Sitka National Historical Park

Sitka National Historical ParkTotem pole in Sitka National Historical Park, southeastern Alaska.

Sitka National Historical Park, historic site in southeastern Alaska, U.S., that preserves remnants of Native American and Russian occupation of the area. The park is situated in the city of Sitka on Baranof Island in the Gulf of Alaska. The site was named a federal park by Pres. Benjamin Harrison in 1890. It was established as a national monument in 1910 and became a national historical park in 1972. It occupies 112 acres (45 hectares).

The park contains the ruins of an Indian fortress in which the Tlingit Indians made their last stand against Russian settlers in 1804. Another feature of the park is a collection of totem poles from old Haida Indian villages on Prince of Wales Island to the southeast.

The Bishop’s House (completed 1842) in downtown Sitka, just west of the main park area, became part of the national historical park in 1973. Long the seat of the Russian Orthodox Church in North America, the house is the oldest intact Russian American building in the United States; the structure underwent extensive renovation (completed 1989) that restored its 1853 appearance.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Kenneth Pletcher.