Alaska Commercial Company
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Alaska Commercial Company
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Alaska Commercial Company
Alaska Commercial Co
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Alaska Commercial Co
Alaska Commercial Company, San Francisco
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Alaska Commercial Company, San Francisco
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Biographical History
The Alaska Commercial Company was founded shortly after the purchase of Alaska in 1867. Beginning as the Russian-American Company, the company assets were purchased by Hayward M. Hutchinson, William Kohl, and Associates, who then formed the Hutchinson, Kohl & Company. In 1868 the company was reorganized as the Alaska Commercial Company. The company, in its various permutations, played a singularly important part in the history of Alaska with trading stations scattered throughout southwestern, south-central and southeastern Alaska as well as northern Alaskan Islands.
In 1868 Louis Sloss, Lewis Gerstle, and A. Wasserman bought the North American assets of the Russian-American Company from the firm Hutchinson, Kohl and Company. The new company, called Alaska Commercial Company, was based in San Francisco. In 1901, the Alaska Commercial Company merged with the International Mercantile Marine Company and Alaska Goldfields, Ltd., to form two new companies, the Northern Navigation Company and the Northern Commercial Company.
Established in 1868 by a group of San Francisco businessmen, Alaska Commercial Company operated a chain of trading posts and stations in Alaska, Yukon Territory, and Siberia, and had exclusive rights to hunt seals on the Pribiloff, Bering, Cooper, and Robben Islands, 1870-1899. In 1901-1902, the company merged with two rival trading firms, then organized two subsidiaries: Northern Commercial Company and Northern Navigation Company. Alaska Commercial Company was dissolved in 1940.
In 1868, Louis Sloss, Lewis Gerstle, and A. Wasserman bought the Russian-American Company (a trading company) from the firm of Hutchinson, Kohl and Company. The new company, called the Alaska Commercial Company, was based in San Francisco. In 1901, as a result of increasing competition in the sealskin trade, the Alaska Commercial Company merged with the International Mercantile Marine Company and Alaska Goldfields, Ltd., to form two new companies, the Northern Navigation Company and the Northern Commercial Company. The original owners of the Alaska Commercial Company carried on the business under the name of the Northern Commercial Company. Volney Richmond, a company supervisor, and several other employees purchased the Northern Commercial Company in 1922. The Northern Commercial Company is still in existence today with its executive offices in Seattle, Washington.
The Alaska Commercial Co. was a San Francisco based company which bought out the assets of the Russian-American Co. in 1867. The company supported the Alaskan fur trade by providing steamship transportation, general merchandising, and other commercial and financial services. The company had offices at Unalaska on Unalaska Island, at Unga on Unga Island, and at St. Michael on the west coast of Alaska in the Norton Sound.
The Alaska Commercial Company was founded shortly after the purchase of Alaska in 1867. The assets of the Russian-American Company were purchased by Hayward M. Hutchinson, William Kohl, and Associates, who then formed the Hutchinson, Kohl & Company. In 1868, the company was reorganized as the Alaska Commercial Company. The company, in its various permutations, played a singularly important part in the history of Alaska with trading stations scattered throughout southwestern, southcentral and southeastern Alaska as well as the northern Aleutian Islands.
Historical Note
The history of the Alaska Commercial Company actually begins in 1776, when, under the flag of Czarist Russia, Gregor Shelikof and Ivan Golikof formed a trading company in the Alaskan territory that was under Russian rule. In 1799 they received trading privileges on the western coast of the United States and became the Russian-American Company. After the 1867 purchase of Alaska by the United States, the firm of Hutchison, Kohl & Company, including Hayward Hutchison, William Kohl, and Louis Sloss, bought the Russian-American Company. In 1868, Sloss, Lewis Gerstle, and A. Wassermann bought this company, although Hutchison, Kohl & Company was in simultaneous existence and under the same ownership until 1872, when the new company paid off the purchase. This new company, formed in 1868, was called the Alaska Commercial Company, and did business under this name until 1901. In that year, because of increasing competition in the sealskin trade, the Alaska Commercial Company merged with the International Mercantile Marine Company and Alaska Goldfields, Ltd., to form two new companies, the Northern Navigation Company and the Northern Commercial Company. The original owners of the Alaska Commercial Company, Louis Sloss, Gerstle, etc. carried on the business under the name of the Northern Commercial Company. Shortly afterwards, W.J. Erskine bought some of the old Alaska Commercial Company boats and set up a small successor to the Company in certain areas of Alaska.
Volney Richmond, since 1910 a Company supervisor, was one of several employees to purchase the Northern Commercial Company in 1922, thus leaving the functioning of the Company virtually unchanged, except in legal ownership. The Northern Commercial Company is still very much in existence today, with its executive offices in Seattle, Washington. Volney Richmond, Jr. carries on his father's position as president of the Company.
In the 1868 articles of incorporation, the stated purposes of the Alaska Commercial Company were "...to buy, sell, rent and lease real estate...to erect buildings...to buy, sell, exchange..merchandise, stocks, bonds, franchises...to build tramways and roads...to catch and pack fish...to manufacture..." The Company established stations in Alaska at Nome, Kodiak, Sunrise, Eagle City, Circle City, St. Michael, Unga, Unalaska and others, and in Dawson in Canada, as well as various other Canadian stations.
Although the Northern Commercial Company became the new name of the Alaska Commercial Company in 1901, business was still carried on in the name of the Alaska Commercial Company as well, according to the papers and records in this collection of material. Among the papers of the company, both the Alaska Commercial Company and the Northern Commercial Company are involved, and volumes for the Alaska Commercial Company, the Northern Commercial Company and the Northern Navigation Company are included in the collection. From evidence accumulated through correspondence regarding this collection, the Alaska Commercial Company apparently did not cease doing business in its own name until 1942, leaving the Northern Commercial Company as the sole successor to the A.C.Co.
Historical Background
The Alaska Commerical Co. was a San Francisco based company which bought out the assets of the Russian-American Co. in 1867. The company supported the Alaskan fur trade by providing steamship transportation, general merchandising, and other commerical and financial services. The company had offices at Unalaska on Unalaska Island, at Unga on Unga Island, and at St. Michael on the west coast of Alaska in the Norton Sound.
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External Related CPF
https://viaf.org/viaf/138536646
https://www.worldcat.org/identities/lccn-n83233789
https://id.loc.gov/authorities/n83233789
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Languages Used
Subjects
Alaska
Alaska
Business
Business enterprises
Business records
Ethnology Archaeology Anthropology
Exposition
Fur trade
Fur trade
Fur trade
Gold mines and mining
Gold mines and mining
Mines and mineral resources
Natural history
Stores, Retail
Stores, Retail
Retail trade
Shipping
Smithsonian Exchange
Trading companies
Trading companies
Treasury Department
Nationalities
Activities
Occupations
Legal Statuses
Places
Alaska
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Alaska
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Alaska
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Alaska
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Alaska
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Unalaska (Alaska)
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Alaska
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Unalaska (Alaska)
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Unalaska (Alaska)
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Alaska
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Pacific Coast (North America)
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Alaska--Kodiak Region
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Convention Declarations
<conventionDeclaration><citation>VIAF</citation></conventionDeclaration>