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State Department Lies About Giveaway to Russians
Newsmax.com ^ | Thursday, June 19, 2003 | Wes Vernon, NewsMax.com

Posted on 06/21/2003 8:07:57 PM PDT by DannyTN

Also see: America Gives Russia a Fortune in Oil and Fish. WASHINGTON – The State Department continues to trifle with the truth about its infamous giveaway of American islands off mainland Alaskan near Siberia.

The giveaway began in 1977, was secret until it was revealed in the mostly unread Federal Register in 1984, was sealed in an executive agreement approved as a treaty by the Senate in 1991, rejected by the Russian Duma in 1997, and now - ironically because of the reluctance of our former Cold War adversary - is thankfully unratified. The Russians want even more.

Nonetheless, the executive agreement continues to be observed, treaty or no treaty. Positive action by both houses of the U.S. Congress could make it clear these eight islands are U.S. territory, complete with their billions of barrels of oil and other energy sources, along with fishing rights.

In a paper issued May 20, the department purports to bring us up to date on “The Status of Wrangell and Other Arctic Islands.”

That document contains “falsehoods,” according to State Department Watch (SDW), whose chairman, Carl Olson, has been following the case like a laser beam. He makes it his business to espy buried information in the Federal Register that bears on sellouts of the best interests of the United States.

“Completely untrue,” he said, is the department's misnamed “fact sheet” regarding the islands in question: Wrangell, Herald, Bennett, Jeannette, Henrietta, Copper Island, Sea Lion Rock and Sea Otter Rock.

“None of these of these islands or rocks above were included in the purchase of Alaska from Russia in 1867,” State proclaims.

Wrong. SDW’s research shows that the treaty in 1867 “includes Copper island, along with its adjacent Sea Lion Rock and Sea Otter Rock. In negotiating the treaty, Secretary of State William Seward was willing to leave one Aleutian Island to the Russians, Bering Island, which is to the west of Copper.”

And then this from the State Department: “[T]hey have never been claimed by the United States, although Americans were involved in the exploration and discovery of some of them.”

Wrong. Wrangell Island was discovered by and annexed to the United States in 1881 by Americans. The U.S. Revenue Marine ship Thomas Corwin under the command of Captain Calvin Leighten Hooper landed on Wrangell Island.

Further, SDW history informs us that “Navy Captain George Washington DeLong led the Arctic expedition of USS Jeannette in 1879-1881 which resulted in the discovery and annexation of Bennett, Jeannette, Henrietta, and Herald Islands.” The whole story has been told in the book “Icebound,” by Leonard Guttridge. The State Department thus is issuing bald-faced untruths that contradict settled, publicly recorded history.

State Department Watch cites other “falsehoods” such as the claim that the negotiations leading to the US-USSR boundary agreement did not deal with the status of Wrangell, Herald, Bennett or Henrietta islands. Wrong again.

And so it goes. SDW’s Olson says the secrecy surrounding the giveaway has gone on long enough. The state legislatures of Alaska and California have objected to the fact that State Department, without proper authority, is unilaterally ceding “parts of a state to a foreign power,” complete with the vast oil and fishery resources.

Furthermore, he notes, numerous military and other groups have objected, such as American Legion, Veterans of Foreign Wars and Daughters of the American Revolution. They have noted the strategic location of these islands for reconnaissance and strategic defense.

Apparently the only thing that can stop this illegal giveaway would be an aroused public opinion. But first, the outrage would have to land on the public’s radar screen.


