
Alexandr Baranov not only played an active role in the Russian-American Company, but he was also the first
governor of Russian Alaska.
'Alexandr Andreevich Baranov' (Александр Андреевич Баранов in
Russian), sometimes spelled 'Aleksander' or 'Alexander' and 'Baranof', was born in
1746 in
Kargopol, in the
Arkhangelsk province of
Russia.
Alexandr ran away from home at the age of fifteen. He became a successful merchant in
Irkutsk,
Siberia. He was lured to
Russian Alaska, by the growing fur trade there. He became a successful trader there and established and managed
trading posts in the
Kodiak Island region.
From
1799 to
1818, through
Nikolai Rezanov's interference, he became chief manager for the influential
Russian-American Company. He managed all of the company's interests in Alaska, including the
Aleutian and
Kuril Islands. Activity in the region flourished as trading in
sea otters and
seals boomed. Baranov convinced native hunters to expand their range to include the coasts of
California. Baranov also advocated more educational opportunities for native Alaskans. Under his leadership, schools were created and frontier communities became less isolated.
During Baranov's rule,
Russian Orthodox missionaries operated in Russian America. Many of them denounced the cruelty and exploitation of the native people by the Russian fur traders. Baranov had a stormy relationship with the missionaries, who often proselytized and helped the natives secretly.
Near the end of his life, Baranov embarked on a journey to return to Russia. He sailed to Russia by heading south and then sailing around the
Cape of Good Hope. Baranov became very ill on the journey and died in the Dutch settlement of
Batavia, in
Java, then part of the
Dutch East Indies (now Indonesia), in
1819.