a

EH-

AN UP-TO-DATE: GUIDE:

KLONDIKE DISTRICT

YUKON VALLEY

Sand, McNally&Co., 'uhlishers,

SEwAYG0RKMD E!

North American Transportation and Trading Company

000

DIRECTORS...

JOHN J. HEALY, Dawson, Klondike Gold Field-, ELY E. WEARE, Fort Cudahy. N. W. T. CHARLES A. WEARE, Chicago, III. JOHN CUDAHY, Chicago, III. PORTUS B. WEARE, Chicago, III. MICHAEL CUDAHY, Chicago, III.

ALASKA and NORTHWEST TERRITORY

MERCHANTS and CARRIERS

*

STEAMERS :

*

TRADING POSTS:

Portus B. Weare

*

Fort Get There

John Cudahy

*

Weare

C. H. Hamilton

J. J. Healy

T. C. Power

J. C. Barr

* * * *

*

Healy Circle City Fort Cudahy

Klondike

*

Dawson

Operates Steamships

between Seattle and Ft. Get There, St. Michael's Island, and steamboats from Ft Get There, St. Michael's Island to all pointson the Yukon River. The only established line running from Seattle to Klondike. Also operates large, well-stocked

stores at all of the principal mining points in the interior i >r

Alaska and Northwest Territory on the Yukon River. For rates and full information of this wonderful mining country call on or address anv of the Company's offices.

Steamers leave September io, 1897, first steamer in 1898, June (St, and every two weeks thereafter.

CHICAGO OFFICE...R. 290 Old Colony Building

SEATTLE, WASH., 0FFICE...N0. 618 First Avenue SAN FRANCISCO OFFlf F "- ° "• " - '

"THE GREATEST GOLD DISTRICT ON EARTH."

The Yukon-Cariboo British Columbia Gold Mining

CAPITAL

$5,000,000 Development Company

Shares...

#1.00 each. Full Paid-Non Assessable.

J. EDWARD ADDICKS, President, Claymont. Delaware.

SYLVESTER T. EVERETT, 1st Vice-President, Cleveland.

BENJAMIN BUTTERWORTH, 2d Vice-President, Washington.

E. F. J. GAYNOR, Treasurer,

Auditor Manhattan R. /?., New York City.

CHARLES H. KITTINGER, Secretary.

66 Broadway, New York City, Harrison Building, Philadelphia.

DIRECTORS.

HON. JOHN H. McGRAW, Ex-Governor, State of Washington.

Vice-President First National Hank, Seattle. CAMILLE WEIDENFELD, Banker, 45 Wall Street, New York. CHARLES E. JUDSON, President Economic Gas Company, Chicago. HON. BENJAMIN BUTTERWORTH, Com'sioner of Patents, Washington. HON. JAMES G. SHAW, Manufacturer, New Castle, Delaware. NVLVESTER T. EVERETT, V-Pres't Cleveland Terminal

& Valley R. R., Cleveland. . HARLES H. KITTINGER, 66 Broadway, New York,

Harrison Building, Philadelphia. HON. JOHN LAUGHLIN, Ex-State Senator, New York,

Laughlin, Ewell & Haupt, Attorneys-at-Law, Buffalo. I ULIUS CHAMBERS, lournalist, New York.

GEN. E. M. CARR, of Preston, Carr & Oilman, Attornevs-at-Law, Seattle. THOMAS W. LAWSON, Banker, 33 State Street, Boston. GEORGE B. KITTINGER, Mining Engineer, Seattle, Wash. E. F. J. GAYNOR, Auditor Manhattan Railway Co., New York. PHILO D. BEARD, Treasurer Queen City Gas Co., Buffalo. J. M. BUXTON, M. E., Vancouver, British Columbia. GEORGE A. KELLY'. 66 Broad wav, New York. J. EDWARD ADDICKS. Delaware.

. . . THIS COMPANY is formed to explore and develop the GOLD FIELDS of British Columbia, including- the Cariboo District and the Klondike District at the headwaters of the Yukon River. Shares of its Capital Stock are offered to the public at par $1.00 per share. The Company has placed exploring parties in the Gold Regions, and now has its own Agents in this marvelously rich field. Each party is in charge of mining engineers, fully equipped for successful discovery and development.

Prospectus and additional information furnished, and subscriptions to stock received at office of

J. EDWARD ADDICKS, Harrison Building,

1500 Market St„ Philadelphia.

GOLDEN ALASKA

A COMPLETE ACCOUNT TO DATE

Yukon Valley

ITS HISTORY, GEOGRAPHY, MINERAL AND OTHER

RESO URGES, OPPOR TV XI TIES A XD

MEANS OP ACCESS

Ernest Ixgersoll,

(Formerly with the Hayden Survey in the West)

author of

Knocking 'Round the Rockies" "The Crest of the Continent,

etc., and General Editor of Rand. McNally &

Co.'s "Guide Books."

Chicago and New York-.

RAND, McNALLY & COMPANY.

1S97.

ALASKA.

Bullion Safe Gold mining

Companp

CAPITAL. .$1,000,000

Shares... $ i .00 each

Full Paid Non-Assessable

Mines on the Yukon.

Mines on the Blue River.

This Company owns 160 acres of Gold-bear- ing gravel from five to forty feet thick con- taining manv millions of value.

A limited amount of the full paid, non-assessable shares will be sold at one dollar each.

For prospectus and particulars, address,

W. L. Boyd Co.,© wall street,

C^NEW YORK.

r

INTRODUCTION.

To make "a book about the Klondike" so shortly after that word first burst upon the ears of a sur- prised world, would be the height of literary impu- dence, considering how remote and incommunicado that region is, were it not the public is intensly cu- rious to know whatever can be said authentically in regard to it. "The Klondike," it must be remem- bered, is, in reality, a very limited district only one small river valley in a gold-bearing territory twice as large as Xew England; and it came into promi- nence so recently that there is really little to tell in respect to it because nothing has had time to happen and be communicated to the outside world. But in its neighborhood, and far north and south of it, are other auriferous rivers, creeks and bars, and mountains filled with untried quartz-ledges, in respect to which information has been accumulat- ing for some years, and where at any moment "strikes" may be made that shall equal or eclipse the wealth of the Klondike placers. It is possible, then, to give here much valuable information in

.'J65948

iv Golden Alaska.

regard to the Yukon District generally, and this the writer has attempted to do. The best authority fur early exploration and geography is the monumen- tal work of Capt. \V. II. Dull, "Alaska and its Re- sources," whose companion, Frederick Whymper, also wrote a narrative of their adventures. The reports of the United States Coast Survey in that region, of the exploration of the Upper Yukon by Schwatka and Hayes of the United States Geological Survey, of Xelson, Turner and others attached to the Weather Service, of the Governor of the Terri- tory, of Raymond, Abercrombie, Allen and oilier army and naval officers who have explored the coast country and reported to various departments of the government, and of several individual exph >r- ers, especially the late E. J. Glave, also contain facts of importance for the present compilation. Tin- most satisfactory sources of information as to the geography, routes of travel, geology and mineral ogy and mining development, are contained in tin investigations conducted some ten years ago by tin Canadian Geological Survey, under the leadership of Dr. G. M. Dawson and of William Ogilvie. < if these I have made free use. and wish to make an equally free acknowledgement.

It will thus be found that the content.- of thi> pamphlet justified even the hastv publication whid

Golden Alaska. v

the public demands, and which precludes much at- tention to literan' form; but an additional claim to attention is the information it seeks to give intend- ing travelers to to that far-away and very new and as yet unfurnished region, how to go and what to take, and what are the conditions and emergencies which they must prepare to meet. Undoubtedly the pioneers to the Yukon pictured the difficulties of the route and the hardships of their life in the high- est colors, both to add to their self-glory and to re- duce competition. Moreover, every day mitigates the hardships and makes easier the travel. Never- theless, enough difficulties, dangers and chances of failure remain to make the going to Alaska a matter for very careful forethought on the part of every man. To help him weigh the odds and choose wisely, is the purpose of this little book.

GOLDEN ALASKA.

ROUTES TO THE YUKON GOLD-FIELDS.

The gold-fields of the Yukon Valley, at and near Klondike River, are near the eastern boundary of Alaska, from twelve to fifteen hundred miles up from the mouth of the river, and from five to eight hun- dred miles inland by the route across the country from the southern Alaskan coast. In each case an ocean voyage must be taken as the first step; and steamers may be taken from San Francisco, Port- land, Ore., Seattle, Wash., or from Victoria, B. C.

The overland routes to these cities require a word.

i. To San Francisco. This city is reached di- rectly by half a dozen routes across the plains and Rocky Mountains, of which the Southern Pacific, by way of Xew Orleans and El Paso; the Atchison & Santa Fe and Atlantic & Pacific by way of Kansas City, and across northern Xew Mexico and Arizona; the Burlington, Denver & Rio Grande, by wav of Denver and Salt Lake City; and the Union

8 Golden Alaska.

and Central Pacific, by way of Omaha, Ogden and Sacramento, are the principal ones.

2. To Portland, Oregon. This is reached directly by the Union Pacific and Oregon Short Line, via Omaha and Ogden; and by the Northern Pacific, via St. Paul and Helena, Montana.

3. To Seattle. Wash. This city, Tacoma, Port Townsend and other ports on Puget Sound, are the termini of the Northern Pacific Railroad and also of the Great Northern Railroad from St. Paul along the northern boundary of the United States. The Canadian Pacific will also take passengers there expeditiously by rail or boat from Vancouver, B. C.

4. To Vancouver and Victoria, B. C. Any of the routes heretofore mentioned reach Victoria by adding a steamboat journey; but the direct route, and one of the pleasantest of all the transcontinental routes, is by the Canadian Pacific Railway from Montreal or Chicago, via Winnipeg. Manitoba, to the coast at Vancouver, whence a ferry crosses to Victoria.

Regular routes of transportation to Alaska are supplied by the Pacific Coast Steamship Company, which has been dispatching mail-steamships once a fortnight the year round from Tacoma to Sitka, which touch at Juneau and all other ports of call. Thev also maintain a service of steamers between

Golden Alaska. 9

San Francisco and Portland and Puget Sound ports. These are fitted with every accommodation and lux- ury for tourist-travel; and an extra steamer, the Queen, has been making semi-monthly trips during June, July and August. These steamers would carry 250 passengers comfortably and the tourist fare for the round trip has been $100.

