Everything Everywhere Daily: History, Science, Geography & More - The Purchase of Alaska
Episode Date: October 19, 2020In 1867, United States Secretary of State William Seward signed a treaty with the Empire of Russia to purchase the territory of what would be called Alaska. The United States purchased it for 2 cents ...an acre. At the time it was called one of the worst deals in American History. Today, it is considered the greatest bargain of all-time. Learn more about the purchase of Alaska on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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In 1867, United States Secretary of State William Seward signed a treaty with the Empire of Russia
to purchase the territory of what would be called Alaska.
The United States purchased it for two cents an acre.
At the time, it was called one of the worst deals in American history.
Today, it's considered the greatest bargain of all time.
Learn more about the purchase of Alaska on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily.
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This episode is sponsored by audible.com.
My audiobook recommendation for this show is Seward, Lincoln's Indispensable Man by Walter Starr.
William Henry Seward was one of the most important Americans of the 19th century.
Progressive Governor of New York and outspoken U.S. Senator, he was the odds-on-favor to win the 1860 Republican nomination for president.
As Secretary of State and Lincoln's closest advisor during the Civil War, Lincoln not only managed foreign affairs, but had a substantial role in military, political, and personal matters.
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to Audible and two free audiobooks by going to
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The Russian presence in the Americas dates back to the early
18th century. Traders and merchants who spread across
Siberia just kept going when they reached the Pacific Ocean.
If Siberia was distant from the Russian population centers
in Europe, then Alaska was really far away.
In fact, it earned the nickname Siberia's Siberia.
Russia's interest in Alaska was in furs and trapping.
The sea otter was of primary interest to the few Russians who bothered to settle.
Most Russian efforts in the region in the 18th century were never really serious.
In 1799, the Russian Crown established the Russian American Company, Russia's first joint stock corporation.
The company was organized along the lines of other European companies, such as the British and Dutch East India companies.
The Russians mostly stayed close to the coast and didn't establish any camps or towns in the interior.
Their primary goal was to dominate trade in the North Pacific, and the Russians.
they even set up forts as far away as California and Hawaii. However, none of these attempts
at colonization in the Americas was ever very successful. Due to the sheer distance of Alaska
from St. Petersburg, transportation costs were enormous. To get there, they would have to go around
most of Europe, cross the Atlantic, go down the length of North and South America, go around
Cape Horn, then go back up, the entirety of North and South America again. They also never had many
people who actually lived in Alaska. The Russian Orthodox Church did send out some missionaries,
but even at its peak, they probably never had more than a thousand settlers. Ships could only
supply Russian outposts every two or three years, so they mostly relied on trading with
Americans and Native people. Nonetheless, for a while at least, it was worth it for Russia just
for reasons of nationalism and imperial ambition. However, things began to change in the 19th century.
Russia's main competitor was the United Kingdom. In Afghanistan and South
Asia, they constantly vied for power with the British in what was called the Great Game.
In 1856, they suffered humiliating and costly defeat to the British and Turks in the Crimean
War. They were in need of cash. The Russians realized that Alaska probably couldn't be held for
long. The Americans were growing in size and power, and it was probably only a matter of time
before they set their sights on Alaska. If there was to be a gold rush, something like what
California experienced, there'd be nothing that could be done to hold back
an influx of prospectors. They were too far away, and it would cost too much money to defend it.
Moreover, if they were to lose Alaska, they really only had two choices. The Americans, or their
nemesis, the British, who controlled Canada. If the British were to take control of Alaska,
then the British would have the perfect location to start to threaten Russia's Pacific coast.
If the Americans were to take control, they could serve as a buffer between Russia and Britain.
Moreover, in the 19th century, American-British relations weren't as good as they are today as the memory of the War of 1812 was still fresh.
In 1858, Russian Tsar Alexander II made the decision to try and sell the territory to the United States.
It would serve their strategic goals, and they could make some desperately needed money in the process.
