As
part of Russia, it was known as
New Arkhangelsk (). The current name,
Sitka (derived from '
, a contraction of the Tlingit '), means "People on the Edge of Shee", with
Shee being the Tlingit name for
Baranof Island (the Tlingit name for the island is '
but is often contracted to '). Baranov was forced to levy 10,000
rubles in ransom to Captain Barber of the British sailing ship
Unicorn for the safe return of the surviving settlers. Baranov returned to Sitka in August 1804 with a large force, including
Yuri Lisyansky's
Neva. The ship bombarded the Tlingit fortification on the 20th but was not able to cause significant damage. The Russians then launched an attack on the fort and were repelled. Following two days of bombardment, the Tlingit "hung out a white flag" on the 22nd, deserting the fort on the 26th.
Bishop Innocent lived in Sitka after 1840. He was known for his interest in education, and his house, the
Russian Bishop's House, parts of which served as a schoolhouse, has since been restored by the
National Park Service as part of the
Sitka National Historical Park. The original
Cathedral of Saint Michael was built in Sitka in 1848 and became the seat of the
Russian Orthodox bishop of Kamchatka, the Kurile and Aleutian Islands, and Alaska. The original church burned to the ground in 1966, losing its handmade bells, the large icon of the
Last Supper that decorated the top of the royal doors, and the clock in the bell tower. Also lost was the large library containing books in the
Russian,
Tlingit, and
Aleut languages. Although the church was restored to its original appearance, one exception was its clock face, which is black in photographs taken before 1966, but white in subsequent photos. Swedes, Finns and other nationalities of Lutherans worked for the Russian-American Company, which led to the creation of a Lutheran congregation. The
Sitka Lutheran Church building was built in 1840 and was the first
Protestant church on the
Pacific coast. After the transition to American control, following the purchase of Alaska from Russia by the United States in 1867, the influence of other Protestant religions increased, and
Saint-Peter's-by-the-Sea Episcopal Church was consecrated as "the Cathedral of Alaska" in 1900.
Territorial Alaska valley, in an 1886 postcard. Probably taken from Castle Hill. Sitka was the site of the transfer ceremony for the
Alaska Purchase on October 18, 1867. Russia was going through economic and political turmoil after it lost the
Crimean War to Britain,
France, and the
Ottoman Empire in 1856, and decided it wanted to sell Alaska before British Canadians tried to conquer the territory. Russia offered to sell it to the United States. Secretary of State
William Seward had wanted to purchase Alaska for quite some time, as he saw it as an integral part of
Manifest Destiny and America's reach to the Pacific Ocean. While the agreement to purchase Alaska was made in April 1867, the actual purchase and transfer of control took place on October 18, 1867. The cost to purchase Alaska was $7.2 million, at 2 cents per acre. Sitka served as both the U.S. Government Capital of the Department of Alaska (1867–1884) and District of Alaska (1884–1906). The seat of government was relocated north to
Juneau in 1906 due to the declining economic importance of Sitka relative to Juneau, which gained population in the
Klondike Gold Rush.
Alaska Native Brotherhood, Alaska Native Sisterhood The
Alaska Native Brotherhood was founded in Sitka in 1912 to address racism against Alaska Native people in Alaska. In 1941, construction began on Fort Ray, an army garrison to protect the naval air station. At its peak, the mill employed around 450 people before closing in 1993. Sitka's Filipino community established itself in Sitka before 1929. It later became institutionalized as the Filipino Community of Sitka in 1981. Gold mining and fish canning paved the way for the town's initial growth. Today Sitka encompasses portions of Baranof Island and the smaller
Japonski Island, which is connected to Baranof Island by the
John O'Connell Bridge (which uses the
cable-stayed suspension method as its means of support). Japonski Island is home to
Sitka Rocky Gutierrez Airport (IATA|: SIT; ICAO|: PASI), the Sitka branch campus of the
University of Alaska Southeast,
Mt. Edgecumbe High School (a state-run boarding school for rural Alaskans), Southeast Alaska Regional Health Consortium's Mt. Edgecumbe Hospital,
U.S. Coast Guard Air Station Sitka, and the port and facilities for the
Kukui. Sitka has become a destination for visiting
cruise ships. In May 2025, a special referendum on restricting cruise ship tourism took place in the town with 3,000 votes cast. The referendum was less than 10 percent from their all-time high for a special election and some 73% of the voters rejected the limits on cruise ships with only 27% voting in favor of the proposed limits. ==Geography==