The Canadian Pacific Navigation Company has been sending semi-monthly steamers direct from Victoria to Port Simpson and way stations the year round. They are fine boats, but smaller than the others and are permitted to land only at Sitka and Dyea.

Such are the means of regular communication with Alaskan ports. There has been no public con- veyance north of Sitka, except twice or thrice a year in summer in the supply-steamers of the Alas- kan commercial companies, which sailed from San Francisco to St. Michael and there transferred to small boats up the Yukon.

Whether any changes will be made in these schedules for the season of 1898 remains to be seen.

Special steamers. As the regular accommoda- tions were found totally inadequate to the demand for passage to Alaska which immediately followed the report of rich discoveries on Klondike Creek,

io Golden Alaska.

extra steamers were hastily provided by the old companies, others are fitted up and sent out by speculative owners, and some have been privately chartered. A score or more steamships, loaded with passengers, horses, mules and burros (donkeys) to an uncomfortable degree, were thus despatched from San Francisco, Puget Sound and Victoria between the middle of July and the middle of August. An example of the way the feverish demand for trans- portation is found in the case of the Willamette, a collier, which was cleaned out in a few hours and turned into an extemporized passenger-boat. The whole 'tween decks space was filled with rough bunks, wonderfully close together, for "first-class" passengers; while away down in the hold second- class arrangements were made which the mind shud- ders to contemplate. Yet this slave-ship sort of a chance was eagerly taken, and such space as was left was crowded with animals and goods. Many persons and parties bought or chartered private steamers, until the supply of these was exhausted by the end of August. Two routes may be chosen to the gold-fields.

i. By way of the Yukon River. This is all the way by water, and means nearly 4,500 miles of voy- aging.

2. By way of the seaports of Dyea or Shkagway,

. ■■'■ -i i

Golden Alaska, 13

over mountain passe?, afoot or a-horseback, and down the upper Yukon River and down the lakes and rivers by raft, skiff and steamboat.

To describe these routes is the next task first, that by the way of St. Michael, and second up the Yukon River.

Route, via St. Michael and the Yukon River. This begins by a sea-voyage, which may be direct, or along the coast. The special steamers (and fu- ture voyages, no doubt) usually take a direct course across the Xorth Pacific and through the Aleutian Islands to St. Michael, in Norton Sound, a bight of Bering Sea. The distance from San Francisco is given as 2,850 miles; from Victoria or Seattle, about 2,200 miles. The inside course would be somewhat longer, would follow the route next to be described as far as Juneau and Sitka, then strike northwest along the coast to St. Michael.

This town, on an island near shore in Norton Sound, was established in 1835 by Lieut. Michael Tebenkoff, of the Russian navy, who named it after his patron saint. Though some distance to the mouth of the Yukon entrance. St. Michael has al- ways been the controlling center and base of sup- plies for the great valley. The North American Trading and Transportation Company and the Alas- ka Commercial Company have their large ware-

14 Golden Alaska.

houses here, and provide the miners with tools, clothing and provisions. Recently the wharf and warehouse accommodations have been extended. and the population has increased, but if, as is prob- able, any considerable number of men are stopped there this fall by the freezing of the river, and com- pelled to pass the winter on the island, they will find it a dreary, if not dangerous experience.

The vessels supplying this depot can seldom ap- proach the anchorage of St. Michael before the end of June on account of large bodies of drifting ice that beset the waters of Norton Sound and the straits between St. Lawrence and the Yukon Delta.

A temporary landing-place is built out into water deep enough for loaded boats drawing five feet to come up at high tide, this is removed when winter approaches, as otherwise it would be destroyed by ice. The shore is sandy and affords a moderately sloping beach, on which boats may be drawn up. A few feet only from high water mark are perpen- dicular banks from six to ten feet high, composed of decayed pumice and ashes, covered with a layer about four feet thick of clay and vegetable matter resembling peat. This forms a nearly even meadow with numerous pools of water, which gradually as- cends for a mile or so to a low hill, of volcanic ori- gin, known as the Shaman Mountain.

Golden Alaska. 15

Between the point on which St. Michael is built and the mainland, a small arm of the sea makes in, in which three fathoms may be carried until the flagstaff of the fort bears wrest by north, this is the best-protected anchorage, and has as much water and as good bottom as can be found much farther out.

The excitement of the summer of 1897 caused an enlargement of facilities and the erection of addi- tional buildings, forming a nucleus of traffic called Fort Get There. Here will be put together in the autumn or winter at least three, and perhaps more, new river steamboats, of which only two or three have been running on the lower river during the last two or three years. These are taken up, in pieces, by ships and fitted together at this point. All are flat-bottomed, stern-wheeled, powerfully engined craft, the largest able to carry perhaps 250 tons, such as run on the upper Missouri, and they will burn wood, the cutting and stacking of which on the river bank will furnish work to many men dur- ing the coming winter. To such steamers, or small- er boats, all the persons and cargoes must be trans- ferred at St. Michael.

For the last few years there has been no trader here but the agent of the Alaska Commercial Com- pany, and a story is told of the building of a river-

16 Golden Alaska.

boat there in 1892, which illustrates what life on the Yukon used to be. In that year a Chicago man, P. B. Weare, resolved to enter the Alaskan field as a trader. He chartered a schooner, and placed upon it a steamboat, built in sections and needing only to be put together and have its machinery set up, and for this purpose he took with him a force of car- penters and machinists. On reaching St. Michael Weare was refused permission to land his boat sec- tions on the land of the Commercial Company's post, and was compelled to make a troublesome landing on the open beach, where he began opera- tions. Suddenly his ship carpenters stopped work. They had been offered, it was said, double pay by the rival concern if they would desist from all work. Weare turned to the Indians, but with the same ill- success. The Indians were looking out for their winter grub. Here was the Chicago man 2,500 miles from San Francisco and only two weeks left to him in which to put his boat together and then hope for a chance to ascend the river before winter came on. There was no time in which to get additional men from San Francisco. In the midst of his trouble Weare one day espied the rev- enue cutter Bear steaming into the roadstead. On board of her was Captain Michael A. Heal}'. That officer, on going ashore and discovering the con-

Golden Alaska. 19

dition of affairs, threatened to hang every carpenter and mechanic Weare had brought up if they failed to immediately commence work. The men went to work, and with them went a gang of men from the Bear. The little steamer was put together in a few days, and the Bear only went to sea after seeing the P. B. Weare steaming into the mouth of the Yukon.

The Weare was enabled that summer to land her stores along the Yukon, and was the only vessel available for the early crowds of miners going to Klondike.

The mouth of the Yukon is a great delta, sur- rounded by marsh of timber a soaking prairie in summer, a plain of snow and ice in winter. The shifting bars and shallows face out from this delta far into Bering Sea, and no channel has yet been discovered whereby an ocean steamer could enter any of the mouths. Fortunately the northernmost mouth, nearest St. Michael and 65 miles from it, is navigable for the light river steamers, and this one, called Aphoon. and marked by its unusual growth of willows and bushes is well known to the local Russian and Indian pilots. It is narrow and intri- cate, and the general course up stream is south- southeast. Streams and passages enter it, and it has troublesome tidal currents. The whole space be-

20 Golden Alaska.

tween the mouth is a net-work, indeed, of narrow channels, through the marshes.

Kutluck, at the outlet of the Aphoon, on Tastol Bay, is an Indian village ,long celebrated for its man- ufacture of skin boats (bidars), and there the old- time voyagers were accustomed to get the only night's sleep ashore that navigation permits between St. Michael and Andraefski. On the south bank of the main stream, at the head of the delta, is the Roman Catholic mission of Kuslivuk; and a few miles higher, just above the mouth of the Andraef- ski River, is tne abandoned Russian trading post, Andraefski, above which the river winds past Icog- mute, where there is a Greek Catholic mission. The banks of the river are much wooded, and the cur- rent even as far down as Koserefski averages over three knots an hour. Above Koserefski (the Cath- olic Mission station), the course is along stretches of uninviting country, among marsh islands and ''sloughs,'' the current growing more and more swift on the long reach from Auvik, where the Epis- copal mission is situated, to Xulato.

The river here has a nearly north and south course, parallel with the coast of Norton Sound and within fifty miles or so of it. Two portages across here form cut-offs in constant use in winter by the traders, Indians and missionaries. The first of these

Golden Alaska. 21

portages starts from the mainland opposite the Isl- and of St. Michael, and passes over the range of hills that defines the shore to the headwaters of the An- vik River. This journey may be made in winter by sledges and thence down the Auvik to the Yukon, but it is a hard road. Air. Xelson, the naturalist, and a fur trader, spent two months from November 16, 1880, to January 19, 1891, in reaching the Yu- kon by this path.

The other portage is that between Unalaklik, a Swedish mission station at the mouth of the Unalak- lik River, some fifty miles north of St. Michael, and a stream that enters the Yukon half way between Auvik and Xulato. In going from St. Michael to Unalatlik there are few points at which a boat can land even in the smoothest weather; in rough weather only Major': Cove and Kegiktowenk before rounding Tolstoi Point to Topanika, where there is a trading post. Topanika is some ten miles from Unalaklik, with a high shelving beach, behind which rise high walls of sandstone in perpendicular bluffs from twenty to one hundred feet in height. This beach continues all the way to the Unalaklik River, the bluff gradually decreasing into a marshy plain at the river's mouth, which is obstructed by a bar over which at low tide there are only a few feet of water except in a narrow and tortuous channel, constantly

22 Golden Alaska.

changing as the river deposits fresh detritus. Inside this bar there are two or three fathoms for a few miles, but the channel has only a few feet, most of the summer, from the mouth of the river to Ulu- kuk.

Trees commence along the Unalaklik River as soon as the distance from the coast winds and silt air permit them to grow; willow, poplar, birch and spruce being those most frequently found.

The Unalaklik River is followed upward to Ulu- kuk. where begins a sledging portage over the marshes to the Llukuk Hills, where there is a na- tive village known as Yesolia Sopka, or Cheerful Peak, at an altitude of eight hundred feet above the surrounding plain. This is a well-known trapping ground, the fox and marten being very plentiful. From Sopka Yesolia (Cheerful Feak) it is about one day's journey to Beaver Lake, which is only a marshy tundra in winter, but is flooded in the spring and summer month-. From the high hills beyond the lake one may catch a first glimpse of the great Yukon sweeping between its splendid banks.

