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Several thousand years ago, before
European explorers discovered the shores of the Aleutian
Islands, they were inhabited by the Aleut Unangan
people.
Rough, windy seas surround the remote, rocky, majestically
beautiful, volcanic islands; inhabitants who live there
experience some of the most inclement weather in the
world.
Despite the tempestuous surroundings, the aleut people
adapted to the environment and became excellent navigators
of the sea, skillfully harvesting its unlimited bounties
as their main livelihood.
Russian explorers commanded by Danish
explorer, Vitus Bering and German naturalist Georg Wilhelm
Steller on September 5, 1741, at about 4:00 P.M. on
Bird Island
in the Shumagin
Islands, "Americans" appeared and a first
contact between the Russian expedition and these
people occurred.
It was estimated that there were as many as 20,000 Unangas
spread out in hundreds of small villages throughout
the sheltered harbors of the Islands. For Fifty years
and more the Russian
Fur Traders came set up camps all along the Aleutian
Chain.
The Aleuts hunted the sea otter for the Russian fur
traders. During this time the Aleut craftsmen designed
the three
hatched baidarka, this was to accommodate an extra
hunter to hunt sea
otters. During this time period the Aleut people
were decimated by diseases brought by the Russian Fur
Traders and over 80% of the Aleuts died.
In the early 1800's it is estimated
that the population of the Aleuts at around 1200. During
the 1800's the Aleuts hunted furs for the Russian fur
traders. They still used baidarkas,
lived in barabaras and
wore their traditional clothing.
But during this time period the Aleut people were adapting
to the Russian and Scandinavian customs. In the late
1800's Scandinavian fishermen, fox farms and miners
started to call the Aleutians home.
In the early 1900's commercial fishing
started to grow in the Aleutians. Salmon and cod fish
were the species harvested in the early 1900's. In 1912
Alaska becomes a territory of the United States.
In 1942 the Japanese captured Attu
and Kiska
and conducted bombing raids on Unalaska. During the
war the Aleut people in the towns west of King Cove
were evacuated and put in camps
in south east Alaska.
After the war some of the Aleut people returned to the
Aleutians to live, they commercial fished to support
their families. The Pribilof Aleuts still harvested
the Northern Fur Seal. The 1960's and 70's brought nuclear
testing to the Aleutians on the island of Amchitka.
In 1971 the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act passed
and The Aleut Corporation was formed by the people of
the Aleutians.
1985 brought the end of the Pribilof seal harvest, the
Aleuts in the Pribilofs built small boat harbors and
began enticing fish processors to the Pribilofs to process
crab and halibut.
In the 1990's Adak,
a naval base began to shut down and relinquish the buildings
to The Aleut Corporation.

Honoring
the Past TAC Chairs
Past TAC Directors
from 1971 to Present
Our Present
Day
Present day, one third of Aleut people, reside in the
Aleutians, one third reside in Anchorage and the other
third are scattered throughout the lower 48 states.
Commercial fishing is the main industry in the Aleutians,
and Dutch Harbor/Unalaska in the largest city in the
Aleutians. Even though Dutch Harbor/Unalaska is the
largest city, the Aleut population are fairly close
in numbers in Unalaska, King Cove, Sand Point and St.
Paul. These are the four large Aleut settlements in
the Aleut Region.
Aleuts Endured
First
Encounter;by Russian explorers on September 5, 1741,
at about 4:00 P.M. on Bird Island.
Submission;
made to hunt Sea Otters for the Russian fur traders.
Disease; within a fifty year span from the mid 1700's
on, over 80% of the estimated Aleut population of 25,000
at that time will have died.
Japanese Evasion on U.S. soil; which captured Kiska,
Attu and bombed Unalaska.
Internment
Camps; Aleut people evacuated from their towns during
World War II.
Nuclear Bomb Tests; on Amchitka Island.
Cold War;being close to Russia, the U.S. Military built
the "Dew Line" to protect the United States.
Aleuts Mastered
the Aleuts knew enough about human anatomy to mummify
their deceased.
Rain Gear;extracted,
dried, and sewed water proof garments from the intestines
of marine mammals.
Sea
Travel;baidarkas, transportation created from wood
and sea mammal skins, of which produced seaworthy vessels
to travel in the Aleutians.
Cutting Tools;the Aleuts chipped obsidian to make cutting
tools for work and art crafting.
Fish Catching;Aleuts crafted a halibut hook from wood
and bone with which the barb turned in on itself.
Tide
Prediction; the Aleuts had a 50% recovery on whale
hunts, because they had the ability to predict the tide
and current changes with accuracy.
Hat;
designed a visor hat from steamed bent wood.
Baskets;
the Aleut women made finely woven baskets from carefully
shredded stalks of beach rye.
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