The most well known type of
art made by Alaska Natives is the totem pole. No
Alaska vacation is complete without seeing a few.
Carver Nathan Jackson (the most famous carver in
the world) works at the Saxman Carving Shed in
Saxman, two miles south of Ketchikan. You can see
him work there most days during the summer.
Alaska Natives
The Real Alaska Natives
Alaska Natives have varied cultures and
have adapted to harsh enviroments for
thousands of years. They are as far north
as
Barrow and as far south as
Ketchikan.
Native History before Statehood:
In the early spring of 1942, when the Army Corps of Engineers arrived to begin building the Alaska Highway, Alaska's population was approximately 73,000. About half of those residents were Native Alaskans, members of indigenous groups who inhabited Alaska before it was colonized by Russia. Native Alaskans are divided into three broad groups: the Aleuts, the Inuit, and the many different Indian tribes.
Aleuts -
The Aleuts, who call themselves Unangan, lived in the Aleutian Islands off the coast of mainland Alaska. St. Paul Island, Alaska. Native barabara and Aleut boy. (Alaska Investigations-1914), 1914 Some anthropologists believe their ancestors migrated to the Aleutians 7,000 years ago. Aleuts had both permanent and seasonal homes. Permanent Aleutian villages consisted of underground homes mainly located on the northern coasts of the islands that faced the Bering Sea, due to the abundance of resources on that side. Aleutian culture is based heavily on the sea. They are famous fishers and hunters, and are known for their basketry.
Inuit -
The Aleuts lived on ice-free waters, but the Inuit (who are also known as the Eskimo) were surrounded by the icy northern seas of Western Alaska. As a result, the Inuit were more mobile that the Aleuts. One distinguishing feature of the Inuit Eskimo, family, in Alaska was their near total dependence on the sea. Their food, clothing, furnishing for their homes, and fuel all came from the marine life that they hunted, such as whales and seals.
First Nations -
The third group of Native Alaskans consisted of several Indian tribes (also known as First Nations). Two of the larger groups were the Tlingit and Haida, who resided in the southeastern inland region of Alaska. While these groups were adept at fishing, they were also known for their mountaineering skills. Haida Skolka's totem pole, Howkan village, Long Island, Alaska, ca. 1923. They were famed for their totem poles and their potlatches, gatherings of friends and family to celebrate important milestones in an individual's life, such as a first hunt or a funeral. Both of these tribes were seasonally mobile hunter gatherers with their own distinguishing features, most prominently linguistic ones.
Illnesses -
The influx of civilians and military personnel into Alaska had a devastating effect on the Native Alaskans, who had already suffered a negative impact. In the century of Russian and American colonization prior to World War II, contact with outsiders had subjected Native Alaskans to diseases for which they lacked immunity, including meningitis, influenza, chicken pox and whooping cough.
Incursions -
Two Tlingit girls, Tsacotna and Natsanitna, wearing noserings, near Cooper River, Alaska, 1903With the newcomers' arrival, Native Alaskans' whole way of living became endangered. Highway-building made travel and access much easier within Alaska. During their recreation time, the Army engineers would go fishing, or go hunting with their military-issued guns, for which they otherwise had little use. Along the narrow corridor of the highway, the outsiders depleted the natural resources on which the Native Alaskans depended for subsistence.
Dwindling Minority -
As a result of disease, cultural confusion and the growing number of whites, the percentage of Native Alaskans in the general Alaskan population plummeted from 45 percent in 1940 to 26 percent in 1950 to 19 percent at the time of statehood in 1959. The highway construction led to a new era for the original Alaskans.
A World Ended - Historian Ken Coates described the effect of the Alaska Highway on the area's native population: "Construction projects transformed aboriginal life in the northwest very quickly and very profoundly. There was only occasional work to be found, they didn't hire very many aboriginal people to work. The women got involved selling handicrafts and doing some domestic work... There were a lot of attacks on aboriginal people, some rapes of native women, for example. A lot of misuse of alcohol with aboriginal people. So, a world had ended. A lifestyle that had been in place in many ways for centuries, but certainly since the arrival of the fur traders in the middle of the 19th century. It's a hundred years of fishing, and trapping, and sort of casual engagement with the market economy, poof, gone. Overnight."
