Angoon bombardment

Coordinates: 57°29′49″N 134°34′25″W / 57.49694°N 134.57361°W / 57.49694; -134.57361
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Angoon Bombardment
Part of Department of Alaska

USRC Thomas Corwin
Date26 October 1882
Location57°29′49″N 134°34′25″W / 57.49694°N 134.57361°W / 57.49694; -134.57361
Result Destruction of Angoon
Belligerents
Commanders and leaders
Edgar C. Merriman
Michael A. Healy
Units involved
USRC Thomas Corwin, detachment from USS Adams, marines. Tlingit villagers
Strength
1 cutter, 1 tug, 1 howitzer, 1 Gatling gun, company of marines one village
Casualties and losses
none Six children killed in bombardment
An undetermined number of starvation deaths due to loss of winter supplies
Angoon, Alaska is located in Alaska
Angoon, Alaska
Angoon, Alaska
Location within Alaska

The Angoon Bombardment was the destruction of the Tlingit village of Angoon, Alaska, by US Naval forces under Commander Edgar C. Merriman and Michael A. Healy in October 1882.

A Tlingit shaman was accidentally killed while working on a whaling ship. Tlingit villagers demanded two hundred blankets in compensation from the North West Trading Company. The Tlingit allegedly took two hostages to secure the compensation, and the US Navy went to Angoon to rescue them. The hostages were released upon the arrival of the naval expedition. Commander Merriman demanded four hundred blankets from the Tlingit in tribute. When the Tlingit delivered just eighty-one blankets, Merriman's forces destroyed the village.

Public reaction to the bombardment was instrumental to the passage of the First Organic Act of 1884 which transferred Alaska from military to civilian control.

Background[edit]

Following the Alaska Purchase, the United States Army came to Alaska to serve as the civil administering entity of the Department of Alaska. Administration of the department was transferred to the United States Navy in 1879. The U.S. authorities used common law, while the Tlingit people used indigenous law. Americans generally characterized the Tlingit legal framework as based on "revenge"; in actuality it was more complex and involved "peace ceremonies" which included compensation in either goods or human lives.[1]

In 1869, two major conflicts took place between the army and Tlingit groups following retribution killings by the Tlingit against whites:

  1. In the February 1869 Kake War, three deserted villages and two forts were destroyed near present-day Kake, Alaska by the USS Saginaw. Prior to the conflict, two white trappers were killed by the Kake in retribution for the death of two Kake departing Sitka village in a canoe. Sitka was the site of a standoff between the Army and Tlingit due to the army demanding the surrender of chief Colchika who was involved in an altercation in Fort Sitka.[2]
  2. In the December 1869 Wrangell Bombardment the Stikine village of Old Wrangell was bombarded by the United States Army. The army issued an ultimatum to the villagers, demanding they deliver a Stikine named Scutd-doo to justice following the retribution murder of Leon Smith by Scutd-doo. Scutd-doo's son, Lowan, had earlier been killed by soldiers following an altercation in which he bit off the finger of the wife of the quartermaster of Fort Wrangell. Following a two-day bombardment of the village and return musket fire by Stikine skirmishers, Scutd-doo was handed over to the army, court-martialed, and in the first application of the death penalty in Alaska under US rule, was hung before the garrison and Stikine villagers.[3]

In 1878, the North West Trading Company established a trading post and fish processing plan at Killisnoo, Alaska, near Angoon, Alaska.[4]

Events leading to the bombardment[edit]

On 22 October 1882, a harpoon gun exploded on the deck of a whaling ship operated by the Northwest Trading Company. Several crew members were injured, and a Tlingit shaman by the name of Til'tlein[a] was killed. The day after his death J.M. Vanderbilt, superintendent of the company station at Killisnoo, reported to the navy station in Sitka. He stated Angoon natives had taken the Killisnoo facilities, including holding two white employees, and demanded a payment of 200 blankets in compensation for the death of Til'tlein.[5][6][7]

Disputed claims[edit]

In 1949 and 1950, anthropologist Frederica de Laguna collected the story of Billy Jones, an Angoon resident who was 13 at the time of the attack. According to his account, villagers did not have warning of the coming of the American Ship, and every structure was destroyed. Angoon elders have stated that Jones's account should be the basis of the Angoon story.[6] Tlingit oral tradition, disputes that there were white hostages involved.[8] In the '70s, the Tlingit and Haida Central Council hired anthropologist Philip Drucker to research the case. Drucker noted that in the official documents, despite the captive white men being the primary mission that brought the ships to Angoon, neither Merriman or Morris "even mentions what should have been the climax of the expedition's achievements, the rescue of the white captives, if there actually was such a rescue."[6]

Navy expedition[edit]

As the USS Adams was thought to be too large to navigate in the shallow waters of the bay,[7] Merriman tendered the company tug Favorite and the USRC Thomas Corwin under the command of Michael A. Healy, upon which he placed a company of marines, a Gatling gun, and a howitzer.[9][5]