TOPICS: Activism/Chapters; Editorial; Foreign Affairs; Front Page News; Government; Politics/Elections; Russia; US: Alaska
KEYWORDS: alaska; arcticislands; boundaries; fisheries; oil; russia; statedept; wrangellisland
Our state department at work!!!!. (Wish they'd go home.)
1 posted on 06/21/2003 8:07:58 PM PDT by DannyTN
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To: DannyTN
bump
2 posted on 06/21/2003 8:11:02 PM PDT by RippleFire
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To: DannyTN
BUMP
3 posted on 06/21/2003 8:20:34 PM PDT by TLBSHOW (the gift is to see the truth)
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To: DannyTN
Another sorry chapter in the State Department crisis. It needs an overhaul, bad.
4 posted on 06/21/2003 8:38:50 PM PDT by henderson field
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To: DannyTN
Whenever the Democrats occupy the White House, they restock key bureaucratic positions with Liberals/Socialists. When we dumped Bush 41, we did 1 or 2 generations worth of serious damage.
5 posted on 06/21/2003 8:47:15 PM PDT by Consort
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To: DannyTN
State is chock full of traitorous, smug and lazy liberals. Sounds great at cocktail parties when you can drop "I work for the State Department"
6 posted on 06/21/2003 9:09:05 PM PDT by dennisw (G-d is at war with Amalek for all generations)
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To: DannyTN; a_Turk
and we laugh at the Greeks and Turks who throw down over rocks! We are all the same apes.
7 posted on 06/21/2003 11:01:23 PM PDT by Destro (Know your enemy! Help fight Islamic terrorisim by visiting www.johnathangaltfilms.com)
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To: DannyTN
The title to this group of rocks is a bit murky. However, Wrangell is 85 miles off the coast of Siberia and has had a permanent Russian settlement there since the 1920's. This is, in my view, a nonstory, and certainly not worth the frenzy Newsmax and some other internet outlets are stirring up.
8 posted on 06/21/2003 11:07:59 PM PDT by kms61
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To: DannyTN
Why are these Foggy Bottome traitors who labor so sedulously to further the interests of our enemies -- while on the Government payroll, no less -- not arrested and tried for treason (and EXECUTED, if found guilty)?

That MIGHT slow a few of them down -- but, then again, I am not sure. These traitors are VERY dedicated to their cause of undermining America.
9 posted on 06/22/2003 6:10:34 AM PDT by BenR2 ((John 3:16: Still True Today.))
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To: DannyTN
Why is this stuff still being posted? Wrangell Island has always been part of Siberia. People are getting confused about place names...or being purposly confused by other people with an agenda...by a fishing rights treaty written signed in the late nineteenth century.
10 posted on 06/22/2003 8:42:44 AM PDT by cake_crumb (UN Resolutions=Very Expensive, Very SCRATCHY Toilet Paper)
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To: DannyTN
Wrong. SDW’s research shows that the treaty in 1867 “includes Copper island, along with its adjacent Sea Lion Rock and Sea Otter Rock. In negotiating the treaty, Secretary of State William Seward was willing to leave one Aleutian Island to the Russians, Bering Island, which is to the west of Copper.”

Can this be confirmed? (I don't necessarily trust Newsmax) If so this proves in my mind again that the State Dept is one of the most powerful anti American groups on Earth left.

Reminds me of the war on Terrorism, Palestinians terrorists are clearly terrorists, but we won't treat them like enemies, so terrorism is allow to survive this storm. So too with the State Dept and American neoSocialism weathering the Cold War to survive and prosper.

11 posted on 06/22/2003 3:15:22 PM PDT by PeoplesRep_of_LA (Press Secret; Of 2 million Shiite pilgrims, only 3000 chanted anti Americanisms--source-Islamonline!)
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To: DannyTN
Silly, there are no documents showing that these island were ever in the US teritory. Instead of looking for secret treaties, look for the original documents.
TYhis is just another attempt to spoil the relations with Russia and leave US in deeper isolation. Actually Russia deserves a bug "Thank you" for selling Alaska and not engaging in fights with US for any northen teritory.
12 posted on 06/22/2003 3:16:57 PM PDT by singsong
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To: DannyTN; Southack; All
You may want to see this discussion:

Quietly, State Dept. Turns Over American Islands to Russia, Others.

13 posted on 06/22/2003 3:26:45 PM PDT by dighton (NLC™)
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To: DannyTN
Email Pres. Bush here to let him know that it's time he reined-in our out-of-control State Dept.
14 posted on 06/22/2003 3:29:57 PM PDT by etcetera
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To: Southack
This Guano Islands crap keeps getting recycled over and over again.

Newsmax has no shame.

You already debunked some of the most outrageous claims of Newsmax previous story
HERE

15 posted on 06/22/2003 3:33:21 PM PDT by george wythe
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To: DannyTN; etcetera; Beck_isright
From the previously discredited NEWSMAX/WorldnetDaily Thread:

"So basically speaking, ceding territory used by our fishing fleets in Alaska is okay with you? Oh, I forgot, you're a bushbot."

