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Jack London Found a Different Kind of Klondike Gold

Jack London found a different kind of gold in the Klondike. Leaving frustrated poverty behind in Oakland, California, he sailed north with a partner in 1897 to look for the traditional kind. At Port Townsend, Washington, they changed ships and sailed on to Juneau, Alaska. In Juneau, stories about the incredibly difficult and dangerous path …

Robert Service, Poet of the Gold Rush

Strikes, Gold Strikes, in the Far North Robert Service lived a long way from Northern Canada—in Glasgow, Scotland. Son of an heiress he got a good education; worked in a shipping office then a bank. He wrote his first poem at age 6. Studied literature at the University of Glasgow. Robert found inspiration in the …

Bennett Came First

Bennett, in 1898 and 1899, made sense as a first stop in Yukon Territory for the thousands of would be miners passing through on their way to the Klondike gold fields. The majority of them made their way on ships to Skagway, Alaska; struggled up the Chilkoot or the White pass; and settled at the …

A Box of Rough Planks

A box of rough planks, lined with Army blankets, carried Clyde Hudson home from Yukon Territory in 1943. He had come north, along with thousands of other civilians, because, at the end of 1942, the Alaska Highway, at best a rough draft, needed a lot of improving. When, in the spring of 1943, the baton …

Rugged, Remote and Austere

The Only Possible Route Rugged, remote, austere, breathtakingly beautiful and viciously inhospitable, the area spanned by the route of the Alcan Highway is unique in the world.  Nature is a dictator, not a ‘mother’ in the North Country. The Highway threads through a vast expanse of raw nature with virtually no population.  Alaska, alone, encompasses …

Ghosts at Morley Bay

Ghosts would surround us at Morley Bay, but first we had to find them. In late summer 1942 the 93rd Engineering Regiment maintained a motor pool and a supply dump at Morley Bay, Yukon. On a lazy afternoon in 2013 we had come to find it—and the ghosts of the hundreds of men who worked …

Emma Did it Her Way

Emma Kelly lived in Topeka, wrote for a Chicago newspaper, thirsted, as they say, for adventure. In 1897 word came south from the Klondike that men had struck gold, and young Emma decided to head north to Dawson City. She arranged financing, acquired a list of newspapers that would print stories she sent back, and …

Millie’s First White Men Were Black

Millie Jones, born in Whitehorse, grew up in Carcross, Yukon Territory—about as remote a place as the world had to offer. People in Carcross ordered their groceries in bulk–had staples shipped to Skagway and then up to them by the White Pass and Yukon Territory railroad. Clothes came from the Sears catalogue. Millie shared the Carcross …

Whitehorse, Headquarters City

Whitehorse, Yukon Territory headquartered most of the Alaska Highway Project throughout 1942. Decisions coming out of the little city shaped the lives of the men on the highway.  More important, the organization that controlled everything their lives depended on—from food and supplies to equipment and medical care—centered there. Whitehorse Yukon 1942 In a contemporary newspaper …

George Johnston of Teslin

George Johnston lived in Teslin, Yukon Territory. George recorded Teslin on film. And George provided Teslin with the “Teslin Taxi”. Teslin Post In 1940 the tiny village housed about 130 Tlingit natives and a few white homesteaders and prospectors. Its name came from the Tlingit word meaning long narrow water. A Tlingit Elder, George documented …