The Gold He Never Kept: John Minook, Citizenship, and the Fight That Still Echoes
A Koyukon miner's 1904 court battle didn't just define who was an American — it planted seeds that still grow in today's Supreme Court.
In 1867, the United States purchased Alaska from Russia and immediately granted citizenship to the Russian traders who had been there for a hundred years. The Koyukon, Athabascan, Tlingit, and Yup'ik peoples who had lived on that land since before any Russian ever arrived received no citizenship, no treaty, no recognized tribal nation, and no legal standing. They were given a phrase instead: "uncivilized native tribes." That phrase — written into the Treaty of Cession by men in Washington and St. Petersburg who never consulted a single Alaska Native — would define the legal universe that John Minook was born into, and that he would spend his life fighting against.
In 1893, Minook — born Ivan Pavaloff Jr., three-quarters Koyukon Athabascan, son of a Russian-Creole trader — struck gold near what is now the village of Rampart. He was not yet twenty. His discovery triggered one of Interior Alaska's most productive gold rushes. The town that grew from his find was briefly called Minook City. He lost every claim. This is the story of how that happened, why the law allowed it — and why the same question is being argued before the United States Supreme Court this very morning.
Two Peoples, One Stroke of a Pen — One Got Citizenship
When the United States purchased Alaska from Russia in 1867, two groups of people woke up in the same territory the morning after the ink dried. One group — Russians, Creoles, and those who had lived as Russian subjects — was handed American citizenship automatically, without application, without proof, without condition. The other group — the Koyukon, the Tlingit, the Yup'ik, the Athabascan peoples who had lived on this land for thousands of years before a single Russian trader ever arrived — received nothing. Worse than nothing: they received a legal label. The Treaty of Cession called them "uncivilized native tribes" and left their status to the discretion of a Congress that would not meaningfully address their rights for nearly six decades.
Consider the raw injustice of that exchange. The Russians had been present in Alaska for barely a century, operating a commercial fur-trading empire that exploited the land and its people. When Russia decided to sell — without consulting a single Alaska Native — the United States agreed to honor the Russian residents' citizenship as a matter of course. They were, in the language of Article III of the Treaty, "inhabitants." They belonged.
The Russians who sold Alaska had no more consulted the Koyukon, the Tlingit, or the Athabascan than a landlord consults the walls. And when the sale was complete, the new owners granted citizenship to the sellers' employees — while the people who had lived there since before memory were classified as legal wards of a government they had never agreed to join.
— Editorial analysisThere is a further dimension to this injustice that is rarely emphasized: at the time of the Treaty of Cession in 1867, there were no federally recognized tribal nations in Alaska. The legal framework that existed in the contiguous United States — where tribes had treaty relationships, reserved lands, and at least nominal recognition as sovereign entities — did not apply. Congress had stopped making treaties with Native Americans in 1871. Alaska Natives had no treaties, no reservations, no government-to-government relationships with Washington. They were simply absorbed into the new American territory with no legal standing, no negotiated rights, and no pathway to citizenship.
This was not an oversight. It was a choice. The 1884 Organic Act, Alaska's first governing framework, acknowledged that Natives "shall not be disturbed in the possession of any lands actually in their use or occupation" — but it created no mechanism to enforce that protection, and it conferred no citizenship. Alaska Natives existed in American law as a problem to be administered, not a people to be recognized.
For the first decades of American rule, this legal void was largely invisible. The Interior was remote, the federal government barely present, and the Koyukon people who had lived along the Yukon River for millennia continued to do so largely undisturbed. But when gold was discovered — first at Juneau in 1880, then Circle City, Rampart, and ultimately the Klondike — tens of thousands of prospectors flooded Interior Alaska. Suddenly the question of who could legally own a mining claim became life-altering. And suddenly the legal void at the heart of Alaska Native existence had devastating practical consequences.
"The Indians have, under our somewhat peculiar laws, no legal right to stake and own mines. He was a good natured fellow with a fair knowledge of English — especially the cuss words, which he introduced into the conversation gravely and irrelevantly."