The native.- call Xulato emphatically a "hungry" place, and it was once the scene of an atrocious mas- sacre. Capt. Dall, from whose book much of the information regarding this part of Alaska is derived, describes the Indians here as a verv <jreat nuisance.

OLD RUSSIAN BLOCK HOUSE AT SITKA.

Golden Alaska. 25

"They had," he explains, "a great habit of coming in and sitting down, doing and saying nothing, but watching everything. At meal times they seemed to count and weigh every morsel we ate, and were never backward in assisting to dispose of the re- mains of the meal. Occasionally we would get des- perate and clean them all out, but they would drop in again and we could do nothing but resign our- selves."

The soil on the banks of the Yukon and that of the islands probably never thaws far below the sur- face. It is certain that no living roots are found at a greater depth than three feet. The soil, in layers that seems to mark annual inundations, consists of a stratum of sand overlaid by mud and covered with vegetable matter, the layers being from a half inch to three inches in thickness. In many places where the bank has been undermined these layers may be counted by the hundred. Low bluffs of blue sand- stone, with here and there a high gravel bank, char- acterize the shores as far as Point Sakataloutan, and some distance above this point begin the quartzose rocks.

The next station on the river is the village of No- wikakat, on the left bank. Here may be obtained stores of dried meat and fat from the Indians. The village is situated upon a beautiful bay or Nowika-

26 Golden Alaska.

kat Harbor, which is connected by a narrow en- trance with the Yukon. "Through this a beautiful view is obtained across the river, through the numer- ous islands of the opposite shore, and of the Yukon Mountains in the distance. The feather)' willows and light poplars bend over and are reflected in the dark water, unmixed as yet with Yukon mud; even- island and hillside is clothed in the delicate green of spring, and luxuriates in a density of foli- age remarkable in such a latitude."

Xowikakat is specially noted for the excellence of its canoes, of which the harbor is so full that a boat makes its landing with difficult}" among them. It is the only safe place on the lower Yukon for winter- ing a steamer, as it is sheltered from the freshets which bring down great crushes of ice in the spring.

At Xuklukahyet there is a mission of the Episco- pal church and a trading store, but there may or may not be supplies of civilized goods, not to speak of moose meat and fat. This is the neutral ground where all the tribes meet in the spring to trade. The Tananah, which flows into the Yukon at this point, is much broader here than the Yukon, and it is here that Captain Dall exclaims in his diary: "And yet into this noble river no white. .man has dipped his paddle." Recently, however, the Tana- nah lias been more or less explored by prospectors

Golden Alaska. 27

with favorable results towards the head of the river, which is more easily reached overland from Circle City and the Birch Creek camps.

Leaving Nuklukahyet, the "Ramparts" are soon sighted, and the Yukon rapids sweep between bluffs and hills which rise about fifteen hundred feet above the river, which is not more than half a mile wide and seems almost as much underground as a river bed in a canyon. The rocks are metaphoric quartzites, and the river-bed is crossed by a belt of granite. The rapid current has worn the granite away at either side, making two good channels, but in the center lies an island of granite over which the water plunges at high water, the fall being about twelve feet in half a mile.

Beyond the mouth of the Tananah the Yukon begins to widen, and it is filled with small islands. The mountains disappear, and just beyond them the Totokakat, or Dall River of Ketchum, enters the Yukon from the north. Beyond this point the river, ever broadening, passes the "Small Houses," de- serted along the bank at the time, years ago, when the scarlet fever, brought by a trading vessel to the mouth of the Chilkat, spread to the Upper Yukon and depopulated the station. This place is noted for the abundance of its game and fish.

The banks of the river above this point become

2& Golden Alaska.

very low and flat, the plain stretching almost un- broken to the Arctic Ocean.

The next stream which empties into the Yukon is Beaver Creek, and farther on the prospector bound for Circle City may make his way some two hundred miles up Birch Creek, along which much gold has already been discovered, to a portage of six miles, which will carry him within six miles of Circle City on the west.

Meanwhile the Yukon passes Porcupine River and Fort Yukon, the old trading-post founded in 1S46-7, about a mile farther up the river than the present fort is situated. The situation was changed in 1864, owing to the undermining of the Yukon, which yearly washed away a portion of the steep bank un- til the foundation timbers of the old Redoubt over- hung the flood.

Many small islands encumber the river from Fort Yukon to Circle City, and the river flows along the rich lowland to the towns and mining centers of the new El Dorado, an account of which belongs to a future chapter.

This voyage can be made only between the middle of June and the middle of September, and requires about forty days, at best, from San Francisco to Cir- cle City or Forty Mile.

Route via Juneau, the Passes and down the Up-

■§* J***:1*.

INDIAN TOTEM POLE. TORT SIMPSO^

Golden Alaska. 31

per Yukon River. The second and more usual, be- cause shorter and quicker course, is that to the head of Lynn Canal (Taiya Inlet) and overland. This coast voyage may be said to begin at Victoria, B. C. (since all coast steamers gather and stop there)., where a large number of persons prefer to buy their outfits, since by so doing, and obtaining a certificate of the fact, they avoid the custom du- ties exacted at the boundary line on all goods and equipments brought from the United States. Victo- ria is well supplied with stores, and is, besides, one of the most interesting towns on the Pacific coast. The loveliest place in the whole neighborhood is Beacon Hill Park, and is well worth a visit by those who find an hour or two on their hands before the departure of the steamer. It forms a half-natural, half-cultivated area of the shore of the Straits of Fuca, where coppices of the beautiful live oak, and many strange trees and shrubs mingled with the all- pervading evergreens.

Within three miles of the city, and reached by street cars, is the principal station in the North Pa- cific of the British navy, at Esquimault Bay. This is one of the most picturesque harbors in the world, and a beginning is made of fortifications upon a very large scale and of the most modern character. This station, in many respects, is the most interest-

32 Golden Alaska.

ing place on the Pacific coast of Canada.

Leaving Victoria, the steamer makes its way cau- tiously through the sinuous channels of the harbor into the waters of Fuca Strait, but this is soon left behind and the steamer turns this way. and that, at the entrance to the Gulf of Georgia, among those islands through which runs the international boun- dary line, and for the possession of which England and the United States nearly went to war in 1862. The water at first is pale and somewhat opaque, for it is the current of the great Fraser gliding far out upon the surface, and the steamer passes on beyond it into the darker, clearer, salter waters of the gulf. Then the prow is headed to Vancouver, where the mails, freight and new railway passengers are re- ceived.

From Vancouver the steamer crosses to Xanaimo, a large settlement on Vancouver Island, where coal mines of great importance exist. A railway now connects this point with Victoria, and a wagon road crosses the interior of the island to Alberni Canal and the seaport at its entrance on Barclay Sound. This is the farthest northern telegraph point. The mines at Xanaimo were exhausted some time ago. after which deep excavations were made on Xew- castle Island, just opposite the town. Tut after a tremendous fire these also were abandoned, and all

Golden Alaska. 33

the workings are now on the shores of Departure Bay, where a colliery village named Wellington has been built up. A steam ferry connects Xanaimo with Wellington; and while the steamer takes in its coal, the passengers disperse in one or the other vil- lage, go trout fishing, shooting or botanizing in the neighboring woods, or trade and chaffer with the Indians. Xanaimo has anything but the appear- ance of a mining town. The houses do not stretch out in the squalid, soot-covered rows familiar to Pennsylvania, but are scattered picturesquely, and surrounded by gardens.

Just ahead lie the splendid hills of Texada Island, whose iron mines yield ore of extraordinary purity, which is largely shipped to the United States to be made into steel. The steamer keeps to the left, mak- ing its way through Bayne's Sound, passing Cape Lazaro on the left and the upper end of Texada on the right, across the broadening water along the Vancouver shore into Seymour Xarrows. These narrows are only about 900 yards wide, and in them there is an incessant turmoil and bubbling of cur- rents. This is caused by the collision of the streams which takes place here; the flood stream from the south, through the Strait of Fuca and up the Haro Archipelago being met by that from Queen Char- lotte Sound and Johnstone straits. These straits are

34

Golden Alaska.

about 140 miles long, and by the time their full length is passed, and the maze of small islands on the right and Vancouver's bulwark on the left are escaped together, the open Pacific shows itself for an hour or two in the offing of Queen Charlotte's Sound, and the steamer rise- and falls gently upon long, lazy rollers that have swept all the way from China and Polynesia. Otherwise the whole voyage is in sheltered water.-, and seasickness is impossible. The steamer's course now hugs the shore, turning into Pitz Hugh Sound, among Calvert, Hunter's and Pardswell islands, where the ship's spars some- times brush the overhanging trees. Here are the entrances to Burke Channel and Dean's Canal that penetrate far amid the tremendous cliffs of the main- land mountains. Beyond these the steamer dashes across the open bight of Milbank Sound only to en- ter the lung pa>sages behind Princess Royal. Pit and Packer islands, and coming out at last into Dixon Sound at the extremity of British Columbia's ragged coast line.

d he fog- which prevail here are due to the fact that this bight is tilled with the waters of the warm Japanese current and the gulf stream of the Pacific from which the warm moisture rises to be condensed by the cool air that descends from the neighboring mountains, into the dense foirs and heavv rain

Golden Alaska. $7

storms to which the littoral forest owes its extra- ordinary luxuriance. During the mid-summer and early autumn, however, the temperature of air and water become so nearly equable that fog and rain are the exception rather than the rule.

Crossing the invisible boundary into Alaska the steamer heads straight toward Fort Tougass, on Wales Island, once a military station of the United States, but now only a fishing place. Between this point and Fort YVrangel another abandoned military post of the United States, two or three fish canneries and trading stations are visited and the ship goes on among innumerable islands and along wide reaches of sound to Taku Inlet (which deeply indents the coast, and is likely in the near future to become an important route to the gold fields), and a few hours later Juneau City is reached.

Juneau City has been lately called the key to the Klondike regions, as it is the point of departure for the numberless gold hunters who, when the season opens again, will rush blindly over incalculably rich ledges near the coast to that remote inland El Do- rado of their dreams.

Juneau has for seventeen years been supported by the gold mines of the neighboring coast. Tt is situ- ated ten miles above the entrance of (lastineau Chan- nel, and lies at the base of precipitous mountains.

