
Where Russia met America in 1867. Sitka sits on the outer Pacific coast of Baranof Island in the Alexander Archipelago — a wet, green rainforest town on the open sea, with the dormant volcano Mount Edgecumbe rising across Sitka Sound like a backdrop painted into the view. The Tlingit have called this stretch of coast Sheet'ká for longer than written history. In 1808, the Russian-American Company moved its capital here from Kodiak and made the town the seat of Russian America — at one point so prosperous and worldly that contemporaries called it "the Paris of the Pacific," a Russian Imperial capital on the Pacific coast more populous than San Francisco at the time. In 1848, Bishop Innocent — Russian Orthodox missionary, ethnographer, and the man who designed the building himself — consecrated St. Michael's Cathedral, the first Russian Orthodox cathedral in North America. Its onion dome and green bell tower still define the Sitka skyline. Then on October 18, 1867, on the bluff that locals still call Castle Hill, the formal transfer ceremony took place: Prince Dmitry Maksutov, the last Russian governor, watched the Imperial Russian flag come down, and General Lovell Rousseau watched the American flag go up. The price had been $7.2 million, paid by Secretary of State William Seward — about two cents an acre for territory more than twice the size of Texas. Alaska Day has been observed every October 18 since. The Russian Bishop's House from 1842 is still standing, the oldest intact Russian building in Sitka. In 1910 the federal government designated Sitka National Historical Park — the oldest federally designated park anywhere in Alaska. And in 1912, in this same town, a small group of Tlingit founded the Alaska Native Brotherhood, one of the earliest civil-rights organizations representing indigenous peoples anywhere in the Americas. The Russian flag hasn't flown over Castle Hill in 159 years. The cathedral, the bishop's house, the totems in the forest park, the dome, the hill, and the brotherhood are all still here.
Today Sitka is celebrated for its cultural diversity, Russian churches, and Indigenous traditions. Its story reflects Native heritage, colonial roots, and American growth. Our Sitka designs embody this layered identity, pairing the bear motif with vintage styling. They invite you to explore the Sitka collection and carry forward a reminder of Alaska's resilience. Retro in tone, the logo reflects authenticity and cultural pride. Sitka's emblem honors both heritage and modern growth, making it a vintage symbol of Alaska's identity. Explore the collection and share in Sitka's story of resilience, heritage, and cultural continuity.
Why People Visit Sitka Alaska
Sitka offers world-historical depth in a working Alaska fishing town — Tlingit heritage, Russian Imperial architecture, the birthplace of Alaska Day, old-growth coastal rainforest, totem poles, and a working harbor — all within a walkable downtown along the outer Pacific. Visitors combine cathedral and museum stops with rainforest trails, whale-watching, raptor rehabilitation tours, and the simple pleasure of standing on the hill where the flags changed in 1867. It is photogenic, walkable, and unlike any other town on the Alaska coast.