Feds approve renaming Saginaw Bay over Kake War connections

The U.S.S. Saginaw was built in 1859 at the U.S. Navy’s shipyard at Mare Island in California. A decade later, it shelled at least three Tlingit villages in Southeast Alaska. (Photo from George H. Read’s 1912 book “The Last Cruise of The Saginaw”/Public domain)
The U.S.S. Saginaw was built in 1859 at the U.S. Navy’s shipyard at Mare Island in California. A decade later, it shelled at least three Tlingit villages in Southeast Alaska. (Photo from George H. Read’s 1912 book “The Last Cruise of The Saginaw”/Public domain)

The U.S. Board on Geographic Names has approved changing the name of a bay in Southeast Alaska following a petition from tribal leaders complaining of its association with military aggression.

Saginaw Bay had been named after a U.S. warship that destroyed three communities in 1869.

Earlier this year, both the Alaska House of Representatives and Alaska Historical Commission endorsed changing the name to Skanax (skeh-NOCH) Bay.

The request came from the Organized Village of Kake, the local tribal government, and received unanimous approval on Thursday.

The three villages targeted by the U.S.S. Saginaw evacuated in advance of the attacks. But soldiers also burned winter food stores that, according to tribal oral accounts, led to the starvation and suffering of an untold number of people.

Other Southeast place names including Murder Cove, Surprise Harbor and Retaliation Point speak to a series of dark episodes more than 150 years ago that came to collectively be known as the Kake War.

The bay is off Kuiu Island, about equal distance between Petersburg and Sitka. In 2011, an unexploded 60-pound artillery shell from the bombardment was defused after being discovered in a house where it had been kept as a family heirloom.

 

Jacob Resneck, CoastAlaska

Jacob Resneck is CoastAlaska's regional news director based in Juneau. CoastAlaska is our partner in Southeast Alaska. KTOO collaborates with partners across the state to cover important news and to share stories with our audiences.

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