38 Golden Alaska.

its court house, hotels, churches, schools, hospital and opera house forming- the nucleus for a popula- tion which in 1893 aggregated 1,500, a number very largely increased each winter by the miners who gather in from distant camps. The saloons, of which in 1871 there were already twenty-two, have in- creased proportionately, and there are, further, at least one weekly newspaper, one volunteer fire bri- gade, a militia company and a brass band in Juneau. The curio shops on Front and Seward streets are well worth visiting, and from the top of Seward Street a path leads up to the Auk village, whose people claim the flats at the mouth of Gold Creek. A curi- ous cemetery may be seen on the high ground across the creek, ornamented with totemic carvings and hung with offerings to departed spirits which no white man dares disturb. FROM JUNEAU TO THE GOLD FIELDS.

The few persons who formerly wished to go to the head of Lynn Canal did so mainly by canoeing, or chartered launches, but now many opportunities are offered by large steamboats. Most of the steam- ers that bring miners and prospectors from below do not now discharge their freight at Juneau, how- ever, but go straight to the new port Dyea at the head of the canal. Lynn Canal is the grandest fiord on the coa<t. which it penetrates for seventy-five

Golden Alaska. 39

miles. It is then divided by a long peninsula called Seduction Point, into two prongs, the western of which is called Chilkat Inlet, and the eastern Chil- koot. "It has but few indentations, and the abrupt palisades of the mainland shores present an unri- valled panorama of mountains, glaciers and forests, with wonderful cloud effects. Depths of 430 fath- oms have been sounded in the canal, and the conti- nental range on the east and the White [Mountains on the west rise to average heights of 6,000 feet, with glaciers in every ravine and alcove." No Cam- eron boundary line, which Canada would like to es- tablish, would cut this fiord in two, and make it use- less to both countries in case of quarrel. The mag- nificent fan-shaped Davidson glacier, here, is only one among hundreds of grand ice rivers shedding their bergs into its waters. At various points sal- mon canneries have long been in operation; and the Seward City mines are only the best among several mineral locations of promise. A glance at the map will show that this "canal" forms a straight continu- ation of Chatham Strait, making a north and south passage nearly four hundred miles in length, which is undoubtedly the trough of a departed glacier.

Dyea, the new steamer landing and sub-port of entry, is at the head of navigation on the Chilkoot or eastern branch of this Lynn Canal, and takes its

40 Golden Alaska.

name in bad modern spelling, from the long-known Taiya Inlet, which is a prolongation inland for twenty miles of the head of the Chilkoot Inlet. It should continue to be spelled Tiaya. This inlet is far the better of the two for shipping. Chilkat Inlet being exposed to the prevalent and often dangerous south wind, so that it is regarded by navigators as one of the most dangerous points on the Alaskan coast. A Presbyterian mission and government school were formerly sustained at Haines, on Seduc- tion Point, but were abandoned some years ago on account of Indian hostility.

The Passes. Three passes over the mountains are reached from these two inlets. Chilkat, Chil- koot and White.

Chilkat Pass is that longest known and formerly most in vogue. The Chilkat Indians had several fixed villages near the head of the inlet, and were accustomed to go back and forth over the moun- tains to trade with the interior Indians, whom they would not allow to come to the coast. They thus enjoyed not only the monopoly of the business of carrying supplies over to the Yukon trading posts and bringing out the furs, and more recently of as- sisting the miners, but made huge profits as middle- men between the Indians of the interior and the trading posts on the coast. They arc a sturdy race

Golden Alaska.

43

of mountaineers, and the most arrogant, treacherous

and turbulent of all the northwestern tribes, but their day is nearly passed. The early explorers Krause, Everette and others took this pass, and it was here that E. J. Glare first tried (in T891) to take pack horses across the mountains, and suc- ceeded so well as to show the feasibility of that method of carriage, which put a check upon the extortion and faithlessness of the Indian carriers. His account of his adventures in making this experi- ment, over bogs, wild rocky heights, snow fields, swift rivers and forest barriers, has been detailed in The Century Magazine for 1892, and should be read by all interested. "No matter how important your mission," Mr. Glave wrote, ''your Indian carriers, though they have duly contracted to accompany you, will delay your departure till it suits their con- venience, and any exhibition of impatience on vour part will only remind them of your utter depen- dency on them; and then intrigue for increase of pay will at once begin. While en route they will prolong the journey by camping on the trail for two or three weeks, tempted by good hunting or fishing. In a land where the open season is so short, and the ways are so long, such delay is a tremendous drawback. Often the Indians will carry their loads some part of the way agreed on, then demand an

44 Golden Alaska.

extravagant increase of pay or a goodly share of the white man's stores, and. failing to get either, will fling down their packs and return to their village, leaving their white employer helplessly stranded.

The usual charge for Indian carriers is $2 a day and board, and they demand the best fare and a great deal of it. so that the white man finds his pre- cious stores largely wasted before reaching his des- tination. These facts are mentioned, not because it is now necessary to endure this extortion and expense, but to show how little dependence can be placed upon the hope of securing the aid of Indian packers in carrying the goods of prospectors or explorers elsewhere in the interior, and the great expense in- volved. This pass descends to a series of connected lakes leading down to Lake Labarge and thence by another stream to the Lewes: and it requires twelve days of pack-carrying far more than is necessary on the other passes. As a consequence, this pass is now rarely used except by Indians going to the Ak- sekh river and the coast ranges northward.

Chilkoot. Taiya or Parrier Pass.- This is the pass that has been used since T885 by the min- ers and others on the upper Yukon, and is still a route of travel. It starts from the head of canoe navigation on Taiya inlet, and follows up a stream vallev, craduallv leading to the divide, which

Golden Alaska. 45

is only 3,500 feet above the sea. The first day's march is to the foot of the ascent, and over a terrible trail, through heavy woods and along a steep, rocky and often boggy hillside, broken by several deep gullies. The ascent is then very abrupt and over huge masses of fallen rock or steep slippery surfaces of rock in place. At the actual summit, which for seven or eight miles is bare of trees or bushes, the trail leads through a narrow rocky gap, and the whole scene is one of the most complete desolation. Xaked granite rocks, rising steeply to partly snow- clad mountains on either side. Descending the in- land or north slope is equally bad traveling, largely over wide areas of shattered rocks where the trail may easily be lost. The further valley contains sev- eral little lakes and leads roughly down to Lake Lindeman. The distance from Taiya is twenty-three and a half miles, and it is usually made in two days. Miners sometimes cross this pass in April, choos- ing fine weather, and then continue down the lakes on the ice to some point where they can conveni- ently camp and wait for the opening of navigation on the Yukon; ordinarily it is unsafe to attempt a return in the autumn later than the first of October. Lake Lindeman is a long narrow piece of water navigable for boats to its foot, where a very bad river passage leads into the larger Lake Bennett, where

4'» Golden Alaska.

the navigation of the Yukon really begins. "The Chilkoot Pass," writes one of its latest trav- elers, '"is difficult, even dangerous, to those not pos- sessed of steady nerves. Toward the summit there is a sheer ascent of 1.000 feet, where a slip would cer- tainly be fatal. At this point a dense mist overtook us. but we reached Lake Lindeman the first of a series of five lakes in safety, after a fatiguing tramp

:' fourteen consecutive hours through half-melted snow. Here we had to build our own boat, first felling the timber for the purpose. The journey down the lakes occupied ten days, four of which were passed in camp on Lake Bennett, during a vio- lent storm, which raised a heavy sea. The rapids followed. One oi these latter, the "Grand Canyon." is a mile long, and dashes through walls of rock from 50 to too feet high: six miles below are the "White Horse Rapids." a name which many fatal accidents have converted into the "Miner's Grave." But snags and rocks are everywhere a fruitful source

:' langer on thus river, and from this rapid down- ward scarcely a day passed that one did not see some cairn or wooden cross marking the last resting place of some '.:' wne '. [ ".grim to the land of gold. The is a ' rief sketch of the troubles that beset the Alaskan gold prospector troubles that, although unknown in the eastern states and Canada, have for

( ioLDi-.x Alaska. 49

many years past associated the name of Yukon with an ugly sound in western America."

It is probable that few if any persons need go over this pass next year, and its hardships will become a tradition instead of a terrible prospect.

White Pass. This pass lies south of the Chil- koot, and leaves the coast at the mouth of the Shagway river, five miles south of Dyea and 100 from Juneau. It was first explored in 1887 and was found to run parallel to the Chilkoot. The distance from the coast to the summit is seventeen miles, of which the first five are in level bottom land, thickly timbered. The next nine miles are in a canon-like valley, beyond which three miles, comparatively easy, take one to the summit, the altitude of which is roughly estimated at 2,600 feet. Beyond the sum- mit a wide valley is entered and leads gradually to the Tahko arm of Tahgish lake. This pass, though requiring a longer carriage, is lower and easier than the others, and already a pack-trail has been built through it which will soon be followed by a wagon road, and surveys for a narrow guage railway are in progress. At the mouth of the Shkagway River ocean steamers can run up at all times to a wharf which has been constructed in a sheltered position, and there is an excellent town site with protection from storms.

50 Golden Alaska.

An English company, the British Columbia De- velopment Association, Limited, has already estab- lished a landing- wharf and is erecting- a wharf and sawmills at Skagway, whence it is proposed (as soon as feasible) to lay down a line of rail some thirty- five miles long, striking the Yukon River at a branch of the Marsh Lake, about ioo miles below Lake Lin- demann. By this means the tedious and difficult navigation between these two points will be avoided. and the only dangerous parts of the river below will be circumvented by a road or rail portage. Light- draught steamers will be put on from Teslin Lake to the canon and from the foot of the latter to all the towns and camps on the river.

Dyea is a village of cabins and tents, and little if anything in the way of supplies can be got there; it is a mere forwarding point.