Initial talks between Russia and the United States began with the Buchanan administration.
However, the unpopularity of his presidency meant that the negotiations would have to have.
have to be picked up by the next administration.
Abraham Lincoln was, of course, elected in 1860, but negotiations again broke down with the
onset of the U.S. Civil War.
Nonetheless, one of the biggest supporters of purchasing Alaska was the expansionist senator
from New York, William Seward, who stated, quote,
Standing here and looking far off into the northwest, I see the Russian as he busily occupies
himself in establishing seaports and towns and fortifications on the verge of the continent.
and I can say, go on and build your outposts all along the coast, even up to the Arctic Ocean.
They will yet become outposts of my own country, monuments of the civilization of the United States in the Northwest, unquote.
Not coincidentally, William Seward became the next Secretary of State when Abraham Lincoln was elected president.
Seward was a pretty fascinating guy. He, not Lincoln, was the presumptive favorite going into the Republican Convention of 1860.
In fact, he had way more votes in Lincoln.
Lincoln did on the first ballot. However, as interesting as it might be, the story of William
Seward will have to be left for another episode. With the end of the Civil War and the death
of Lincoln, Seward remained the Secretary of State under the new president Andrew Johnson.
While Seward was an expansionist, he was also an abolitionist. Pre-war, he was against the
Gadsden purchase and a possible purchase of Cuba because they would have been slave states. With the war over,
Seward wanted to go on a buying spree, which not only included Alaska, but maybe even Greenland and Iceland too.
Almost immediately after the war ended, the Tsar ordered his minister to the United States to open up negotiations again with Seward.
By March 1867, negotiations had entered their final stage.
The initial U.S. offer was $5 million, which the Russians rejected as being too low.
The final price, which was agreed upon, was $7.2 million, which ended up being approximately $0.2 an acre.
adjusted for inflation, it would be about $133 million today.
The treaty was signed at 4 a.m. on March 30, 1867.
Johnson and Seward hoped that the announcement would offset bad domestic news, and for a while it did.
Most of the coverage of the purchase was positive, but some radical Republican newspapers
disparaged the purchase, calling it Johnson's polar bear garden, a Russian fairyland, or walrus Russia.
The term Seward's folly didn't come about until several years later.
Horace Greeley, the editor of the New York Tribune, noted that Alaska was, quote,
a burden not worth taking as a gift, unquote.
One senator joked that the U.S. should only accept it if Seward agreed to live there.
Nonetheless, it easily passed in the Senate on a 32-7 vote.
On October 18, 1867, a transfer ceremony was held in Sitka, or what the Russians called New Archangel.
everything went smoothly and peaceably.
The vast majority of Alaskan natives had no clue that any of this had happened.
Because the Russians never strayed far from beyond the southern coast of Alaska,
most people inland had never seen a Russian or had even heard of Russia,
let alone that the land which they lived on had now somehow been sold to some other people
that they had no knowledge of.
After the transfer had taken place, the impeachment of President Johnson
and his extreme unpopularity led to problems.
The House initially refused to authorize the payment for the territory.
It wasn't until Johnson lost the Democratic nomination, and it was clear he wouldn't have another term that funds were authorized.
Afterward, it was found that the Russian envoy to the U.S., Edward De Stokel, made tens of thousands of dollars of bribes and payments to members of Congress to get approval for the deal.
Of the Russians who were in Alaska, the vast majority of them left.
They took the opportunity to return home, which was paid for by the Russian-America Company.
Most of the Americans who moved there also ended up leaving, as there were few economic opportunities in the region.
It wasn't until the Klondike Gold Rush of 1896 that the fortunes of Alaska changed and large numbers of people started to flood into the territory.
As for Seward, he traveled to Alaska almost as soon as he retired from Secretary of State, where he visited the territorial capital of Sitka.
Today, he is honored in the state with a highway, a city, and an annual holiday.
Executive producer of Everything Everywhere Daily is James McAula.
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