— U.S. Geological Survey geologist Joshua Spurr, observing Minook at his diggings, 1896Spurr's observation — delivered with a kind of bemused detachment — captures the surreal cruelty of the situation. Minook was already working the claim. He had found the gold. He had a crew. He knew the land better than any prospector who would ever arrive by steamboat. And yet under "our somewhat peculiar laws," none of that mattered. He had no legal right to what he had found. The law did not recognize him as a person capable of owning it.
Minook's situation had one complicating feature that made his case unique and, eventually, historically significant. His father, Pitka Pavaloff, was a Russian-Koyukon Creole — the last manager of the Russian American Trading Company's outpost at Nulato. This Russian lineage placed Minook in a legal gray zone: he was part of the class of people the Treaty of Cession had theoretically granted citizenship to, and yet his three-quarters Koyukon Athabascan blood and his life in the Interior made the territorial administration deeply reluctant to acknowledge that status. To claim his gold, he would have to prove, in court, that he was more Russian than Native — more "civilized" than Indigenous — more acceptable to American law than his own ancestry suggested.
Under Army administration of the Alaska Territory, Native Americans were classified as "Wards of the State" — not citizens, not fully persons under the law, but wards to be administered by federal agencies. No tribal nation spoke for them. No treaty protected them. No court had ever affirmed their rights. Mining claims could only be legally held by citizens. Minook had found the gold. He could not keep it.
The Rampart Exception — and What It Revealed
In 1896, when the miners of the Rampart district formally incorporated their mining district, they did something unusual: they voted to recognize Minook's right to own, sell, and work his claims — in direct defiance of federal law. It was a community act of pragmatic justice. Everyone knew it was Minook's gold. The local miners chose to honor that.
But this exception was fragile. It carried no legal weight beyond the district. And as more outside prospectors arrived, more capital flowed in, and the machinery of territorial law asserted itself, Minook's claims eroded. By the time he brought his case to court in 1904, someone else was already mining the ground he had found.
The Pavaloff Family: A Dynasty of Discovery, a Pattern of Loss
John Minook's story was not unique within his own family. His brother Pitka Pavaloff and brother-in-law Sergei Cherosky co-discovered gold at Birch Creek in 1893, which led to the founding of Circle City. His sister Erinia Pavaloff — who married Cherosky — worked as a translator for American traders, helping bridge two worlds. Every one of them lost their claims to white prospectors who argued, successfully, that the Pavaloffs were not legal citizens and therefore could not hold title.
In a single generation, one family discovered two of Alaska's major gold districts and profited from neither. The family tree, compiled by descendants, stretches seventy feet when laid flat — a testament to survival and rootedness in a land that the law repeatedly tried to take from them.
The Legal Journey: 1867 to 1924
Minook's citizenship case did not emerge in a vacuum. It was the latest chapter in a century-long struggle over who belonged to America — and what belonging meant. Here is the arc of that legal journey:
Russians Get Citizenship. Natives Get a Label.
Article III of the Treaty grants automatic U.S. citizenship to Russian colonists, Creoles, and those who had lived as Russian subjects — people who had been in Alaska for at most a century. Alaska Natives, whose ancestors had occupied the land for millennia, are classified as "uncivilized native tribes" and excluded. Critically, there are no federally recognized tribal nations in Alaska. No treaties exist. No government-to-government relationship is established. Alaska Natives have no legal standing, no negotiated rights, and no path to citizenship. They are absorbed into American territory as a problem to be administered — not a people to be recognized.
Supreme Court: Native Americans Are Not Automatic Citizens
The U.S. Supreme Court rules that Native Americans, even those who leave their tribes and live as private citizens, are not birthright citizens under the 14th Amendment. Citizenship requires explicit Congressional action. This ruling would directly shape how Minook's case was framed twenty years later.
Minook Strikes Gold at Rampart
John Minook discovers placer gold at what becomes Minook Creek. The Rampart district — briefly called Minook City — becomes one of Interior Alaska's most productive mining zones. Minook and his children prospect together as a family operation. He has no legal protection for his claims.