Pending the completion of the facilities mentioned above, miners may transport their goods over the pack trail on their own or hired burros, and at Tah- gish Lake take a boat down the Tahco arm (1 i miles) to the main lake, and down that lake and its outlet into Lake Marsh. This chain of lakes, filling the troughs of old glacial fiords to a level of -'.150 feet above the sea, "constitutes a singularly picturesque region, abounding in striking points of view and in landscapes pleasing in their variety or grand and im-

Golden Alaska. 51

pressive in this combination of rugged mountain forms." All afford still-water navigation, and as soon as the road through White Pass permits the trans- portation of machinery, they will doubtless be well supplied with steamboats. Marsh Lake is 20 miles long, Bennett 26, and Tagish 16^ miles, with Windy Arm 11 miles long, Tahko Arm 20 miles, and other long, narrow extensions among the terraced, ever- green-wooded hills that border its tranquil surface. The depression in which this group of lakes lies is between the coast range and the main range of the Rockies; and as it is sheltered from the wet sea- winds by the former heights, its climate is nearly as dry of that of the interior. The banks are fairly well timbered, though large open spaces exist, and abound in herbage, grass and edible berries. Lake Marsh, named by Schwatka after Prof. O. C. Marsh of Yale, but called Mud Lake by the miners, without good reason, is twenty miles long and about two wide. It is rather shallow and the left bank should be followed. The surrounding region is rather low, rising by terraces to high ranges on each side, where Michie mountain, 5,540 feet in height, eastward, and Mounts Lome and Landsdowne, westward, 6,400 and 6,140 feet high respectively, are the most prom- inent peaks. "The diversified form of the moun- tains in view from this lake render it particularly

5_> Golden Alaska.

picturesque," remarks Dr. Dawson, "and at the time of our visit, on the 10th and i ith of September, the autumn tints of the aspens and other deciduous trees and shrubs, mingled with the sombre greens of the spruces and pines, added to its beaut}'."

Xear the foot of this lake enters the McClintock river, of which little is known. The oulet is a clear, narrow, quiet stream, called Fifty-mile River, which flows somewhat westerly down the great valley. Large numbers of dead and dying salmon are al- ways seen here in summer, and as these fish never reach Lake Marsh, it is evident that the few who are able, after their long journey, to struggle up the rapids, have not strength left to survive.

The descent of the Lewes (or "\ ukon") may be said to begin at this point, and 23 miles below Lake Marsh the first and most serious obstacle is encoun- tered in the White Horse Rapids, and Miles Canon. Their length together is 27 miles, and they seem to have been caused by a small local effusion of lava, which was most unfortunately ejected right in the path of the river, The canon is often not more than ioc feet in width, and although parts of it may be run at favorable times, all of it is dangerous, and the White Horse should never be attempted. The portage path in the upper part of the canon is on die east bank, and is about five-eighths of a mile

Golden Alaska. 55

long. There a stretch of navigation is possible, with caution, ending at the head of White Horse Rapids, where one must land on the west bank, which con- sists of steep rocks, very awkward for managing a boat from or earning a burden over. Usually the empty boat can be dropped down with a line, but when the water is high boat as well as cargo must be carried for 100 yards or more, and again, lower down, for a less distance. The miners have put down rollways along a roughly constructed road here to make the portage of the boats easier, and some windlasses for hauling the boats along the water or out and into it. It would be possible to build a good road or tramway along the east bank of these rapids without great difficulty; and plans are already formulated for a railway to be built around the whole three miles of obstruction, in the summer of 1898. to connect with the steamboats above and below that will no doubt be running next year.

The river below the rapids is fast (about four miles an hour) for a few miles, and many gravel banks appear. It gradually subsides, however, into a quiet stream flowing northwest along the same wide valley. Xo rock is seen here, the banks being bluffs of white silt, which turns the clear blue of the current above into a cloudy and opaque yellow.

;fi < .< >u>i:\ Alaska.

irteen inik'S i measuring, as usual, along- the rivi-rj brings the vovager to the mouth of the Tah- Keena, a turbid stream about 75 yards wide and 10 it! deep, whieh comes in from the west. Its sour- ce- ari1 ai the ' kj1 of the Chiikat Pass, where it flows t tin nf Wot Kussoa lake (afterwards named Lake \rkell . and was formerly much employed by the 1 'hilk; ' hi Hans as a means of reaching the interior, ; ui was never in favor with the miners, ami is now rarely followed by the Indians themselves, although it.- navigation from the lake down is reported to be

' as.N

i .li veil and a half miles of quiet boating takes one

1 the head of Lake Labarge. This lake is 31 miles

lii - uearh north and south, and is irregularly

gated, reaching a width of six miles near the

lower i-nd. li is 2,100 feet above sea level and is

'. everywhere by mountain.-, those on the

-onth having remarkably abrupt and castellated

- and carrying summits of white limestone.

b '■■ r; -tormy one. and traveler- often

a\'e ' ' wail ;;:;;;. for several davs on its shores

permits them to go on. This

r:\er va!le\ ;- a great trough sucking inland

hng -outln rl\ -umnur wind-, and naviga-

- i- Iikeb ti 1 be r< mgh for .-mall

Golden Alaska. 57

The river below Lake Labarge is crooked, and

at first rapid six miles or more an hour, and in- terrupted by boulders; but it is believed that a stern wheel steamer of proper power could ascend at all times. The banks are earthen, but little worn, as floods do not seem to occur. Twenty-seven miles takes one to the mouth of a large tributary from the southeast, the Teslintoo, which Schwatka called Newberry River, and which the miners mistakenly call Hotalinqu. It comes from the great Lake Teslin, which lies across the British Columbia boun- dary (Lat. 62 deg.),'and is said to be 100 miles long; and it is further said that an Indian trail connects it with the head of canoe navigation on the Taku river, by only two long days of portaging. Some miners are said to have gone over it in 1876 or 'jj, Schwatka and Hayes came this way; and it may form one of the routes of the future, perhaps even a railway route. This river flows through a wide and somewhat arid valley, and was roughly pros- pected about 1887 by men who reported finding fine gold all along its course, and also in tributaries of the lake. As the mountains about the head of the lake belong to the Cassiar range, upon whose southern slopes the Cassiar mines are situated, there is every reason to suppose that gold will ultimately be found there in paying quantities.

^8 < lOLDEN A LASKA.

I his pari of the Lewes i? called Thirty-mile River, under the impression that it is really a tributary of the Teslintoo. which is. in fact, wider than the Lewes at the junction (Teslintoo, width 575 feet; Lewes, 420 fecth but it carries far less water. From this confluence the course is north, in a deep, swift, somewhat turbid current, through the crooked de- files of the Seminow hills. Several auriferous bars have been worked here, and some shore-placers, in- cluding the rich Cassiar bar. Thirty-one miles be- low the Teslintoo the Big Salmon, or D'Abbadie River, enter- from the southeast an important river, 350 feet wide, having clear blue water flowing deep ami quiet in a stream navigable by steamboats for man}' miles. Its head is about 150 miles away, not far from Teslin Lake, in some -mall lakes reached by tlie salmi in. and surrounded by granite moun- tains. Prospectors have traced all its course and found fine gold in many places.

1 hirty-four miles below the Big Salmon, west- 'rth-\ve-t. along a comparatively straight course, carries the boatman to the Little Salmon, or Dalv River, where the valley is so broad that no mountains are anywhere in Mght, only lines of low hills at a

listanci from the bank.-. Five miles below this river the riwr make.- an abrupt turn to the southwest

irouml Lagk-'- W-t rock, and 18] miles beyond

( ini.DF.x Alaska. 6i

that reaches the Xordenskiokl, a small, swift, clear- watered tributary from the southwest. The rocks of all this part of the river show thin seams of coal, and gold has been found on several bars. The cur- rent now flows nearly due north and a dozen miles below the Xordenskiokl carries one to the second and last serious obstruction to navigation in the Rink rapids, as Schwatka called them, or Five-fin- ger, as they are popularly known, referring to five large masses of rock that stand like towers in mid channel. These other islands back up the water and render its currents strong and turbulent, but will offer little opposition to a good steamboat. Boat- men descending the river are advised to hug the right bank, and a landing should be made twenty yards above the rapids in any eddy, where a heavily loaded boats should be lightened. The run should be made close along the shore, and all bad water ends when the Little Rink Rapids have been passed, six miles below. Just below the rapids the small Tatshun River comes in from the right. Then the valley broadens out, the current quiets down and a pleasing landscape greets the eye as bend after bend is turned. A long washed bank on the northeast side is called Hoo-clie-koo Bluff, and soon after passing it one finds himself in the midst of the pretty Ingersoll archipelago, where the river widens out

(}j ( i< )i.i)i:x Alaska.

and wanders among hundreds of islets. Fiftv-five tniles by the river below Rink Rapids, the confluence of the Lewes and Felly is reached, and the first sign of civilization in the ruins of old Fort Selkirk, with such recent and probably temporary occupation as circumstances may cause. Before long, undoubt- edly, a flourishing permanent settlement will grow up in this favorable situation.

The confluence here of the Lewes and Felly rivers forms the Yukon, which thenceforth pursues an un- interrupted course of 1,650 miles to Behring Sea. The country about the confluence is low. with ex- tensive terrace flats running back to the bases of rounded hills and ridges. The Yukon below the junction averages about one-quarter of a mile in width, and has an average depth of about 10 feet, with a surface velocity of 4! miles an hour. A good many gravel bars occur, but no shifting sand. '1 he general course nearly to White River, 96 miles, is a little north of west, and many islands are seen; then the river turns to a nearly due north course, maintained at Fort Reliance. The White River is a powerful stream, plunging down. loaded with silt, over ever shifting sand bars. Its upper source is problematical, but is probably in the Alaskan Mountains near the head of the Tenana and Forty- mile ( 'reek.

Gold ex Alaska. 63

For the next ten miles the river spreads ont to more than a mile wide and becomes a maze of isl- ands and bars, the main channel being- along the western shore, where there is plenty of water. This brings one to Stewart river, which is the most im- portant right-hand tributary between the Felly and the Porcupine. It enters from the east in the middle of a wide valley, and half a mile above its mouth is 200 yards in width; the current is slow and the water dark colored. It has been followed to its headquar- ters in the main range of the Rockies, and several large branches, on some of which there are remark- able falls, have been traced to their sources through the forested and snowy hills where they rise. These sources are perhaps 200 miles from the mouth, but as none of the wanderers were equipped with either geographical knowledge or instruments nothing definite is known. Reports of traces of precious metals have been brought back from many points in the Stewart valley, but this information is as vague as the other thus far. All reports agree that a light draught steamboat could go to the head of the Stewart and bar up its feeders. There is a trad- ing post at its mouth.

