Career
Alexander ran away from home at the age of fifteen to Moscow, where he became a clerk before returning home. After marrying and the birth of a daughter, he left for Siberia. He was then lured to Russian America, by Grigory Ivanovich Shelikhov, and the growing Maritime Fur Trade there.
He became the chief manager of the Russian-American Company, establishing and managing trading posts in the Kodiak Island region from 1790 onwards.
In 1792, he moved the Kodiak Island settlement from Three Saints Bay to Pavlovsk. In 1793, he founded the port of Voskresensk in Chugach Bay, and a settlement in Yakutat Bay in 1795.
In 1799, he started the settlement in Sitka Sound. In 1807 Branov was awarded the Order of Saint Anna, 2nd class.
In 1812, he established Fort Ross.
From 1799 to 1818, through Nikolai Rezanov"s intervention, he managed all of the company"s interests, including the Aleutian and Kuril Islands. Activity in the region flourished as trading in sea otters and seals boomed. Baranov convinced native hunters to expand their range to include the coasts of California.
Baranov also advocated more educational opportunities for the Alaska Native Americans.
Under his leadership, schools were created and frontier communities became less isolated. During Baranov"s rule, Russian Orthodox missionaries operated in Russian America.
Baranov was replaced as chief manager and governor in January, 1818, by Russian navy Captain Lieutenant Leontii Hagemeister.
Kirill Khlebnikov was appointed Office Manager, receiving company capital totaling two and a half million rubles.
On 27 November, Baranov left Alaska on the ship Kutuzov for Russia. The ship headed south on a route that would take it around the Cape of Good Hope. En route, the ship made an extended stopover in the Dutch settlement of Batavia, on the island of Java, then part of the colonial Dutch East Indies (present day Indonesia), in March, 1819.
Alexander Andreyevich Baranov became ill there, and soon after the ship resumed its journey he died on 16 April, and was buried at sea in the Sunda Strait off Prince Island.
Baranof Island in Alaska is named after Baranov as is a United States. Coast Guard Cutter and a United States Liberty ship. Chevigny, Hector; Lord of Alaska - Baranov and the Russian adventure, Portland, Oregon, Binfords & Mort, 1951, LIBRIS-id 2331138
Engstrom, Elton & Engstromn, Allan.
Alexander Baranov - a Pacific Empire, Juneau, Alaska, Elton Engstrom & Allan Engstrom, 2004,
Wilson, James Grant. Fiske, John, eds. (1900).
"Baranoff, Alexander Andrevitch".
Appletons" Cyclopædia of American Biography. New York: Doctorate. Appleton.