You are such a doom-saying anti-Busher.

Here's TODAYS copy of the Wrangell Island Chamber of Commerce web site, 3 years *AFTER* NEWSMAX and Worldnet Daily claimed Wrangell Island was occupied by Russian troops with a Russian guard tower.

Enjoy your tin-foil...

 
Links
51st Annual Wrangell Salmon Derby 
Annual Calendar of Events 
Contact Us 
Sign Our Guest Book 
City of Wrangell, Alaska Website 
Membership Directory 
Membership Application Form, Wrangell Chamber of Commerce 

Events
Harvest Festival 2003 
51st Annual Salmon Derby May 10 - June 8, 2003 
Fourth of July 2003 
Festival of Lights December 5, 2003 
Wrangell Weather
Click for Wrangell, Alaska Forecast
Articles
Gateway to the Stikine River
 
Nestled on an island at the mouth of the mighty Stikine River, Wrangell offers visitors a friendly taste of a frontier community in the midst of some of the most unique and pristine wilderness in Alaska. Known as the "Gateway to the Stikine", Wrangell offers a step back into time. There is much to immerse yourself in:
-Walk among petroglyphs and imagine the people who carved them thousands of years ago.
-Visit Chief Shakes Tribal House, Totem Park and the Wrangell Museum for a glimpse in to the Tlingit Natives' way of life.
-Hike up to Rainbow Falls or stop and pick the abundant wild blueberries, huckleberries and salmonberries.
-Traverse the Stikine River Delta by jet boat fighting the tremendous current and seeking the ever-changing channel of the river.
-Fly over majestic snowcapped mountains, pristine lakes and calving glaciers.
-Rest in natural hot springs surrounded by the unmatched beauty of the wilderness.
-Explore untouched corners of the Tongass National Forest.
Welcome to Wrangell!!! A frontier community in the heart of Southeast Alaska.


Photo Courtesy City of Wrangell  

 
Classified Advertisements
 
The Wrangell Chamber of Commerce is pleased to offer its membership on-line classified advertisements. If you are a Chamber member and would like to post an on-line advertisement, please contact the Chamber office for more information. 
 
Wrangell Video Offer
 
The Wrangell Chamber of Commerce is pleased to offer you an exciting ten minute video tape that features attractions from the Wrangell area. The price is $9.95 plus USPS Priority Mail fees. A discount is offered to Chamber members. Click here to order!!  
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9 posted on 06/12/2003 12:16 PM CDT by Southack (Media bias means that Castro won't be punished for Cuban war crimes against Black Angolans in Africa)
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To: Stingray51

The U.S. did / does have a very valid claim to Wrangel Island. Unfortunately, as looking at a map will reveal, we have about zero chance of ever recovering it and the other Siberian islands.

There are flights from Fairbanks to Wrangell every day. Seems like a lot of transportation for 119 inhabitants.

10 posted on 06/12/2003 12:18 PM CDT by RightWhale (gazing at shadows)
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To: Beck_isright

"... But if anyone desired to visit Wrangell Island, they would be greeted not by the Stars and Stripes waving proudly in the brisk air but by a Russian military tower. "

HA Ha, BWAAAA Ha haaa!

11 posted on 06/12/2003 12:19 PM CDT by Southack (Media bias means that Castro won't be punished for Cuban war crimes against Black Angolans in Africa)
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To: Beck_isright

"So basically speaking, ceding territory used by our fishing fleets in Alaska is okay with you? Oh, I forgot, you're a bushbot."

Hey brainiac, is there a ... pause ... Russian Guard Tower on Wrangell?!

BWAAAA Ha Ha!

It just goes to show that some people will believe *anything* that they read if it in anyway supports their own anti-Bush political agenda...

12 posted on 06/12/2003 12:22 PM CDT by Southack (Media bias means that Castro won't be punished for Cuban war crimes against Black Angolans in Africa)
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To: Southack

That's Wrangell, not Wrangel Island.

13 posted on 06/12/2003 12:27 PM CDT by RightWhale (gazing at shadows)
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To: Stingray51

"The U.S. did / does have a very valid claim to Wrangel Island. Unfortunately, as looking at a map will reveal, we have about zero chance of ever recovering it and the other Siberian islands."