The succeeding 125 miles holds what is at pres- ent the most interesting and populous part of the Yukon valley. The river varies from half to three-

f,_} ( ,( II.DKX A I.ASKA.

quarters i>t a mile wide ami is full of islands. About 23 mik- below Stewart River a large stream enters fn>m the west called Sixty-mile Creek by the miners, who have had a small winter camp and trading store there fur some years, and have explored its course for gold to its rise in the mountains west of the in- ternational boundary. Every little tributary has been named, among them (going up), Charley's Fork, Fdwards Creek and ITawley Creek, in Canada, and them on the American side of the line, Gold Creek, Miller Creek and Bed Ruck Creek. The sand and gravel of all these have yielded fine gold and some of them, as Miller Creek, have become noted for their richness. Forty-four miles below Sixty-mile takes 1 me ti ) I )awsi hi ( 'it \ . at the mouth 1 if Klondike River, tlie center 0; the highest productiveness and great- est excitement during 1S07. when the gold fields of die interior of Alaska first attracted the attention < : the world. Leaving to another special chapter an account of them, the itinerary may be completed by -n_\ in- that < : mile- below the mouth of the Klon- dike :- fort Reliance, an old private trading post of no present importance. Twelve and a half miles larther the Chan-din-du River enters from the east, and 3/C below that in the mouth of Forty- mile . or ('one Hill River, which until the past year -wi- the mo-t important mining region of the inte-

-Golden Alaska. 67

rior. It took its name from the supposition that it was 40 miles from Fort Reliance, but the true dis- tance is 46 miles. On the south side of the outlet of this stream is the old trading post and modern town of Forty-Mile, and on the north side the more re- cent settlement Cudahy. Both towns are, of course, on the western bank of the Yukon, which is here about half a mile wide. Five miles below Cudahy. Coal Creek comes in from the east, and nearly marks the Alaskan boundary, where a narrowed part of the river admits one to United States terri- tory. Prominent landmarks here are two great rocks, named by old timers Old Man rock, on the west bank, and Old Woman, on the east bank, in reference to Indian legends attached to them. Some- twenty miles west of the boundary the river now having turned nearly due west in its general course Seventy-mile, or Klevande Creek, comes in from the south, and somewhat below it the Tat-on-duc from the north. It was ascended in 1887 by Mr. Ogilvie, who describes its lower valley as broad and well timbered, but its upper part flows through a series of magnificent canons, one of which half a mile long, is not more than 50 feet wide with vertical walls fully 700 feet in height. There are said to be warm sulphur springs along its course, and the In- dians regard it as one of the best hunting fields,

(,S ( ini.DK.N Alaska.

sheep being especially numerous on the mountains in which it heads, close by the international boun- dary, where it is separated by only a narrow divide from Ogilvic River, one of the head streams of the IVcl river, and also from the head of the Porcupine, to which there is an Indian trail. Hence the miners call this Sheep River. The rocks along this stream are all sandstones, limestone and conglomerates, with mam thin calcite veins. Large and dense tim- ber prevails, and game is abundant.

Ik-low the mouth of the Tat-on-due several small streams enter, of which the Kandik on the north and the Kolto or Charley's River at the mouth of which there used to be the home of an old Indian notability named Charley are most important. About 1 60 miles from the boundary the Yukon flats are reached, and the center of another important mining district that of Rirch Creek and the Upper Tenana at Circle City, the usual terminus of the trip tip the Lower Yukon from St Michael.

Gulden Alaska. 69

HISTORY AND CHARACTERISTICS OF THE UPPER YUKON VALLEY.

The; sources of the Yukon are just within the northern boundary of British Columbia (Lat. 62 cleg.) among a mass of mountains forming a part of the great uplift of the Coast range, continuous with the Sierras of California and the Puget Sound coast. Here spring the sources of the Stikeen, flow- ing southwest to the Pacific, of the Fraser, flowing south through British Columbia, and of the Liard flowing northeasterly to the Mackenzie. Headwa- ters of the Stikeen and rJard interlock, indeed, along an extensive or sinuous watershed having an elevation of 3,000 feet or less and extending east and west. There are, however, many wide and com- paratively level bottom lands scattered throughout this region and numerous lakes. The coast ranges here have an average width of about eighty miles and border the continent as far north as Lynn Canal, where they trend inland behind the St. Elias Alps. Many of their peaks exceed 8,000 feet in height, but few districts have been explored west. Eastward of this mountain axis, and separated from it by the valleys of the Fraser and Columbia in the south and the Yukon northward, is the Con-

-(l i K >Li)i:x Alaska.

tinental Divide, or Rocky .Mountains proper, which is broken through (as noted above) by the Laird, but north of that canon-bound river forms the watershed between the Liard and Yukon and be- tween the Yukon and Mackenzie. These summits attain a height of 7.000 to 9,000 feet, and rise from a very complicated series of ranges extending north- ward to the Arctic ( »cean, and very little explored. The valley of the Yukon, then, lies between the Kock_\ Mountain-, separating its drainage basin from that of the Mackenzie, and the Coast range and St. Klias Alps separating it from the sea. Gran- ite is the principal rock in both these great lines of watershed-uplift, and all the mountains show the ef- fects of an extensive glaciation, and all the higher peaks still bear local remnants of the ancient ice- sheet.

The headwaters of the great river are gathered into three principal streams. First, the Lewes, east- ernmost, with its large tributaries, the Teslintoo and I'.ig Salmon; second, the bell}', with its great west- ern tributary, the MacMillon.

I he Lewes River has been described. It was

An to the fur traders as early as 1840, and the

1 lulkat and Chilkoot passes were occasionallv used

their Indian couriers from that time on. The

M fields in british Columbia from 1863 onwards

SCENfc IN JUNEAU ■- MOUNTAINS AND INDIAN HOUbES.

Golden Alaska. 73

stimulated prospecting in the northern and coastal parts of that province, and in 1872 prospectors reached the actual headwaters of the Lewes from the south, but were probably not aware of it; and that country was not scientifically examined until the re- connoisance of Dr. G. M. Dawson in 1887. In :S66 Ketchum and La Barge, of the Western Union Tel- egraph survey, ascended the Lewes as far as the lakes still called Ketchum and La Barge. In 1883 Lieut. Frederick Schwatka, LA S. A., and an assis- tant named Hayes, and several Indians, made their way across from Taka inlet to the head of Tahgish (a Tako) Lake, and descended the Lewes on a raft to Fort Selkirk, studying and naming the valley. From Fort Selkirk an entirely new route was fol- lowed toward the mountains forming the divide be- tween the Yukon and the White and Copper rivers, which flow to the Gulf of Alaska, north of Mt. St. Flias. After discovering a pass little more than 5,000 feet high, they struck the Chityna River and followed that to the Copper River and thence to the coast. The Copper River Valley was thoroughly ex- plored somewhat later by Lieuts. Abercrombie and Allen, LA S. A., who added greatly to knowledge of that large river, which, however, seems to have no good harbor at its mouth. The miners began to use the Chilkoot Pass and the Lewes River route to

"■}

' ':< H.i)K\ A I.A5KA.

the Yukon district in 1SS4. Some additions were made tu geography in this region by an exploring expedition despatched to Alaska in 1890 by Frank Leslie's Weekly, under Messrs. A. J. Wells,, E. J. Cllave and A. Ik Schanz. They entered by way of C'hilkat pass and came to a large lake at the head of the Tah-keena tributary of the Lewes, which they named Lake Arkell, though it was probably the same ear!; r described by the Drs. Krause. Here Mr. (Have left die party and striking across the coast range southward discovered the headwaters of the Alsekh and descended to Dry Bay. At Forty-mile creek- Mr. Wells and a part}' crossed over into the basin 1 if the Tanana and increased the knowledge of that river. Mr. Schanz went down the Yukon and explored the lower region. In 1892 Mr. Glave again went to .Alaska, demonstrated the possibility of taking pack horses over the Chilkat trail, and with an aid named Dalton made an extensive jour- ik-\ southward along the crest of the watershed be- '1 Yuki hi valley and the coast. I urnii ^ now to the Lelly, we find that this was arli si avenue of discovery. The IVlly rises in

- under die 62nd parallel, just over a divide from 'die 1 inlay sou and Frances Lake, the head of the

i>< - River, the northern source of the Liard,and - entered bv the Hudson Bav Com-

Golden Alaska. 75

pany as early as 1834, and gradually exploring the LairdRiver and its tributaries, in 1840 Robert Cam- bell crossed over the divide north of Lake Finlay- son (at the head of the Frances), and discovered (at a place called Felly Banks) a large river flowing northwest which he named Felly. In 1843 ne de- scended the river to its confluence with the Lewes (which he then named), and in 1848 he built a post for the H. B. Company at that point, calling it Fort Selkirk. This done, in 1850, Campbell floated down the river as far as the mouth of the Porcupine, where three years previously (1847) Fort Yukon had been established by Air. Murray, who (founded by James Bell in 1842) crossed over from the mouth of the Mackenzie. The Yukon may thus.be said to have been '"discovered" at several points inde- pendently. The Russians, who knew it only at the mouth, called it Kwikhpak, after an Eskimo name. The English at Fort Yukon, learned that name from the Indians there, and the upper river was the Felly. The English and Russian traders soon met, and when Campbell came down in 1850 the identity of the whole stream was established. The name Yu- kon gradually took the place of all others on English maps and is now recognized for the whole stream from the junction of the Lewes and Felly to the delta.

-() ( i( )i pkx A I.ASKA.

The Yukon basin, east of the Alaskan boundary. is known in Canada as the Yukon district, and con- tains about 150.000 square miles. This is nearly equal to the ana of France, is greater than that of the I'nited Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland b\ 71,000 square miles, and nearly three times big- ger than that of the \*ew England states. To this must be added an area of about 180,000 square mile-, west of the boundary, drained by the Yukon upon it- wa\ to the sea through Alaska. Neverthe- less Dr. ( i. M. Dawson and other students of the matter are of the opinion that the river does not dis- charge as much water as does the Mackenzie nor could it be expected to do so, since the drainage area of the Mackenzie is more than double that of the Yukon, while the average annual precipitation of rain over the two areas seems to be substantially similar. Remembering these figures and that the basin of the Mississippi has no less than 1,225,000 xjuare miles as compared with the 330,000 square miles of the Yukon basin, it is plain that the state- ment often heard that the Yukon is next to the ;sippi in size, is greatly exaggerated. In fact, - proportions, from all points of view, are exceeded those of the Xile. Ganges. St. Lawrence and -everal other rivers of considerably less importance the Mississippi.

Golden Alaska. 79

Resuming the historical outline, a short paragraph will suffice to complete the simple story down to the year 1896.

