THE KLONDIKE
GOLD RUSH:
THE
WORLD'S LAST GREAT GOLD RUSH
 Before 1896, only First Nations peoples and the hardiest of
fur traders, prospectors, missionaries and North West Mounted
Police officers ventured into the Yukon Territory. But in two
short years, the people, the history and even the landforms of
Yukon would be profoundly altered. From a pre-gold rush figure
of fewer than 5,000 people, the population of Yukon would soar
to over 30,000 in 1898. And a land, which had not even been
drawn on maps one century before, would become the place to be
in North America, and arguably the world.
The Klondike Gold Rush was the most publicized gold rush in
history. Newspapers and magazines were filled with the tales
of Yukon adventurers, miners and Mounties, and the hardships
and windfalls of the gold rush stampeders. The Klondike
attracted, and was immortalized, by m any of the best writers
of the era including Jack London, Robert Service and Tappan
Adney. The characters surrounding the Klondike Gold Rush are
still the stuff of legends and dreams. The discovery and
discoverers of gold in the Klondike continue to be surrounded
by controversial and sometimes conflicting stories.

According to the oral traditions of the Tagish First Nations
people, the gold rush story begins when Skookum Jim, Dawson
Charlie and Patsy Henderson travelled down the Yukon River
from Tagish, in the southern Yukon. They were looking for
Jim's sisters Shaaw Thia, also known as Kate, was George
Carmack's wife. Well before his trip to the Klondike, Skookum
Jim had a dream in which his spirit helper, frog, appeared in
the form of Wealth Woman. She gave him a golden walking stick
and told him he would discover his fortune in the north.
After finding Kate and George Carmack, Skookum Jim and the
others were fishing in the Klondike River. It was July when
veteran fold-seeker Robert Henderson approached the group and
told Carmack about some good prospects he had found on Gold
Bottom Creek in the Klondike River Valley. According to the
unwritten code of the miner, Henderson had to share his
knowledge of potential finds with whomever he met. Carmack
asked whether there was a chance that he could stake a claim.
In a voice that was overheard by Skookum Jim and Dawson
Charlie, Henderson replied that Carmack was welcome, but not
his First nations brothers-in-law.
In early August, the group poled their boat up Rabbit Creek, a
tributary of the Klondike. They went over the dome that
separated the creeks and visited Robert Henderson's camp at
Gold Bottom. Henderson once again insulted the First Nations
men by refusing to sell them tobacco. "His obstinacy", Carmack
later recalled, "cost him a fortune."
The group headed back to Rabbit Creek and panned out a few
encouraging traces of gold. Then, in place where the bedrock
was exposed, someone found a nugget the size of a dime.
Energized by the find, they turned over loose pieces of rock
and found gold that, according to Carmack, lay thick between
the flaky slabs like cheese sandwiches. The date was August
16, 1896.
George Carmack, Skookum Jim and Dawson Charlie staked their
claims the next day and renamed the creek "Bonanza". The men
headed downstream to the community of Fortymile to register
their claims, but they never travelled over the dome to tell
Henderson of their find. Henderson stayed on Gold Bottom Creek
for another three weeks. By the time he caught wind of the
great discovery, the best locations on Bonanza Creek had been
staked.
A staking rush began that brought prospectors from all over
Yukon and Alaska. On August 31, 1896 gold was discovered on
Eldorado Creek, a tributary of Bonanza. Eldorado was no more
than five miles long and produced over 30 million dollars
worth of gold (an amount estimated at 3675 million U.S. in
1988 dollars).
But the world didn't know what was happening in Yukon until
July 14, 1897 when the steamship Excelsior landed in San
Francisco. On board was over a half a million dollars worth of
Klondike gold. News of the great discovery travelled over the
wires like wildfire. When the steamer Portland landed in
Seattle three days later a crowd of 5,000 greeted the 68
miners on board. Over a million dollars worth of gold was
carried down the gangplank in a battered assortment of
suitcases and rope-tied bags.
The Klondike Gold Rush was on.
It's a matter of ongoing speculation why the Klondike Gold
Rush captured the imagination of so many people. The world was
under the influence of severe recession at the time. The idea
of the North American frontier, which had brought so many
people from the Old World to the New, was still a fresh
concept in the minds of the American populace. This was the
land of the entrepreneur, the adventurer, the innovator and
the fortune hunter.