If you bother to look above, I've posted today's copy of the Wrangell Island web site by their American chamber of commerce.

There are also daily American flights going there so you can see for yourself.

And there's no Russian Guard tower on the non-Guano Wrangell Island, either...

14 posted on 06/12/2003 12:28 PM CDT by Southack (Media bias means that Castro won't be punished for Cuban war crimes against Black Angolans in Africa)
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To: RightWhale

From the article... "A number of years later, in 1881, U.S. Captain Calvin L. Hooper landed on Wrangell Island and claimed it for the United States. One of the landing party was famed explorer John Muir."

15 posted on 06/12/2003 12:30 PM CDT by Southack (Media bias means that Castro won't be punished for Cuban war crimes against Black Angolans in Africa)
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To: Southack

There are two Wrangels or Wrangells. The website is for the community in the Wrangell Mts. Wrangel island is way up north. How copy? Over.

16 posted on 06/12/2003 12:32 PM CDT by RightWhale (gazing at shadows)
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To: Beck_isright; Howlin

"Apparently W is going to give away some more islands and reduce the fishing grounds..."

Awwww, nothing like posting a little factually incorrect fear-mongering when you attack your most hated GWB, right Beck?!

Hey, where's that Russian military tower again, on Wrangell?!

BWWAAAA Ha HAAAAA haaa!

17 posted on 06/12/2003 12:33 PM CDT by Southack (Media bias means that Castro won't be punished for Cuban war crimes against Black Angolans in Africa)
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To: Southack

Hey, it's NewsMax, what do you expect? Next he'll be posting pics of the UN vehicles invading the US right now!!!!!! ;>)

18 posted on 06/12/2003 12:33 PM CDT by Ready4Freddy
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To: RightWhale

From the Chamber of Commerce web site as I posted it above:

"Nestled on an island at the mouth of the mighty Stikine River, Wrangell offers visitors a friendly taste of a frontier community in the midst of some of the most unique and pristine wilderness in Alaska."

19 posted on 06/12/2003 12:34 PM CDT by Southack (Media bias means that Castro won't be punished for Cuban war crimes against Black Angolans in Africa)
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To: Beck_isright

Hey Beck, where did you go?!

Have you fled from your own thread re-post in disgrace already?!

20 posted on 06/12/2003 12:36 PM CDT by Southack (Media bias means that Castro won't be punished for Cuban war crimes against Black Angolans in Africa)
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To: RightWhale

"That's Wrangell, not Wrangel Island."

Wrangel Island has always been considered the Chutchka (sp?) Autonomous Territory. Part of Russia.

21 posted on 06/12/2003 12:37 PM CDT by cake_crumb (UN Resolutions=Very Expensive, Very SCRATCHY Toilet Paper)
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To: Southack

*tap* *tap* *tap*

Is this mike hot? No response, Captain. The scoutship may be lost somewhere down by Sitka, which seems odd because he's supposed to be up around Kotzebue.

22 posted on 06/12/2003 12:38 PM CDT by RightWhale (gazing at shadows)
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To: Beck_isright

"The Eskimos on those islands in the story, by the way, did not get a chance to vote or offer to relocate to other parts of Alaska. They are now Russian citizens. The residents of the islands in discussion now, will not be allowed to vote either. Food for thought people. As I get more news on this, I shall post it."

Oh, I can't wait for your next "update"!

23 posted on 06/12/2003 12:39 PM CDT by Southack (Media bias means that Castro won't be punished for Cuban war crimes against Black Angolans in Africa)
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To: RightWhale

"*tap* *tap* *tap* Is this mike hot? No response, Captain."

Understood. Carry on.

24 posted on 06/12/2003 12:41 PM CDT by Southack (Media bias means that Castro won't be punished for Cuban war crimes against Black Angolans in Africa)
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To: cake_crumb

They aren't giving up Wrangell, and if they did they would give it to Canada or Seattle.

25 posted on 06/12/2003 12:47 PM CDT by RightWhale (gazing at shadows)
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To: Stingray51

"The issue with Russia has nothing to do with the Guano act islands that you are referring to." - Stingray51

From the article as posted above (that you didn't read):

"Lost” islands include Nassau Island in the Pacific Ocean and Bajo Nuevo and Serranilla Bank in the Caribbean Sea. The islands became American territory under the Guano Act in the late 1800s."