Robert Campbell had scarcely returned from his river voyage to his duties at Fort Selkirk, when he discovered that its location in the angle between the rivers was untenable, owing to ice-jams and floods. The station was therefore moved, in the sea- son of 1852 across to the west bank of the Yukon, a short distance below the confluence, and new buildings were erected. These had scarcely been completely, when, on August 1st, a band of Chilkat Indians from the coast came down the river and early in the morning seized upon the post, surpris- ing Mr. Campbell in bed. and ordered him to take his departure before night. They were not at all rough with him or his few men, but simply insisted that they depart, which they did, taking such per- sonal luggage as they could put into a boat and starting down stream. The Indians then pillaged the place, and after feasting on all they could eat and appropriating what they could carry away, set fire- to the remainder and burned the whole place to the ground. One chimney still stands to mark the spot, and others lie where they fell. This act was not dictated by wanton destructiveness on the part of the Chilkats bad as they undoubtedlv were and

8o Golden Alaska.

arc; hut was in pursuance of a theory. The estab- lishment of the post there interfered with the monop- oly of trade that they had enjoyed theretofore, with all the Indians of the interior, to whom they brought salable goods from the coast, taking in exchange furs, copper, etc., at an exhorbitant profit, which thev enforced bv their superior brutality. The Hud- son 15av Company was robbing them of this, hence the demolition of the post, which was too remote to be profitably sustained against such opposition. A little way down the river. Mr. Campbell met a fleet of boats bringing up his season's goods, and many friendly Indians. These were eager to pursue the robbers, but Campbell thought it best not to do so. He turned the supply-boats back to Fort Yukon and led his own men up the Polly and over the pass to the Frances and so down the Liard to Fort Simp- son, on the Mackenzie. Such is the story of the ruins of Fort Selkirk. Fort Yukon flourished as the only trading post until the purchase of Alaska by the I nited States, when Captain Raymond, an arm}' officer, was sent to inform the factor there that his post was on I nited States territory, and require him to leave. 1 le did so as won as Rampart House could be built to take its place up the Porcupine. Old Fort Yukon then fell into ruins, and Rampart House itself was soon abandoned. In 1873 an op-

Golden Alaska. 8i

position appeared in the independent trading house of Harper & McQuestion, men who had come into the country from the south, after long experience in the fur trade. They had posts at various points, occupied Fort Reliance for several years, and in ]SS6 established a post at the mouth of the Stewart River for the miners who had begun to gather there two years before. Many maps mark ''Reed's House" as a point on the upper Stewart, but no such a trading-post ever existed there, although there was a fishing station and shelter-hut on one of its upper branches at an early day. This firm became the rep- resentatives of the Alaska Commercial Company (a San Francisco corporation) and opened a store in 1887 at Forty Mile, where they still do business.

Gold Discoveries. The presence of fine float gold in river sands was early discovered by the Hudson Bay Company men, but in accordance with the former policy of that company, no mining was done and as little said about it as possible. The rich- ness of the Cassiar mines led to some prospecting northward as early as 1872, and by 1880 wander- ing gold hunters had penetrated to the Testintos, where for several years $8 to $10 a da}- of fine gold was sluiced out during the season by the small col- ony. In 1886 Cassiar liar, on the Lewes, below there, was opened, and a party of four took out

X_> * m m.im-.x Alaska.

$6,000 in 30 days, while other neighboring bars

yielded fair wages. I'y that time Stewart River was becoming attractive, and many miners worked plac- ers there profitably in 1X85, '86 and 'Sy. During the fall of 1886 three or four nun took the engines out of the little steamboat "Xew Racket," which was laid up fur the winter there, and used them to drive a set of pumps lifting water into sluice-boxes; and with this crude machinery each man cleared Si, 000 in less than a month. A judicious estimate is, that the Stewart River placers yielded $100,000 in 1885 and ^6.

Prospecting went on unremittingly, but nothing else was found of promise until 1886, when coarse gold was reported upon Forty Mile Creek, or the Shitando River, as it was known to the Indians, and a local rush took- place to its canons, the principal attraction being Franklin Gulch, named after its dis- coverer. Three or four hundred men gathered there by the season of 1887, and all dad well. This stream is a 'dud-rock'" creek, that is, one in the bed of which there is very little drift; and in many places the bed-rock was scraped with knives to get the lit- tle loose stud out of crannies. Some nuggets were found. At its mouth are extensive bars along the Yukon, which carry gold throughout their depth. I hiring iSSN the season was verv unfavorable and

Goldex Alaska. 85

not much accomplished. Sixty Mile Creek was brought to notice, and Miller Gulch proved richer than usual. It is one of the headwaters of Sixty Mile, and some 70 miles from the mouth of the river where, in 1892, a trading store, saw-mill and little wintering-town was begun. Miller Creek is about 7 miles long, and its valley is filled with vast deposits of auriferous drift. In 1892 rich strikes were made and 125 miners gathered there, paying $10 a day for help, and many making fortunes. One clean-up of 1,100 ounces was reported. Glacier Creek, a neighboring stream, exhibited equal chances and drew many claimants, some of whom migrated thither in mid-winter, drawing their sleds through the woods and rocks with the murcury 30 degrees below zero. All of these gulches and other golden headwaters on both Forty Mile and Sixty Mile Creek, are west of the boundary in Alaska: but the mouths of the main streams and supply points are in Canadian territory. In all, the great ob- stacle is the difficulty of getting water up on the bars without expensive machinery; and the same is true of the rich gravel along the banks of the Yukon itself. Birch Creek was the next find of import- ance, and was promising enough to draw the larger part of the local population, which by this time had been considerably increased, for the news of the rich-

86 Golden Alaska.

ncss of the Forty INIile gulches had reached the out- side world and attracted adventurous men and not a few women from the coast not only, but from British Columbia and the United States. A rival to Harper & McOuestion, agents of the Alaska Com- mercial Company, appeared in the North American Transportation and Trading Company, which in- creased the transportation service on the Yukon River, by which most of the new arrivals entered, and by establishing large competitive -tores at Fort Cudahy (Forty Mile) and elsewhere reduced the price of food and other necessaries. About this time, also, the Canadian government sent law of- ficers and a detachment of mounted police, so that the Yukon District began to take a recognized place in the w< irld.

Birch Creek is really a large river rising in the Iauana Mills, just west of the boundary and flowing northwest, parallel with the Yukon, to a debouch- ment some jo miles west of Fort Yukon. Between the two rivers lie the "Yukon Flats," and at one p"int they are separated by only six miles. Here, at tlie '\ ukon end of the road arose Circle City, so- alleil frum its proximity to the Arctic Circle. This i- an orderly little town of regular streets, and has a n nli r : Funis, a st< »re, etc.

Birch (.reek has been thoroughlv explored, and

Golden Alaska. 87

in 1894 yielded good results. The gold was in coarse flakes and nuggets, so that $40 a day was made by some men, while all did well. The drift is not as deep here as in most other streams, and water can be applied more easily and copiously, a vast advantage. Molymute, Crooked. Independ- ence, Mastadon and Preacher creeks are the most noteworthy tributaries cf this rich field.

The Koyukuk River, which Hows from the bord- ers of the Arctic Ocean, gathering many mountain tributaries, to enter the Yukon at Xulato, was also prospected in 1892, '93 and '94, and indications of good placers have been discovered there, but the northerly, exposed and remote situation has caused them to receive little attention thus far.

THE KLONDIKE.

During the autumn of 1896 several men and wo- men, none of whom were "old miners," discouraged by poor results lower down the river resolved to try prospecting in the Klondike gulch. They were laughed at and argued with; were told that prospect- ors years ago had been all over that valley, and found only the despised "flour gold," which was too fine to pay for washing it out. Nevertheless they persisted and went at work. Only a short time elapsed, when, on one of the lower southside branches of the stream they found pockets of flakes and nuggets of gold far richer than anything Alaska had ever shown before. They named the stream Bonanza, and a small tributary El Dorado. Others came and nearly < veryone succeeded. Before spring nearly a ton and a half of gold had been taken from the frozen ground. Nuggets weighing a pound (trnyi were found. A thousand dollars a day was sometimes saved despite the rudeness of the methods, but these things happened where pockets were -truck. Probably the total clean-up from January to June was not less than $1,500,000. The report

Golden Alaska. 91

spread and all those in the interior of Alaska con- centrated there, where a "camp" of tents and shan- ties soon sprang up at the mouth of the Klondike called Dawson City. A correspondent of the New York Sun describes it as beautifully situated, and a very quiet, orderly town, due to the strict super- vision of the Canadian mounted police, who allowed no pistols to be carried, but a great place for gam- bling with high stakes. It bids fair to become the mining metropolis of the northwest, and had about 3,000 inhabitants before the advance-guard of the present "rush" reached there.

Hundreds of claims were staked out and worked in all the little gulches opening along Bonanza, El- dorado, Hunker, Bear and other tributaries of the Klondike, and of Indian River, a stream thirty miles south of it, and a greater number seem to be of equal richness with those first worked. All this is within a radius south and east of 20 miles from Daw- son City, and most of it far nearer. The country is rough, wooded hills, and the same trouble as to water is met there as elsewhere, yet riches were ob- tained by many men in a few weeks without ex- hausting their claims.

So remote and shut in has this region been in the winter that no word of this leaked out until the river opened and a party of successful miners came

1)2 ( i< n.iJKN Alaska.

down to the eoa.-t and took passage on the steamer Rxcelsior for San Francisco. They arrived on Tulv i_j. and no one suspected that there was any- thing extraordinary in the passenger list or cargo, until a procession of weather beaten men began a march to the Selby Smelting works, and there began to open sacks of dust and nuggets, until the heap made- something not seen in San Francisco since the days of 'uj. The news flashed over the world, and aroused a fire < >:" interest; and when three days later the Portland came into Seattle, bringing other miner- and over $1,000,000 in gold, there was a rush to go north which bids fair to continue for month- to come, for one of the articles of faith in the creed of the Yukon miner is that many other gulches will be found as rich as these. One elderly man. who went in late last fall and with partners took four claim- on Eldorado Creek, told a reporter that his pickings had amounted to Si 12.000, and that he was confident that the ground left was worth S2.000.000 more. "1 want to say." he exclaims, "that 1 believe there is gold in every creek in Alas- ka. Certain on the Klondike the claims are not -potted. One seems to be as good as another. Tt's gold. gold, gold, all over. Tt's yards wide and deep. All you have to do is to run a hole down."