Merriman's force arrived at Angoon on 25 October, and the Tlingit released the white hostages and captured property.[7] Merriman, demanded four hundred blankets from the Tlingit as a "punishment and guarantee of future good behavior"[7] to be delivered by noon the next day.[5] The villagers were only able to collect 81 blankets for the tribute payment. Jones's account and official documents agree that Merriman brought his ship to anchor outside the lagoon, and proceeded to shell the town. Under the cover of the bombardment, marines landed and proceeded to destroy the houses of the village, forty canoes, and food stores. Naval records state a few houses survived,[7] Tlingit oral tradition holds that none did.[8] While most of the inhabitants survived after fleeing the village, six children died of smoke inhalation.[10][11][5][12]

Aftermath[edit]

An unknown number of Tlingit died during the winter due to the loss of winter supplies and shelter.[10]

In 1884, the First Organic Act placed Alaska under civilian control.[6] In the debate leading up to the act, Representative James Budd of California referenced Commander Merriman's role, stating "The Indians did not comply with this pre-emptory order of this royal dictator. I understand that they did not have the blankets. The commander of this United States vessel was a law unto himself, and in the morning he, a United States officer, judge, jury and sheriff, fulfilled his threat and shelled the Indian village."[8]

In 1973, the Indian Claims Commission awarded the Angoon clans $90,000 in compensation for clan property destroyed in 1882 value. Federal law limited the value of the compensation to the value of the physical damage done to the village without regard for inflation or interest.[6] $90,000 in 1882 is equivalent to $444,667 in 1973 when the award was paid out. The village of Angoon accepted the settlement from the government as a tacit acknowledgment that the Navy was wrong to shell Angoon.[6] There has been no official apology, and the Angoon Tlingit continue to press for an apology by the navy.[11] Governor of Alaska Jay Hammond declared the 100th anniversary as "Tlingit Remembrance Day".[12]

Beaver Canoe[edit]

The only canoe known to have survived the bombardment was away from the village at the time. The canoe was used extensively that winter for hunting, fishing, and gathering supplies. The canoe holds special importance, as many of the people who survived the ordeal would not have survived without it. When the canoe was no longer seaworthy, the vessel was ceremonially cremated, but the beaver carving from the prow was kept as a reminder. [13] Sometime around 1911, the beaver carving was lost. In 2011, a Tlingit delegation visiting the American Museum of Natural History discovered the carving in the museum's collection, with very little documentation as to how it got there. After the beaver's rediscovery, it was repatriated to Angoon.[14]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ Stikine names vary widely between sources, when named this name is given as Til'tlein, Teel' Tlein, or Tith Klane

References[edit]

  1. ^ Harring, Sidney L. "The Incorporation of Alaskan Natives Under American Law: United States and Tlingit Sovereignty, 1867-1900." Ariz. L. Rev. 31 (1989): 279.
  2. ^ ""Search for and destroy: US Army Relations with Alaska's Tlingit Indians and the Kake War of 1869,"". Archived from the original on 8 July 2018. Retrieved 28 December 2017.
  3. ^ The 1869 Bombardment of Ḵaachx̱an.áakʼw from Fort Wrangell: U.S. Army Response to Tlingit Law, Wrangell, Alaska (Washington DC: American Battlefield Preservation Program; Juneau, AK: Sealaska Heritage Institute, 2015). Part 1 Archived 19 October 2017 at the Wayback Machine, National Park Service, American Battlefield Protection Program, Zachary Jones
  4. ^ Herring Synthesis: Documenting and Modeling Herring Spawning Areas within Socio-Ecological Systems Over Time in the Southeastern Gulf of Alaska 2015-01-11.
  5. ^ a b c d Crow Dog's Case: American Indian Sovereignty, Tribal Law, and United States Law in the Nineteenth Century, Sidney L. Harring, pages 228-230
  6. ^ a b c d e f US Navy Bombed Angoon 125 Years Ago, Dave Kiffer, SitNews, 29 October 2007
  7. ^ a b c d e Alleged Shelling of Alaska Villages: Letter of the Secretary of the Treasury, 6 December 1882
  8. ^ a b c Worl, Rosita (November 2012). Tlingit Law, American Justice and the Destruction of Tlingit Villages (PDF) (Speech). Native American Heritage Month. Sealaska Heritage Institute. Retrieved 29 October 2021.
  9. ^ 1882 letter sheds light on Angoon tragedy Archived 24 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine, 12 August 1999, GENEVIEVE GAGNE-HAWES
  10. ^ a b The Tlingit Indians want a warship named the U.S.S Angoon, UPI, Elmer W. Lammi, 19 June 1982
  11. ^ a b Hoxie, Frederick E. (2016). The Oxford Handbook of American Indian History. Oxford University Press. pp. 307–8. ISBN 9780199858897. Retrieved 23 September 2021.
  12. ^ a b The Alaska Native Reader: History, Culture, Politics, Maria Sháa Tláa Williams, pages 144-150
  13. ^ Zeldovich, Lina (28 September 2017). "The American Museum of the Alive and Well". Hakai Magazine. Retrieved 30 October 2021.
  14. ^ "The Beaver Returns". American Museum of Natural History. American Museum of Natural History. Retrieved 30 October 2021.