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below to access pictures and recordings.
The
Russian Bishop's House is one of the few surviving examples
of Russian colonial architecture in North America. Imperial
Russia was the dominant power in the North Pacific for over
125 years. Sitka (known as New Archangel at the time) was
the Russian colonial capital. The Bishop's House was
completed in 1842 and was the center of Russian Orthodox
church authority in a diocese that stretched from California
to Siberian Kamchatka. The Church closed the Bishop's House
in 1969. The spruce walls had rotted, the roof leaked, and
the floors and doorways tilted. It was in danger of
collapse. In 1973, the National Park Service obtained the
property and began a 16 year project to restore the building
to its 1853 appearance. The restored Russian Bishop's House
offers visitors a chance to step back into history and feel
and understand what it was like to live in Sitka during the
Russian-American period.
Slideshow
Architecture
and
Restoration(Gene
Ervine interview)
House
Tour
For more information on the
Russian Bishop's House, refer to the Alaska Natural History
Association's 1992 publication: "The Russian Bishop's House,
Sitka, Alaska: Legacy of An Empire, 1842."