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SEWARD'S DAY MARCH 30:
Celebrating the Alaska Purchase
By June Allen

 

March 21, 2003
Friday - 11:00 pm


It was at the end of March 1867 that the sale of Russia's possessions on the far northwest shoulder of North America was negotiated. It was a curious transaction in that the sellers didn't particularly want to sell and the buyers were not all that interested in purchasing such a huge, seemingly worthless chunk of real estate. And even at the successful end of the negotiations between representatives of the two nations, the United States Senate

Portrait of Secretary of State William H. Seward, officer of the United States government. Created 1860 - 1865. Civil War photographs / compiled by Hirst D. Milhollen and Donald H. Mugridge, Forms part of Selected Civil War photographs, 1861-1865. Photo courtesy Library of Congress
approved the purchase of Alaska by only a single vote! It was the popular and powerful Senator Charles Sumner of Massachusetts who eased the passage of the treaty allowing the sale - and who also suggested that the nameless frozen properties in the North Pacific be named "Alaska."

It was two years after the close of the War Between the States and the assassination of President Abraham Lincoln that the Purchase of Alaska was engineered. At the time, Washington D.C. was a springtime quagmire of muddy and rutted, manure-fouled streets. Men carried side arms and spat tobacco juice. The seemingly lawless nation's capital still wore the in-progress look of a "created" community, the progress halted by the empty coffers of a country devastated by a long and costly civil war.

The two men who engineered the Alaska Purchase, U.S. Secretary of State William Henry Seward and Russian diplomat Edouard de Stoeckl - couldn't have been more different.

William Henry Seward had been Secretary of State under President Lincoln - against whom he ran unsuccessfully for the presidential nomination in 1860. After Lincoln's assassination, Seward remained as Secretary of State under President Andrew Johnson.

Seward was born to a wealthy family in New York state, became a lawyer like his judge father, and entered politics at a young age, becoming a two-term governor of New York before he exercised his presidential ambitions. As Lincoln's "right hand," he was said to have been an effective secretary of state.

Seward's most notable physical characteristic was his large "noble" nose, which he himself may have considered handsome. A proud and full profile photograph of him hangs in the Seward, Alaska, museum. In life, his nose definitely preceded him! He had a distinctive upper lip, an abundant head of hair, a passionate nature for causes, and a fierce determination.

His face carried the scars of an assassin's attack from the evening of April 14, 1865, when Abraham Lincoln was killed at Ford's Theater. Lincoln's assassination by renowned actor John Wilkes Booth was not a solo act but was a part of a much larger plot to kill the president, the Vice-President, the Secretary of State, the Secretary of War and perhaps others. However, some of the assigned assassins were less determined or trustworthy than others. The vice-president's assigned assassin got drunk to screw up his courage and passed out before he could act. The spared war secretary's potential assassin was never identified, a fact that fueled rumors that perhaps it was the Secretary of War himself who sponsored the deadly plans!

Seward was the only other target actually attacked in the assassination web. Seward had been rather seriously injured in a carriage traffic accident some days before and was lying in bed in the second story bedroom of his home on the evening of April 14. His attacker, one Lewis Paine (identified by other but similar names in several sources) arrived by horseback on the pretense of delivering medicine. Once in Seward's bedroom he brandished his pistol and pulled the trigger! But the gun misfired! Panicked, Paine pulled a knife and slashed at the bedridden Secretary of State. Seward's adult son, however, had heard the commotion, rushed into the room and pulled the attacker away. Paine clattered down the stairs and rode away - into a noose and a shameful historical footnote.

Two years later in 1867, at the time of the Alaska Purchase, the nation was caught up in the Go West Young Man fever of American expansion and the certainty of Manifest Destiny - the belief that the United States would one day stretch from the Atlantic to the Pacific shores. On March 1 of 1867 Nebraska was admitted to the Union as the 37th state. To come in the years following the Alaska Purchase were the states of Colorado, South and North Dakota, Montana, Washington, Idaho, Wyoming, Utah, Okalahoma, New Mexico, Arizona and, finally, in 1959, Alaska and Hawaii.

