Four blocks further along at 104 College Drive, the Sheldon Jackson Museum (summer daily 9am-5pm; rest of year Tues-Sat 10am-4pm; $4) houses a compact but extensive accumulation of Native artifacts. All of the tools, utensils and craft objects from Aleut, Athabascan, Tlingit and especially Aleut peoples were collected by the Rev Dr Sheldon Jackson on his wide-ranging travels throughout Alaska as a missionary and the territory's first General Agent for Education.
At the end of Lincoln Street, in a verdant copse between ocean and creek, Sitka National Historic Park embraces both the town's Tlingit heritage and its days of Russian rule. When Tsarist troops attacked a Tlingit fort on this site in 1804, the natives withstood bombardment for six days, but after running out of gunpowder, decided to abandon the fort silently at night. The next day Russians stormed the stockades only to find them empty except for a few dead children, whom they alleged were murdered to accomplish the retreat in complete silence. Nothing remains of the fort except a grassy clearing, but the evocative air is enhanced by several vividly painted totem poles alongside the footpaths, all replicas of nineteenth-century classic designs. A visitor center (summer daily 8am-5pm; free) features good interpretive displays on what is commonly called the "Battle of Sitka," as well as hosting Native craft workshops.
Sitka's trail system ranges from shoreside strolls to harder climbs up Gavan Hill and steep Mount Verstovia: for more information visit the Forest Service office , 201 Katlian St (tel 907/747-4220). -- location id = 42493 -->
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