May-September 1881, Cruise of the Corwin Sketches and Notes Image 8

and a small pipe leading from a very small Russian stove in which the stems of empetrum are burned. I found a Yankee clock in most of the huts that I entered, a few pictures, and ordinary cheap crockery and furniture; accordions also, as they were very fond of music. All such bits of furniture and f...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Muir, John
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: Scholarly Commons 1881
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/jmj-all/1748
https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/context/jmj-all/article/2747/type/native/viewcontent/fullsize.jpg
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Summary:and a small pipe leading from a very small Russian stove in which the stems of empetrum are burned. I found a Yankee clock in most of the huts that I entered, a few pictures, and ordinary cheap crockery and furniture; accordions also, as they were very fond of music. All such bits of furniture and finery of European manufacture contrasting meanly with their own old-fashioned kind. Altogether, in dress and home gear, they are so meanly mixed, savage and civilized that they make a most pathetic impression. The moisture rained down upon them every other day keeps the walls and the roof green, even flowery, and as perfectly fresh as the sod before it was built into a hut. Goats, once introduced by the Russians, made these hut tops their favorite play and pasture grounds, much to the annoyance of their occupants. In one of these huts I saw arrowheads manufactured for the first time out of bottle glass. The edges are chipped by hard pressure with a bit of deer horn. As the Thlinket [Tlingit]Indians of the Alexander Archipelago make their own whisky, so these Aleuts make their own beer, which if possible is more abominable and destructive than the Hootchenoo. It is called Kvass and was introduced by the Russians. Made from sugar and flour with a few dried apples left to ferment, and usually drawn off and drunk while yet acrid and muddy, making a fiery intoxicating mixture that renders the poor wretches howling drunk and insane, and forms a thirst for rum and alcohol supplied by traders, to some extent. This with the abominable beer renders the misery of the Aleuts complete. There are about 2000 of them scattered along the chain of islands, living in small villages. Nearly all the men are hunters of the fur seal, the most expert making $500 or more per season. After paying old debts contracted with the companies, they invest the remainder in trinkets, clothing not so good as their own furs, and in beer and go at once into hoggish dissipation, hair pulling, wife beating, etc. In a few years their health becomes impaired, ...