Rampart Miners Vote to Honor Minook's Claims
The local mining district grants Minook a community exemption to the federal law banning Native ownership. It is a gesture of respect — but not law. As outside interests grow, his protection weakens. The gold he found will eventually be mined by others.
Judge Wickersham's Landmark Ruling
John Minook applies for U.S. citizenship. Judge James Wickersham rules that Minook was already a citizen — by virtue of Article III of the 1867 Treaty, which recognized Creoles and settled tribes as Russian subjects, and therefore as inheritors of American citizenship upon the transfer of sovereignty. The court could not make him more a citizen than he already was. But by then, his gold was gone.
Wickersham Builds on Minook to Protect Native Land
One year later, Wickersham uses the Minook precedent in a land dispute on the Little Delta River, ruling that prospectors cannot purchase land from Athabascan people because Native land claims have not been settled by the government. The federal government, he rules, has a legal responsibility to protect Alaska Natives from exploitation — a trust responsibility that echoes into modern law.
Alaska Territorial Legislature Extends Citizenship — With Conditions
Alaska's territorial legislature passes a citizenship act for Natives — but only for those who demonstrate they are living "civilized" lives. The Alaska Native Brotherhood, founded in 1912, continues to push for unconditional citizenship. Most Natives still cannot vote.
Congress Grants Universal Native Citizenship
The Indian Citizenship Act finally grants citizenship to all Native Americans born within the United States — without requiring them to prove they are "civilized," abandon tribal customs, or relinquish property rights. The act explicitly states that citizenship "shall not in any manner impair or otherwise affect the right of any Indian to tribal or other property." Twenty years after Minook's case helped establish the legal framework, citizenship becomes universal.
Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act Cites the Minook Precedent
The landmark legislation that transferred 44 million acres and nearly $1 billion to Alaska Native people directly cites In re Minook and U.S. v. Berrigan in its foundational legal analysis. Legal scholars conclude that prior to ANCSA, Alaska Natives held their lands by right of aboriginal possession — a conclusion rooted in the soil of Minook's 1904 case. One Koyukon miner's fight to hold a gold claim becomes the cornerstone of the largest indigenous land settlement in American history.
Why Minook Matters Today
On April 1, 2026 — this morning — the United States Supreme Court heard oral arguments in Trump v. Barbara, a landmark case testing President Trump's executive order to restrict birthright citizenship under the 14th Amendment. In an extraordinary moment, Trump became the first sitting president ever to attend Supreme Court oral arguments in person. The arguments turned on five words etched into the Constitution in 1868: "subject to the jurisdiction thereof." Who falls within them? Who is excluded?
Historians who know Minook's story recognized the echo immediately. It was, in structure if not in detail, the same question a Koyukon gold miner faced in a territorial courtroom in 1904: does presence on American soil, within the borders of America, automatically confer belonging — or does the state retain the power to define who truly belongs?
The Trump administration's central argument rested on the concept of domicile — the idea that birthright citizenship should flow only to children whose parents have established lawful, permanent residence in the United States. It was a theory that struck several justices as historically unsupported. None pressed harder on it than Justice Neil Gorsuch.
"If somebody showed up here in 1868 and established domicile, that was perfectly fine. So why wouldn't we come to the conclusion that the fact that someone might be illegal is immaterial?"
— Justice Neil Gorsuch, oral arguments in Trump v. Barbara, April 1, 2026Gorsuch — a Trump appointee, notably — was relentless. He pointed out that when the 14th Amendment was ratified, the United States had no meaningful immigration enforcement. There were no undocumented immigrants in the modern sense. Anyone who arrived and settled could establish domicile. To condition citizenship on a parent's legal status, Gorsuch suggested, was to read a modern bureaucratic concept backwards into a 19th-century constitutional text.
He then raised a question that would have stopped John Minook cold: he asked the government's lawyer whether, under the administration's domicile test, newly born Native American babies would still be entitled to U.S. citizenship. The solicitor general stumbled. "I think so? On our test, yeah, if they're lawfully domiciled here," he said — before adding, "I'm not sure, I have to think through that."