Seward, in negotiating the Purchase of Alaska, was working on a tight congressional schedule as well as a personal time crunch. The U.S. Senate was set to adjourn on Saturday, March 30, 1867. To Seward, his personal efforts toward the Purchase of Alaska were "now or never." The ambitious secretary of state had a dream even larger than Manifest Destiny - and there were Americans who joined him in his belief about the future of the United States. It was this: that the United States was destined to eventually occupy all of the North American continent above Mexico.

Canada was at that moment in 1867 deciding whether of not to initiate Consolidation.

If it did so, Canada would forever be connected to Mother England, and the U.S. would never be able to acquire that vast northern territory. But, if Consolidation failed and the U.S. acquired Canada, then to finalize the grand scheme, Alaska would be the "icing" on

Tongass Village, Alaska; Lincoln pole (middle) and Seward pole (far right). Tongass Village. Photograph by S. Riley, n.d. In Forest Service file of pictures taken 1919-1921.
Courtesy Library of Congress
the tasty cake of North America! So - to Seward - the Russian possession's immediate purchase was essential! He sharpened his pens and his wits in approaching his session with the Russian negotiator.

Russia had entrusted the sale of its Russian-American lands to a member of its diplomatic corps, a dapper little gentleman named Edouard de Stoeckl, a man quite familiar with Americans and their culture after 25-some years as one of czarist Russia's most able representatives. The handsome and cultured de Stoeckl, a man of rather vague nationality, antecedents and titles - he fancied himself a baron - had married an American heiress and was quite ready to leave bumptious and muddy D.C. for the refinements and dancing slippers of gay Paris.

His mother country was divided on the issue of the sale of their North American lands. But it was the Czar who made the decision and he favored the sale - if the sale price was high enough. So de Stoeckl was charged with the sale, with a preferred sale price of no less than $5 million.

Russia had reason to sell Alaska. The bottom of the fur market had long since bottomed out and an otter pelt no longer commanded high prices on the Chinese market. And, in spite of strict Russian conservation demands, the sea otter populations had dwindled. Fur seal pelts from the Pribilofs still were profitable but it was not enough to justify the costs of manning and supplying Russia's American colonies. Agricultural attempts in the new lands had failed miserably from the start - imported Russian peasants were not happy in the primitive forests of Alaska or with its indigenous peoples. More importantly, Russia too believed that Manifest Destiny would drive Americans to the shores of the Pacific - and then north to Alaska!

A nervous de Stoeckl had finally been given the go-ahead for the sale in December of 1866. On short notice - just three months - he and his aides and secretaries found themselves closeted with Secretary of State Seward and his people on the night of Friday, March 29, 1867. The bargaining began in earnest! The Russian haggled the price up to $7,200,000, at which point Seward seemed reluctant to go any higher. Under the hiss of gaslights and billowing clouds of cigar smoke the two men wrote out provisions of a sale agreement. They argued and negotiated until four o'clock in the morning of Saturday, March 30.

Groggy but determined, that day, the final day before adjournment, Seward took his signed sale agreement to the U.S. Senate. Seward was no longer popular in the halls of Congress. His reception in the Senate was less than lukewarm. Few of the senators knew anything, or cared, about Alaska - it wasn't even contiguous to any existing U.S. territories!

We all know the names Alaska was called at the time: Seward's Ice Box, Seward's Folly, Walrussia, and worse. But maybe the senators were anxious to get on the road for adjournment, because after several votes, the Purchase of Alaska was a reality - by that one vote. What wasn't a reality was the promise of payment. It took Russia quite awhile to get its money, but eventually did. In the meantime, de Stoeckl and his bride moved to Paris for a comfortable retirement of French wine, French manners and Parisian entertainment.

William Henry Seward took a voyage to Alaska the following year, 1868, to see what his efforts had provided. His first stop was at Tongass Village at the mouth of Portland Canal. A totem pole was carved to commemorate his visit, a totem pole now defined as a shame pole, allegedly because he failed to provide gifts for a potlatch thrown in his honor. Maybe, maybe not. He returned to New York where he died in 1872.

But, on March 30 of 2003, now 136 years after that memorable all-night session drafting the sale of Alaska to the United States of America, we Alaskans can say, "THANK YOU, WILLIAM HENRY SEWARD!"

 

 

 

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Copyright © 2003 June Allen
All rights reserved.
Not to be reprinted in any form without the written permission of June Allen.

 

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