Following the
Alaska Purchase, the
United States Army came to Alaska to serve as the civil administering entity of the
Department of Alaska. In the summer of 1868 a detachment from Battery I of the
2nd Regiment of Artillery established a small outpost at
Fort Wrangell (which was previously a trading post) in a 200 by 200 feet area, surrounded by a 10-foot log wall with elevated platforms, a
12-pounder mountain howitzer, and a
6-pounder cannon. In December 1869 the fort was garrisoned by 26 soldiers, with accompanying civilians. Adjacent to the fort, the village of
Old Wrangell (
Tlingit:
Ḵaachx̱aana.áakʼw) established in the 1830s adjacent to the trading post contained some 508
Stikine people (a
Tlingit group) in 1869. In February 1869 a similar incident dubbed the
Kake War led to the destruction of three deserted villages and two forts near present-day
Kake, Alaska by the . Prior to the conflict, two white trappers were killed by the Kake in retribution for the death of two Kake departing
Sitka village in canoe. Sitka was the site of a standoff between the Army and
Tlingit due to the army demanding the surrender of chief Colchika who was involved in an altercation in
Fort Sitka.
Leon Smith was a former steamboat captain and Confederate volunteer who served during the
American Civil War as Commander of the
Texas Marine Department. During the war, Smith's rank was variously described as naval lieutenant, captain, and commodore or army major, and colonel, but he was not actually commissioned. He operated the trading post and bowling alley adjacent to the fort in partnership with William King Lear. Smith lived outside the fort, and was involved in late October 1869 in the beating of a Stikine he suspected (wrongly) of hitting his son. ==Christmas night altercation==