Gorsuch was not finished. He zeroed in on what he called a striking absence in the historical record:
"There is precious little discussion about domicile in the debates around the 14th Amendment. The focus of the clause is on the child — not on the parents."
— Justice Neil Gorsuch, oral arguments in Trump v. Barbara, April 1, 2026He also pressed on the practical mechanics of the government's theory, asking who would actually determine whether a person had established domicile — and whether courts should use contemporary standards or look back to 1868. "How are we going to determine domicile? Would we use contemporary sources on what qualifies as domicile in a state, or do we look in 1868? And do we have to do this for every single person?" he asked.
The parallel to Minook's situation is not merely rhetorical. In 1904, the territorial government required Minook to prove he was "civilized" — that he had established a settled, permanent, Christian-adjacent life — before his citizenship would be recognized. The standard was designed to be hard to meet, applied selectively, and weaponized to delay justice until the damage was already done. Gorsuch's pointed questioning today suggests at least some members of the current Court see a similar danger in requiring parents to prove their domicile before their children's birthright is honored.
What Gorsuch's questioning reveals — perhaps unintentionally — is that the domicile argument has a troubling historical twin. The idea that belonging must be earned through proof of permanence, legal status, or assimilation is not new American jurisprudence. It is old American jurisprudence, applied for generations against Indigenous people, Chinese immigrants, formerly enslaved people, and anyone else the state found convenient to exclude. Minook's case is Exhibit A.
And lurking behind today's arguments is the precedent established by Minook's 1904 ruling and its 1905 successor: that the federal government bears a trust responsibility to those it has historically marginalized — a duty of protection rooted not in generosity but in legal obligation. That principle, first articulated in response to gold miners trying to dispossess a Koyukon man of his claims, is now a pillar of federal Indian law. The question before the Court today is whether that principle has limits — and who gets to decide where they are.
What Minook Left Behind
John Minook died in relative obscurity. He never profited meaningfully from the gold that bore his name. His citizenship was affirmed by a court that acknowledged it had nothing left to give him. His family — sixteen children by his wife Liza, plus the nieces and adopted relatives he took in — spread across Alaska and beyond, carrying the bloodline of the man who, by any honest reckoning, founded the Rampart district.
What he left behind was invisible to him but vast in its reach: a legal record, cited in federal courts for over a century, that established the most fundamental principles of Native land rights, citizenship, and the government's duty of care. The In re Minook ruling was cited directly in the legal analysis of the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act of 1971. It was woven into the fabric of federal Indian law. It shaped how courts understood the Treaty of Cession. And today, the questions it raised — about who belongs, who the government owes protection to, and what citizenship really means — are argued before the highest court in the land.
He was one of the most honest men in Interior Alaska. He lost his gold. He kept his name on the land. He changed the law of a nation.
— Adapted from the Rampart Whirlwind and the Alaska Mining Hall of FameMinook Creek still flows into the Yukon River east of Rampart. The creek's native name — Klanarkakat, meaning "creek suitable for small boats" — predates the gold rush by centuries. But on every federal map, every geological survey, every miner's deed, it carries his name: a Koyukon man's name, on Koyukon land, that the law once told him he could not own.
He owned it anyway. History knew it, even when the law refused to.
"They gave citizenship to the people who sold the land — and called the people who owned it 'uncivilized.'"
In 1867, the United States granted automatic citizenship to Russian traders who had been in Alaska for a century. The Koyukon, Tlingit, and Athabascan peoples who had been there since before recorded history received no citizenship, no treaty, no recognized tribal nation, and no legal standing. That choice — made with a pen, without consultation, without consent — is the wound from which every case in this blog flows.
John Minook did not fight for a privilege. He fought to be recognized as what he already was. And when the court finally agreed — it was too late for his gold, but not too late for the law.
ALASKA HISTORY · INDIGENOUS RIGHTS · GOLD RUSH ERA