Revitalization
Today, Alaska Natives account for just over 15 percent of the total Alaskan population of approximately 648,000 people. Since the 1960s and 1970s, aboriginal autonomy has rebounded in Alaska. The Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act of 1971 officially ended native land ownership claims while creating regional corporations that administered approximately one-ninth of Alaskan territory; the shareholders of the corporations are the native peoples. The legal battles for rights to their ancestral land began a revitalization of native society that is evident today.
Inuit
(Eskimo):
Inuit are a people who live near the
Arctic. Their homeland stretches from the
northeastern tip of Russia across Alaska
and northern Canada to parts of
Greenland. Inuit refers to the people
formerly called Eskimos. The term Eskimo
comes from a Native American word that
may have meant 'eater of raw meat'. They
prefer the name Inuit, which means 'the
people' or 'real people' and comes from a
language called Inuit-Inupiaq.
As the Inuit spread
eastward, they modified their way of life
to suit the Arctic environments they
encountered. They caught fish and hunted
seals, walruses and whales. On land, they
hunted caribou, musk oxen, polar bear and
other small animals. They used animal
skins to make tents and clothes. They
crafted tools and weapons from the
animals' bones, antlers, horns and teeth.
In summer, they traveled in boats covered
with animal skin, called kayaks and in
winter, on sleds pulled by dogteams. Most
Inuit lived in tents in the summer and in
large sod houses during the winter. When
traveling in search of game in winter,
they built snowhouses (igloos).
Inupiat:
The Inupiat have inhabited the harsh
arctic enviroment for more than 10,000
years. The ancestral Inupiat crossed the
Bering Land Bridge from Siberia. Some of
the early migrants continued their
journeys to the east and south. Those who
remained in the region gradually
established camps, small villages and
trading routes. They are skilled hunters
and gatherers an subsist on whale, fish,
caribou and moose. Their diet is
supplemented with berry and root plants
native to the region.
Aleuts:
The Aleuts are the native inhabitants of
the present Aleutian islands stretching
for about a thousand miles southwestward
from the Alaskan mainland. Primarily a
sea-going people, the Aleuts were adept
at harvesting resources of the sea (sea
lion, seals, whales, and fish) in their
skin-covered boats as well as those of
the land (birds, eggs, and plants). Yup'ik:
The Yup'ik people live mainly in the
coastal watersheds of the Yukon and the
Kuskokwim Rivers both of which flow
westward through
Southwest Alaska and
drain into the Bering Sea.
Athapaskans:
Having continuously inhabited the land
for several thousand years, Athapaskan
society exemplifies how humans can
maintain a sustainable coexistence with
their environment. Subsisting on the rich
natural resources provided by the
northern boreal forest, they have
developed a deep respect for both the
land and its animals.
Tlingit:
The origin of the Tlingit people is not
certain. It is possible the people came
from the coast of Asia and Japan
migrating north and east across the
Aleutians and Gulf of Alaska into
Southeast Alaska. Art forms and physical
features of the Tlingit are similar to
some Pacific groups.
• Southeast Alaska provided an
idyllic setting for the villages and
contained abundant local resources. The
forests supplied shelter, game and wild
berries while the ocean was a storehouse
of fish and sea mammals. In contrast to
the Arctic peoples of Alaska, the
Tlingits spent relatively little time
surviving and were able to become traders
and craftsmen.
Haida:
The original homeland of the Haida people
is the Queen Charlotte Islands in British
Columbia, Canada. Prior to contact with
Europeans, a group migrated north to the
Prince of Wales Island area within
Alaska. This group is known as the
"Kaigani" or Alaska Haidas. Today, the
Kaigani Haida live mainly in two
villages, Kasaan and the consolidated
village of Hydaburg.
• Before the Haida came in contact
with Europeans, most Haida wore clothes
made of woven red or yellow cedar bark.
Women wore skirts and capes and men wore
long capes.
• The Haida's main food sources
were the salmon and eulachon fish. The
eulachon was highly prized because,
besides being good to eat, its oil could
be used for lighting lamps.