26 posted on 06/12/2003 12:47 PM CDT by Southack (Media bias means that Castro won't be punished for Cuban war crimes against Black Angolans in Africa)
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To: All

Still can't find the DEFINITIVE stuff I'm looking for, but here's a bit of history :

By Alexandra J. McClanahan
CIRI Historian

September 9, 2001, marked the eightieth anniversary of an ill-fated five-member expedition to a far-flung tiny uninhabited island that forever made life difficult for the sole survivor.

Ada Blackjack Johnson, who was born in Solomon on May 10, 1898, was just twenty-three years old when she was hired as a seamstress to accompany four other members of an expedition charged with colonizing Russia’s Wrangel Island, 85 miles off the northeast coast of Siberia.

Left a widow in Nome when her husband drowned, Ada did the best she could to care for her son Bennett who suffered from tuberculosis and later spinal meningitis. Two other babies born to the couple had died. She undertook the risky prospect of going to a place that was virtually unknown at the time because she desperately wanted to earn enough money to get medical care for her son.

The original plan had been to hire Eskimo families, with the women making boots and clothing and the men doing the hunting.

Ada Blackjack Johnson“. . .the Wrangel party tried to engage at Nome some Eskimo families, and did so actually. But when the time came to sail there arrived at the boat landing only the Eskimo woman, Ada Blackjack, who had been expecting to go along as a member of one of the families engaged. When she found that the others had broken their bargain she also wanted to withdraw, but was prevailed upon to go by the assurance that the Silver Wave would call in at some Eskimo settlement between Nome and Wrangel to hire families in which Ada could then take her place. . .With that program they sailed September 9th, 1921,” Vilhjalmur Stefansson wrote in his 1925 book about the expedition, The Adventure of Wrangel Island.

Stefansson had sent the party to Wrangel Island with the hope that Canada or the United States would be able to claim control of the island, which had always been a part of Russia. The island encompasses an area of about 2,000 square miles. It’s 80 miles long and 18 to 30 miles wide, which makes it about half the size of Puerto Rico.

Now a Russian wildlife refuge, in the early part of the century the island was mysterious because it is surrounded almost constantly by ice fields and often blanketed in dense fog. Melody Webb of the University of Alaska-Fairbanks wrote a paper describing the island and its history in 1981, and it is featured in Stefansson’s book as well as other books written about a previous expedition to the island sponsored by Stefansson that was equally disastrous.

The team Stefansson sent in 1921 included Blackjack and three other Americans as well as a Canadian. Stefansson’s secret hope was that including a Canadian would force the Canadian government into accepting its “responsibility” for claiming the island. Expedition members included Frederick Mauer and E. Lorne Knight, both 28-year-old Americans, American Milton Galle, 20, and Canadian Allan R. Crawford, also 20, and the man Stefansson designated as the group’s leader.

The Silver Wave arrived at Wrangel Island on September 16. In a dictated statement, printed in Stefansson’s book, Blackjack wrote: “When we got to Wrangel Island, the land looked very large to me, but they said that it was only a small island. I thought at first that I would turn back, but I decided it wouldn’t be fair to the boys. Soon after we arrived I started to sew.”

Although they planned to be on the island for two years, they brought supplies for only six months because they expected to live primarily off the land.

They stayed at first in a tent, then built a snowhouse. In the spring of 1922, the men killed more than 30 seals and 10 polar bears as well as geese and ducks, according to Blackjack, so meat seemed to be plentiful. That summer Knight went off by himself to explore and swam across the Skeleton River. He was never well after the trip.

Throughout the summer, the group waited for a supply boat to arrive. But Stefansson’s boat had been unable to reach the island because of ice. By late fall, conditions worsened for the group and there was little meat. On Jan. 8, Knight and Crawford took the dogs and left for Siberia to get help. But they returned within a couple of weeks because Knight was too sick and weak to travel.

On January 28, Crawford, Mauer and Galle left for Siberia.

“They promised that they would come back after they got to Nome, with a ship, and if they couldn’t get there with a ship they would come over with a dog team next winter. They left with a team of five dogs and a big sled of supplies,” Blackjack wrote.

