In those days, the mainland east of
Wrangell was wild country and a few men passed through it navigating the river.
Who interested B.A. Seaborg in the area? Perhaps some of the prospectors, who
participated in the early Stikine and Cassair gold rushes, came back to Astoria and mentioned in
passing that salmon were seen progressing upstream. Maybe some of the steamboat
captains spent winters on the Columbia River
and mentioned sockeye and king salmon.
Astorians were already canning fish in
Southeast Alaska in Boca de Quadra, Ketchikan , Burroughs Bay
at the mouth of the Unuk River , and Pyramid
Harbor off Lynn
Canal . B.A. Seaborg &
Company’s president, B.A. Seaborg, decided to try his luck in Alaska under
another of his company’s names, the Aberdeen Packing Company, This company owned
a cannery at Ilwaco on the Washington side of the Columbia River and one at Bay
Center, Washington (on Highway 101, south of Raymond).
In early April 1888, the company’s steamer
EUREKA was refitted and set in sailing trim, She
awaited an opportunity to cross the Columbia River Bar with a man named Wilson as captain. After
she sailed, a few weeks later the GEO W. ELDER left with supplies not only for
the Stikine River
cannery, but for the D.L. Beck & Sons cannery at Pyramid Harbor .
Twenty-two Astorians were aboard with fifty Chinese. How many of those men were
bound for the Aberdeen cannery is unknown.
The
crews built the cannery on what was described as “reasonably level ground.” The
building was 24-feet wide with the inshore side resting on the rocky shore and
the water side on posts 14 feet in length.
The Stikine River ,
despite its size and navigability, proved not to provide great quantities of sockeye
salmon. Aberdeen Packing’s original intent was to make the entire pack from
catches in the river. The fish were taken by gillnets, the method used on the Columbia River .
The Daily
Morning Astorian newspaper received a few news items about the first year’s
activities at the Stikine
River cannery. The first
was when the GEO W. ELDER brought down 1,200 cases of salmon in early July. The
next shipment came in early October when the IDAHO ,
a coastal steamer, brought cases from both Aberdeen Packing and a cannery owned
by Astorians at Burrough
Bay . The first year only
3,400 cases were packed, but the following year, the pack consisted of 14,000
cases.
In November 1888, William Graham returned
to Astoria and told a reporter that he liked Fort Wrangel
where there was lots of work to do, “but found it mighty lonesome for an
idler.” Robert Bell, the foreman, returned to Astoria with him.
No news came from the cannery to Astoria in 1889. This is
unfortunate became after that season the operations were moved to the east side
of Wrangell Island and renamed Glacier Packing
Company. So far I have not been able to discover if Seaborg ceased his interest
at that time.
It is a puzzle why the cannery was
constructed on the river in the first place. Robert Bell, listed of Astoria , recorded a land claim for 35 acres in “Lamshier Bay ”
on the opposite side of the island from Fort
Wrangel on October 20, 1887, the year
before the Stikine
River cannery was built.
In the land records the claim was made “for the purpose of erecting and establishing
a cannery.” Bell used the original Hudson ’s Bay Company name
for Labouchere Cove. This is the site that Bell and the Astorians moved the cannery in
1890. Crews tore down the old cannery
and salvaged the equipment and lumber to build the new cannery.
After
123 years, people who cruise the Stikine
River , mostly in jet boats,
can not tell where this cannery was constructed. The timber and underbrush have
reclaimed the area.
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