In a time where there was little food news, the press played
on the sensational wealth of the Klondike prospectors and
created the idea of a land where riches just lay in the ground
for anyone to dig up and carry away. Tens of thousands of
people took the bait, and they packed their bags for Dawson
City.
Steamship companies were swamped with enquiries, suppliers
couldn't keep up with the demand for Klondike outfits and
newspapers debated the relative merits of the different routes
to the Klondike.
Although steamers could travel along the Inside Passage,
around the cost of Alaska and then up the Yukon River all the
way to Dawson City, this route was very expensive and it was
nearly impossible to book a ticket on the Yukon River boats.
Among the other exhausting and often life-threatening routes
to the Klondike, it was the Chilkoot and the White Pass trails
that became the most popular paths to Dawson City.
From the start of the Chilkoot Trail, at Dyea, to the end, at
Lake Lindemann, was only a distance of 32 kilometers (2Omi) -
but it was a climb of 1,067 meters (3,500 ft), some of it at a
nearly 40 degree angle. The White Pass was not as steep, and
it was lower than the Chilkoot, but it stretched over 72
kilometers (45 mi).
At the top of the Chilkoot trail, on the summit of the pass,
was a wind blasted NWNP post that enforced the policy that
each stampeder had to carry one year's supply of food and
living materials into Canada. This amounted to close to one
tone of live saving supplies. Thus the treacherous trail was
made even more arduous (and tedious) by the fact that the
average stampeder needed to make this trip 20 times in order
to ferry all of his of her goods to Lindemann.
The stampeders who made it over the Chilkoot and White Pass
gathered at Lake Lindemann and Bennett Lake in the winter of
1897/8. They still needed to travel over 800 kilometers (500
mi) to Dawson City, but the rest of their journey would be by
water. A flurry of boat building denuded the surrounding
hillside of trees. When the ice went out on the lakes on May
29 of that year, a rag-tag flotilla of 7,000 barges, rafts and
homemade plank ships began their journey to Dawson.
When this armada reached Dawson they discovered that all the
claims had been staked two years before. Many of the
stampeders headed back as soon as they arrived. Others stayed
and found wealth in different enterprises.
Fortunes were made in Dawson, but many were also lost. Some of
the richest Yukon citizens were the business people who sold
the stampeders goods and services. There was no shortage of
moneymaking schemes and the desperation that fuelled them - a
couple of entrepreneurs even hit on the idea of sifting gold
dust from the dirt beneath the floors and foundations of the
saloons.
In 1898, the confluence of the Yukon and Klondike Rivers had
been transformed from a small fishing camp used by the Han
First Nations people, into Dawson City, the largest and most
cosmopolitan Canadian city west of Winnipeg. On sale in the
streets of Dawson were French champagnes, oysters, the finest
Paris fashions, porcelain, parasols, lacquer work and imported
delicacies.

But the Klondike Gold Rush ended as quickly as it began. In
the summer of 1899, gold was discovered in the sandy beaches
of Nome, Alaska. Many of the people who had arrived too late
to stake claims in the Klondike left immediately for the "new
Eldorado". Ironically, the greatest year for gold production
in Yukon was 1900. Over 22 million dollars worth of gold was
extracted, in contrast to the $2.5 million of 1897 and the $10
million of 1898.
The Klondike Gold Rush marked the end of a decade and the end
of an era. Soon after, gold mining was taken over by
corporations and government who could make the investment in
complex machinery.
The Klondike Gold Rush brought out the best and the worst in
the people that followed its call -it remains a fascinating
enigma to this day. One of the last manifestations of the
dream of the North American frontier, the Klondike was seen as
a place where any person could make his or her fortune by
exploring unopened territory. The concept of frontier has
become a myth or an idealized notion. But the vestiges of the
Klondike quest are still to be seen and sensed in the
landmarks of Yukon - from the summit of the Chilkoot Trail to
the boardwalks of Dawson City.
For More Information Contact:
Tourism Yukon
Box 2704
Whitehorse, Yukon
Canada YlA2C6
Tel: (867) 667-5388
Fax: (867) 667-3546
http://www.touryukon.com/
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