That was the last she or anyone ever saw of the trio. And from that point on, Blackjack’s life became a battle for survival. She did not know how to hunt and trap, but she learned quickly because Knight was too ill to be of any assistance.

By February, he had become bedridden. She kept a bag of warm sand at Knight’s feet and sewed pillows of oatmeal sacks stuffed with cotton to ease his bedsores.

When he died later in the spring, she was completely alone and at the mercy of the many polar bears that frequented the island.

Once, when she was hunting seals, she barely escaped from a mother bear and her cub.

“Finally, I realized it was a polar bear and I was four hundred yards from my tent. I turned and ran just as hard as I could until I got to my tent. I was just about ready to faint when I got there, too,” she said.

After a number of other close calls, Blackjack was finally rescued August 19, 1923, when the boat Donaldson arrived. Incredibly, Blackjack found her return to the more populated world to be nearly as harrowing as Wrangel Island. She was criticized by one of her rescuers for not finding a way to save Knight’s life, although Knight’s parents eventually vindicated her after meeting with her and issuing a statement that Blackjack had done everything possible to save their son’s life.

Still, poverty dogged Blackjack for much of her life. She married and divorced a man named Johnson and had another son, Billy, who eventually became a leader in the Thirteenth Regional Corp. Because she had little money and was not well, Billy and Bennett were put in the Jessie Lee Home in Seward for nine years.

When she finally scraped together enough money, she took the two boys to Nome where she worked herding reindeer and fed the children by hunting and trapping. After Billy left home, his mother continued to care for Bennett. She died in Palmer May 29, 1983.

Johnson recalls his mother with love.

“I consider my mother Ada Blackjack to be one of the most loving mothers in this world and one of the greatest heroines in the history of Arctic exploration. She survived against all odds. It’s a wonderful story that should not be lost of her self-discovery and cultural re-awakening. And it’s a story of a mother fighting to survive to live so she could carry on with her son Bennett and help him fight the illness that was consuming him. She succeeded, and I was born later. Her story of survival in the Arctic will be a great chapter in the history of the Arctic and Alaska. Time is running out, and soon this chapter will fade away unless we care enough to make a record of it,” he said.

When his mother died, Johnson had a plaque mounted on her grave stating simply: “The heroine of Wrangel Island.”

27 posted on 06/12/2003 1:00 PM CDT by cake_crumb (UN Resolutions=Very Expensive, Very SCRATCHY Toilet Paper)
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To: Southack

Bookmaring and bumping.

28 posted on 06/12/2003 1:02 PM CDT by TruthNtegrity (God bless America, God bless President George W. Bush and God bless our Military!)
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To: Beck_isright

NewsMax.com contacted Mark Seidenberg, a former senior traffic management specialist within the U.S. Department of Agriculture, and asked him if he believed the United States should pursue its sovereignty on the islands. Seidenberg, without hesitation, said "yes."

Hey, I'm all for taking back the islands, but this sentence is downright silly. A traffic management analyst with the department of agriculture? They might as well ask the guy from a corner store in front of Des Moines, IA while they are at it.

29 posted on 06/12/2003 1:03 PM CDT by Rodney King (No, we can't all just get along.)
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To: cake_crumb

Notice that the Newsmax/Worldnet daily articles both refer to the non-Guano Wrangell Island with their Russian military hype, but use the Guano Island Wrangel as their point of controversy.

Pretty deceptive, but typical of tabloids and tin-foilers.

Gee, no one is mining bird-poop (i.e. guano) on Russia's Wrangel any longer, so the U.S. has ceased claiming sovereignty over it.

Oh my, what a scandal! Quick, let's tell our readers that the Alaskan island Wrangell has been occupied by Russian troops and guard towers...

< /MOCKING! >

30 posted on 06/12/2003 1:06 PM CDT by Southack (Media bias means that Castro won't be punished for Cuban war crimes against Black Angolans in Africa)
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To: Rodney King

See posts #9 and 11.

31 posted on 06/12/2003 1:08 PM CDT by Southack (Media bias means that Castro won't be punished for Cuban war crimes against Black Angolans in Africa)
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To: Beck_isright

Be sure to ping me in 3 years when you re-post this "article" again on yet another new thread...

