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Russians was situated there. The name means
Japan Island and is given because Resanof
designated it as the place to keep captive
Japanese whom he expected to capture
through his expedition against the lower Kuril
Islands in 1806.

The dock at which the ship lands is in
the same location as the one used by the
Russians, but it has been extended to deeper
water. The timbers of the old hulk once used
by the Russians as a landing stage may still
be seen in the water at low tide. On the
dock was the landing warehouse of the
Russians, a log structure with a passage
through the center. It was burned in 1916.
Leaving the wharf and going eastward along
Lincoln Street, at the side are the booths or
tents of the native merchants, kept by the
women from the village, a veritable arcade
of little markets, and each of the vendors is
as interested as though she occupied a seat
on the famous Rialto Bridge to sell the wares
of ancient Venice. The picturesque, dark-~
skinned Thlingit women sit at the doors of
their little tents hour after hour, offering
the strangely carved totems, the beautiful
baskets of spruce roots woven in mystic
designs, the beaded moccasins, etc., products
of their industry during the long winter
when the tourist boats do not call at the Sitka

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