park in southeastern Alaska, U.S., on Baranof Island in the Gulf of Alaska, just south of Sitka. It was established in 1910 as a national monument and became a national historical park in 1972. The park contains the ruins of an Indian fortress in which the Tlingit Indians made their last stand against Russian settlers in 1804. Another feature of the park, which occupies 106 acres (43 hectares), is a collection of totem poles from old Haida Indian villages on Prince of Wales Island. The Bishop's House, which was built in 1842 and is the oldest intact Russian-American building in the United States, is also on park grounds.
SITKA NATIONAL HISTORICAL PARK
Meaning of SITKA NATIONAL HISTORICAL PARK in English
Britannica English vocabulary. Английский словарь Британика. 2012