32 posted on 06/12/2003 1:10 PM CDT by Southack (Media bias means that Castro won't be punished for Cuban war crimes against Black Angolans in Africa)
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To: Southack

Yeah, I posted before I read the rest of the thread.

33 posted on 06/12/2003 1:16 PM CDT by Rodney King (No, we can't all just get along.)
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To: Southack

"Notice that the Newsmax/Worldnet daily articles both refer to the non-Guano Wrangell Island with their Russian military hype, but use the Guano Island Wrangel as their point of controversy."

LOL...yeah, I did. I VAGUELY remember a territorial disput at the time of the first Bush administration which MIGHT be the basis of this...urban legend. Confusion about names. That's what I'm trying to find details on, but since it wasn't illegal or even important, am finding nothing linkable along the lines of what I'm looking for.

34 posted on 06/12/2003 1:17 PM CDT by cake_crumb (UN Resolutions=Very Expensive, Very SCRATCHY Toilet Paper)
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To: Southack

I don't know why these guys are after the State Department when they could be going after you!

Look at that waving flag image of yours - all of the Alaskan islands are gone(birdsh*t and non-birdsh*t), and the rest of the state is shrunk to 1/2 size and given to the goldurn Mexicans!

Account for yourself!

35 posted on 06/12/2003 1:26 PM CDT by headsonpikes
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To: Southack

Before you accuse me of not reading an article, perhaps you should read it more carefully. I stated that the dispute with Russia does not concern the Guano Act. It does not. There are other islands mentioned in the article that are Guano Act islands. The Siberian and Aleutian islands are not among them (not surprisingly given the climate).

36 posted on 06/12/2003 1:30 PM CDT by Stingray51
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To: Southack

One is a rock frozen in the middle of the Artic Ocean off the coast of Siberia not close at all to any US territory, and the other is in SE Alaska in the Tonsags National Forest, close to the State Capital and the Canadian border.

Wrangel Island or Wrangell Island , Rus. Ostrov Vrangelya, island, 1,740 sq mi (4,507 sq km), in the Arctic Ocean, between the East Siberian Sea and the Chukchi Sea, off NE Russia. It is separated from the mainland by Long Strait. Generally barren, frozen, and rocky, it has an arctic station and a permanent settlement. The island is a breeding ground for polar bears, polar foxes, seals, and lemmings. During the summer it is visited by numerous varieties of birds. The island was sought by Russian Baron Ferdinand von Wrangel during his arctic expedition of 1820–24; he had heard of it from Siberian natives, but he did not succeed in finding it. It was finally discovered by Thomas Long, captain of an American whaling ship, who named it for Wrangel. Later George W. De Long, an American explorer, discovered that it was a small island and not a part of the mainland, as at first believed. In 1911 a group of Russians made a landing on the island, and in 1921 Vilhjalmur Stefansson, the Canadian explorer, sent a small party to Wrangel with a view to claiming it for Great Britain. In 1926 the Soviet government established the first permanent colony there, ousting the few of Stefansson's Eskimo settlers who had remained. The Soviet freighter Chelyuskin, trying to discover (1933) whether an ordinary cargo ship could navigate the Northeast Passage, was crushed in the ice off Wrangel Island. The party was marooned on the island but was later rescued.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Wrangell Island – US 30 mi (48 km) long and 5 to 14 mi (8.1-22.5 km) wide, off SE Alaska in the Alexander Archipelago, south of the mouth of the Stikine River. It was occupied in 1834 by Russians, who named it for the Russian explorer Baron Ferdinand von Wrangel. The city of Wrangell, on the northern coast, grew around a fort built to prevent encroachment by the Hudson's Bay Company traders. From 1867 to 1877 it was a U.S. military post; later it became an outfitting point for hunters and explorers as well as for miners using the Stikine River route to the Yukon. Lumbering, fishing, and mining are pursued in the area.

37 posted on 06/12/2003 2:23 PM CDT by Ditto (You are free to form your own opinions, but not your own facts.)
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To: Stingray51

"Before you accuse me of not reading an article, perhaps you should read it more carefully. I stated that the dispute with Russia does not concern the Guano Act."

There is no dispute with Russia. The article for this thread was debunked 3 years ago, here on FR.

