'Russian colonization of the Americas' proceeded in several places.
Alaska
Main articles: Russian Alaska
Northern
Alaska was discovered by
Ivan Fedorov in
1732; the
Aleutian Islands, southern
Alaska and northwestern shores of
North America were discovered in
1741 during the Russian exploration conducted by
Vitus Bering and
Aleksei Chirikov. The first Russian
colony in Alaska was founded in
1784 by
Grigory Shelikhov. The
Russian-American Company was formed in
1799 by
Nikolay Rezanov for the purpose of hunting sea
otters for their fur. The peak population of the Russian colonies was about 40,000, although most of these were
Aleuts.
The colony was never very profitable, due to transportation costs. At the instigation of
Secretary of State William H. Seward, the
U.S. Senate approved the
purchase of Alaska from the
Russian Empire for 2 cents an acre, totaling $7,200,000 ($95,672,993 adjusted for inflation in 2006 dollars) on
April 9,
1867.
In modern
Russia and its predecessor, the
Soviet Union, there has been speculation in the mass media that Alaska was not sold, but merely leased to the U.S. for 99 or 150 years and has to be returned to Russia. However, the treaty itself is quite clear that it was a complete
cession. The speculation may be explained in part by the notion that after the
1917 revolution in Russia all secret tsarist international agreements were officially denounced and declared void by the new government.
A hundred-
pound bell was unearthed in an orange grove near
Mission San Fernando Rey de España, southern California, in
1920. It carried the following inscription, (translated from
Russian): "In the Year
1796, in the month of January, this bell was cast on the Island of Kodiak by the blessing of
Archimandrite Joaseph, during the sojourn of
Alexandr Baranov." It is not known how this
Russian Orthodox artifact from
Kodiak, Alaska, made its way to a
Roman Catholic mission in
Southern California, though its existence provides proof of the
Russian
diaspora on the
Pacific Rim and its intertwining with
Spanish and
Native American cultures.
The
Russian Orthodox Church Outside Russia and the
Orthodox Church in America can trace activities back to early Russian missionaries.
Herman of Alaska,
Saint Innocent of Alaska and
Peter the Aleut have contributed to the strong Orthodox community in Alaska.
A
series of commemorative coins was released in the
USSR in
1990 and
1991 to commemorate the 250th anniversary of the discovery of Russian America. It consisted of a
silver coin, a
platinum coin and two
palladium coins in each year.
Elsewhere in North America
Subsequently, Russian explorers and settlers continued to establish trading posts in Alaska, the Aleutian Islands,
British Columbia,
Washington,
Oregon and as far south as
Fort Ross in northern
California. Fort Ross, some 50 miles north of
San Francisco, was founded in 1812 and closed in 1841.
El Presidio Real de Sonoma, or ''Sonoma Barracks'', was established at
Sonoma, California in 1836 by
Mariano Guadalupe Vallejo (the "Commandante-General of the Northern Frontier of
Alta California") as a part of
Mexico's strategy to halt Russian incursions into the region.
In
1815, Dr. Schäffer, a Russian entrepreneur, went to
Kauai and negotiated a treaty of protection with the island's governor
Kaumualii, vassal of King
Kamehameha I of
Hawaii, but the Russian Tsar refused to ratify the treaty. See also
Orthodox Church in Hawaii and
Russian Fort Elizabeth[1].
See also
★
Grigory Shelikhov
★
Alexandr Baranov
★
Johan Hampus Furuhjelm
★
Nikolai Rezanov
★
Battle of Sitka
★
Saint Innocent of Alaska
★
Yevgeniy Tsvetov
★
Kseniya Galper
★
Russian American
External links
★
The Russian-American Treaty of 1867
★
The History of Orthodox Christianity in Hawaii