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Timeline / Defining Rights and Responsibilities / 1848: Commercial whaling destroys Yup‘ik, Inuit traditions

1848: Commercial whaling destroys Yup‘ik, Inuit traditions

After U.S. whalers kill a bowhead whale near Big Diomede Island, commercial whalers begin hunting in the waters of the Bering Strait. In time, commercial whaling to supply a world market erodes the whale and walrus populations on which Yup‘ik and Inuit rely for food and materials.

Theme
Land and Water
Region
Arctic

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Commercial whalers cutting blubber from their harvest in Point Barrow, Alaska, 1899–1908. This later image may look similar to scenes that brought about the end of a way of life for Yup'ik and Inuit.

Courtesy Alaska State Library, Rev. Samuel Spriggs Photograph Collection

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Early photograph of the Pacific Steam Whaling Company trading station, Cape Lisburne, Alaska

Courtesy The New Bedford Whaling Museum