Daily Sitka Sentinel

Petition Seeks to Move Juneau’s Seward Statue

JUNEAU (AP) — Petitioners have called for the removal of a statue in Alaska depicting the U.S. cabinet secretary who arranged the purchase of the state’s land from Russia.

Juneau resident Jennifer LaRoe launched a Change.org petition last week to remove a statue of William H. Seward from a plaza in the state’s capital city, The Juneau Empire reported  Saturday.

More than 1,300 people had signed the petition as of Friday, although the online format does not require signers to be Alaska residents.

The $250,000 statue unveiled in 2017 depicts Seward holding the 1867 Treaty of Cession, which authorized the sale of the Alaska Territory to the U.S. from the Russian Empire.

The purchase arranged by the secretary of state was ridiculed at the time as “Seward’s Folly” by critics who also called the territory “Seward’s Icebox.”

The opposition to the statue is not based on Seward himself, said LaRoe, who acknowledged his role as an abolitionist in President Abraham Lincoln’s administration.

In this May 18 file photo, a statue of William Seward wears a mask outside the Alaska Capitol in Juneau. Petitioners have called for the removal of the statue depicting the U.S. cabinet secretary, Seward, who arranged the purchase of the state’s land from Russia. (AP Photo/Becky Bohrer, File)

The statue is a symbol of white, patriarchal authority and the disenfranchisement of Alaska Natives, she said.

“(Alaska Natives) didn’t sell their land to the U.S., and that wrong has never been corrected,” LaRoe said.

The statue is owned by the State of Alaska, which also owns Dimond Courthouse Plaza where the statue is located, making the state responsible for its removal.

The petition was addressed to state Sen. Jesse Kiehl and Rep. Sara Hannan, both Democrats, whose districts include downtown Juneau.

Efforts to reach Kiehl and Hannan were not immediately successful.

LaRoe suggested replacing Seward’s statue with a monument to Alaska civil rights icon Elizabeth Peratrovich.

Sealaska Heritage Institute President Rosita Worl said removing the statue would be consistent with long-held views of Southeast Alaska Native residents.

“Seward embodied Manifest Destiny,” Worl said in a letter to the Juneau Empire. “His imperialistic vision was founded on white supremacy.”

Seward was an imperfect figure, but his legacy in Alaska is important, said Dave Rubin, the artist who crafted the statue with his sister, Judith.

Rubin said he is proud of his art but also wants to encourage discussion about Seward, who helped Lincoln produce the Emancipation Proclamation and sold land to Harriet Tubman that was used as part of the Underground Railroad.

“It is a complicated legacy,” Rubin said.