feet), two and a half stories high. The schoolroom is so far finished as to be occupied. With very great labor they have cleared two or three acres of laud and planted them with pota- toes and turnips. Commencing with July 1, 1891, this will be made one of the contract schools of the Government. From the mission we Avent througli the native village; then, tak- ing a boat, we crossed the bay in a driving rain and visited the old village, return- ing to the ship for lunch. In the afternoon I again went ashore, when the school children were called together and examined by myself. In the neighborhood of Yakatat are coal measures, and along the beach a black sand bearing gold. On the 6th of June we weighed anchor at 2 :40 a. m. and at 9 :25 a. m. dropped anchor off Guyot Glacier, Icy Bay. At 9 for a short time Mount St. Elias emerged from the clouds and stood revealed before its from base to top in all its majesty. It was a sight never to be forgotten. The whole distance from Yakatat to Icy Bay we skirted the base of Mount St. Elias and the gigantic glaciers that occupy the coast line. Upon dropping anchor Lieut. Jarvis was sent asliore to see if a landing could be made through the surf in safety. He reported favorably ; preparations were at once made to land the exploring party and their supplies. At 10 o'clock Lieut. Jarvis led the way, in charge of the second cutter, with a load of supplies. Fifteen minutes later he was followed by the third cutter, in charge of Lieut. L. L. Robinson, with James Haisler, cockswain, W.J.Wright, H. Smith, T. F. Anderson, and A.Nelson, seamen, and W. C. Moore, of Prof. Russell's party. This boat capsized just before entering the breakers and all the occupants were drowned except seaman Wright. At 10:30 the first cutter of Lieut. Broadbent was sent in, biit before reaching the breakers, seeing tho fate of the other boat, was recalled to the ship. The balance of the day was spent in uncertainty as to the fate of the crew in the wrecked boat. First, Lieut. McConnel was sent in shore as close as the breakers would allow, but was unable to secure information. The next morning Lieuts. McConnel and Broadbent were sent to the edge of the breakers to endeavor to open communication with Lieut. Jarvis on shore. They tlicn returned, reporting the loss. Lieut. Jarvis was then signaled to bury the body of seaman Anderson, and, when he EDUCATION IN ALASKA. 939 conld safely do so, embark and return aboard with the body of Lieut. Robinson, the only bodies that were recovered at the date of sailinj;-. At slack water, hij.'.U tide, Lieut. Jarvis and men returned to the ahij), brinj;in