There are two islands, one Russian, the other American. One is spelled "Wrangel", the other "Wrangell".

The American island Wrangell is alive and well and still flies the American flag to this very day, as EVIDENCED BY THE FREAKING POST ABOVE THAT I MADE FROM THEIR CHAMBER OF COMMERCE WEB SITE!

For crying out loud, do you not realize that your pathetic argument has been shredded and debunked by now?!

Get a grip!

Read the maps posted above, then go slap Beck_isright for posting this nonsense, again, 3 years after it was discredited.

38 posted on 06/12/2003 2:47 PM CDT by Southack (Media bias means that Castro won't be punished for Cuban war crimes against Black Angolans in Africa)
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To: Southack

Now I know a lot more than I'll ever need about places I'll never see. I learned to take NewsMax with a dose of salt some time ago, guess I'll add WorldNet to that list, too.

39 posted on 06/12/2003 3:51 PM CDT by gcruse (Superstition is a mind in chains.)
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To: Southack; Rodney King

There are two islands, Wrangell in Alaska and Wrangel (sometimes spelled in Wrangell) off the coast of Siberia. This is hardly a brilliant discovery on your part.

You state that the idea that there is a dispute with Russia has been discredited and debunked, as if there was no such island and as if there has never been an American claim to it. If that is your contention, you are wrong.

40 posted on 06/12/2003 3:56 PM CDT by Stingray51
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To: cake_crumb

Please this is no place for facts. It is time for HYSTERIA.
After all you saw this was from NewsMax didn't you?

41 posted on 06/12/2003 4:08 PM CDT by justshutupandtakeit (RATS will use any means to denigrate George Bush's Victory.)
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To: Stingray51

"You state that the idea that there is a dispute with Russia has been discredited and debunked, as if there was no such island and as if there has never been an American claim to it."

That's a silly thing to say. There is no dispute with Russia over the islands (Wrangel, Wrangell), but that hardly means that the islands don't exist.

It is the article, as well as your argument, that has been debunked, not the existence of the islands.

42 posted on 06/12/2003 4:16 PM CDT by Southack (Media bias means that Castro won't be punished for Cuban war crimes against Black Angolans in Africa)
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To: Southack

You say there is no dispute with Russia. The article's point is that there should be. Personally, I think it is pretty clear that Wrangel Island was in fact part of the US at one time but that we have much bigger fish to fry at the moment. However, that does not make the article's contention with regard to Wrangel Island bogus or debunked or discredited or whatever other derisive terms you use to describe opinions that differ from yours.

43 posted on 06/12/2003 5:41 PM CDT by Stingray51
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To: Southack

The City of Wrangell, Alaska, and Wrangel Island are not the same thing.

44 posted on 06/12/2003 6:06 PM CDT by Campion
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To: Campion

No kidding...

45 posted on 06/12/2003 10:02 PM CDT by Southack (Media bias means that Castro won't be punished for Cuban war crimes against Black Angolans in Africa)
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To: Stingray51

Did you see the map in post #37?

46 posted on 06/12/2003 10:03 PM CDT by Southack (Media bias means that Castro won't be punished for Cuban war crimes against Black Angolans in Africa)
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To: Stingray51

"However, that does not make the article's contention with regard to Wrangel Island bogus or debunked or discredited or whatever other derisive terms you use..."

Did you not even read the *TITLE* to this thread (and to the debunked NewsMax article)??!!

"Quietly, State Dept. Turns Over American Islands to Russia, Others"

Did you miss the line in the article wherein NewsMax claims "But if anyone desired to visit Wrangell Island, they would be greeted not by the Stars and Stripes waving proudly in the brisk air but by a Russian military tower."

Look kid, that is the epitome of being DISCREDITED!

There is no Russian military tower on Wrangell Island, and I even posted the U.S. Chamber of Commerce web page (above, this thread) for Wrangell Island to illustrate that point.

Talk about being discredited...

47 posted on 06/12/2003 10:08 PM CDT by Southack (Media bias means that Castro won't be punished for Cuban war crimes against Black Angolans in Africa)
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16 posted on 06/22/2003 6:21:21 PM PDT by Southack (Media bias means that Castro won't be punished for Cuban war crimes against Black Angolans in Africa)
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