One might go on quoting such rhapsodies, aris-

Golden Alaska. 93

ing from success, to end of the book, but it is needless, for every newspaper has been full of them for a month.

One man and his wife got $135,000; another, formerly a steamboat deck-hand, $150,000; another, $115,000; a score or more over $50,000, and so on. These sums were savings after having the heavy ex- penses of the winter, and most of them had dug out only a small part of their ground.

It is curious in view of this success to read the only descriptive note the present writer can dis- cover in early writings as to this gold river. It occurs in Ogilvie's report of his explorations of 1887, and is as follows: "Six and a half miles above Reliance the Tou-Dac River of the Indians (Deer River of Schwatka) enter from the east. It is a small river about 40 yards wide at the mouth and shallow; the water is clear and transparent and of a beautiful blue color. The Indians catch great numbers of salmon here. A miner had prospected up this river for an estimated distance of 40 miles in the season of 1887. I did not see him."

C)4 CiOldkx .Alaska.

THE METHODS OF PLACER MINING

in the Klondike region and elsewhere along the Yukon are different from those pursued else- where, owing to the fact that from a point about three feet below the surface the ground is permanently frozen. The early men tried to strip off the gravel down to the gold lying in its lower levels or beneath, it, upon the bed rock, and found it exceedingly slow and laborious work; more- over, it was only during the short summer that any work could be done. Now, by the aid of fires they sink shafts and then tunnel along the bed rock- where the gold lies. A returned miner described the process as follows, pointing out the great ad- vantage of being able to work under ground during the winter:

"The miners build fires over the area where they wish to work and keep these lighted over that terri- tory for the space of twenty-four hours. Then the gravel will be melted and softened to a depth of per- haps six inches. This is then taken off and other fires are built until the gold bearing layer is reached. When thi' shaft i-; down that far other fires are built at the bottom, against the sides of the layer and tun- nels made in the same manner. Blasting will do

Golden Alaska. 97

no good, the charge not cracking off but blowing out of the hole. The matter taken out, and contain- ing the gold is piled up until spring, when the tor- rents come down, and is panned and cradled by these. It is certainly very hard labor."

Another quotation may be given as a practical ex- ample of this process:

"The gold so far as has been taken from Bonanza and Eldorado, both well named, for the richness of the placers are truly marvelous. Eldorado, thirty miles long, is staked the whole length and as far as worked has paid.

"One of our passengers, who is taking home $100,000 with him. has worked one hundred feet of his ground and refused $200,000 for the remainder, and confidently expects to clean up $400,000 and more. He has in a bottle $212 from one pan of dirt. His pay dirt while being washed averaged $250 an hour to each man shoveling in. Two others of our miners who worked their own claim cleaned up $6,000 from one day's washing.

"There is about fifteen feet of dirt above bed rock, the pay streak averaging from four to six feet, which is tunnelled out while the ground is frozen. Of course, the ground taken out is thawed by building fires, and when the thaw comes and water rushes in thev set their sluices and wash the dirt. Two of

ijS Golden* Alaska.

our fellows thought a small bird in the hand worth a large one in the bush, and sold their claims for $45,000. getting 84. 500 down, and the remainder to be paid in monthly installments of $10,000 each. The purchaser- had no more than $5,000 paid. The\' were twenty clays thawing and getting out dirt. Then there was no water to sluice with, but one fellow made a rocker, and in ten days took out the $10,000 for the first installment. So. tunnelling and rocking, they took out $40,000 before there was water ti > sluice with."

LEGAL ASPECT OF ALASKA.

Commissioner Hermann, of the General Land Of- fice, has announced that the following laws of the I nited States extend over Alaska, where the general land laws do not apply:

hirst The mineral land laws of the United States.

Second Town-site laws, which provide for the incorporation of town-sites and acquirement of title thereto from the (Suited States Government by the town-site tni>ter>.

Golden Alaska. 99

Third The laws providing for trade and manu- factures, giving each qualified person 160 acres of land in a square and compact form.

The coal land regulations are distinct from the mineral regulations or laws, and as in the case of the general land laws Alaska is expressly exempt from this jurisdiction.

On the part of Canada, however, the provisions of the Real Property act of the Northwest Territories will be extended to the Yukon country by an order in council, a register will be appointed, and a land title office will be established.

The act approved May 17, 1884, providing a civil government for Alaska, has this language as to mines and mining privileges:

"The laws of the United States relating to min- ing claims and rights incidental thereto shall, on and after the passage of this act, be in full force and effect in said district of Alaska, subject to such regulations as may be made by the Secretary of the Interior and approved by the President," and "parties who have located mines or mining priv- ileges therein, under the United States laws ap- plicable to the public domain, or have occupied or improved or exercised acts of ownership over such claims, shall not be disturbed therein, but shall be allowed to perfect title by payment so provided for."

< i( II.DK.N A I.ASKA.

There is still more general authority. Without the special authority, the act of July 4. 1866, says: "All valuable mineral deposits in lands belonging' to the United States, both surveyed and unsurveyed, are hereby declared to be tree and open to explora- tion and purchase, and lands in which these are found to occupation and purchase by citizens of the United States and by those who have declared an intention to become such, under the rules prescribed by law and according to local customs or rules of miners in the several mining districts, so far as the same are applicable and not inconsistent with the laws of the United States."

The patenting of mineral lands in Alaska is not a new thing, for that work has been going on. as the cases have come in from time to time, since 1884.

One of the difficulties that local capitalists find in their negotiations for purchase of mining properties on the Yukon is the lack of authenticated records of owner- of claim-. Different practice.- prevail on the two sides of the line and cause more or less con- fusion. The practice has been at most of the new camp- to call a miners' meeting at which one of the parties was elected recorder, and he proceeded to enter the bearings of -takes and natural marks to define claim-. Sometimes the recorder would cdve

Golden* Alask.

i°3

a receipt for a fee allowed by common consent for recording-, and also keep a copy for future reference, but in a majority of cases even this formality was dispensed with, and the only record kept was the rough minutes made at the time.

On the Canadian side a different state of affairs exists. The Dominion Government has sent a com- missioner who is empowered to report officially all claims, and while no certificate is issued to the own- ers thereof, properties are thoroughly defined and their metes and bounds established. The commis- sioner in the Klondike district, whose name is Con- stantine. also exercises semi-judicial functions, and. settles disputes to the best of his ability, appeal lying to the Ottawa Government.

As to courts and the execution of civil and criminal law general!}', none were existent in the upper 'Yu- kon Valley on the American side of the line during 1897. The nearest United States judge was at Sit- ka. At Circle City and other centers of population the people had organized into a sort of town-meet- ing for the few public matters required; and a sort of vigilance committee took the place of constituted authority and police. As a matter of fact, however, the people were quiet and law-abiding and little need for the machinery of law is likely to arise before courts, etc., are set up. A movement toward send-

I04

( Ioldkx Alaska.

mq- a garrison of United States troops thither was vetoed by the War Department.

Canada, however, awoke to the realization that her interests were in jeopard}', and took early steps to profit l>v the wealth which had been discovered within her borders and the international business that resulted. Idle natural feeling- among the Ca- nadians was, and is, that the property belongs to the Canadian public, and that no good reason exists why the mineral and other wealth should be ex- hausted at once, mainly by outsiders, as has largely happened in the case of Canada's forests. A pro- hibitory policy was urged by some, but this seemed neither wise nor practicable; and the Dominion Covernment set at work to save as large a share as it could. As there are gold fields on the Alaska side of the line, and the approaches he through I nited States territory, a spirit of reciprocal accom- modation was necessary. One difficulty has been averted last spring by President Cleveland's veto of the Immigration bill, one provision of which would have prevented Canadian laborers drawing wages in this country, and probably would have pro- voki d a retaliatory act.

( anada has already placed customs officers on the passes and at the Yukon crossing of the boundary to collect customs duties not only on merchandise

Goldex Alaska.

io:

but on miner's personal outfits. There is practically no exception, and the duty comes below 20 per cent, on but few articles. On most of the goods the duty is from 30 to 35 per cent., and in several instances higher, but the matter may be very simply ad- justed by purchasing tools and outfits in Victoria or Vancouver, for thus far the United Slates has placed no corresponding obstruction in the way of Canadian travellers to the gold-fields, but, on the contrary, has made Dyea a sub-port of entry, largely to accommodate British transportation lines. The Canadian Government is represented in that region now only by customs officers and 20 mounted police, but it is taking steps to garrison the whole upper Yukon Valley with its mounted police, a body of officers, whose functions are half military, half civil, and which, it may as well be conceded once for all, cannot be trifled with. There is no question but that they will do their level best to enforce the laws to the utmost. The commander of each detachment will be constituted a magistrate of limited powers, so that civil examinations and trials may be speedily conducted.

The plan is to erect a strong post a short distance north of the sixtieth degree of latitude, just above the northern boundary of British Columbia, and be- vond the head of the Lvnn Canal, where the Chil-

iof) < 1< u.DEX Alaska.

kout Pass and the While I'ass converge. This post will command the southern entrance to the whole cf that territory. Further oh .-mall police posts will lie established, ah' mt fifty miles apart, down to Fort Selkirk, while another general post will patrol the river near the international boundary, with head- quarters, probably, in the Klondike valley.

The mining regulations of Canada, applying to the Yukon placer claims, are as follows:

''Bar diggings" shall mean any part of a river over which water extends when the water is in its flooded state and which is not covered at low water. "Mine- on benches" shall be known as bench dig- gings, and shall for the purpose of defining the size

; uch claims be excepted from dry diggings. "Dry diggings" shall mean any mine over winch a river never extends. "Miner" shall mean a male or fe- male over the age of eighteen, but not under that age. "Claims" shall mean the personal right of property in a placer mine or diggings during the time for which the grant of such mine or digging- is made. "Legal post" shall mean a stake standing nut less than four feet above the ground and squared on four sides for at least one foot from the top. "Close season" shall mean the period of the year

luring which placer mining is generally suspended.

I he period to be fixed b'v the gold commissioner

Golden* Alaska.

109

in whose district the claim is situated. "Locality" shall mean the territory along a river (tributary of the Yukon) and its affluents. "Mineral" shall in- clude all minerals whatsoever other than coal.

1. Bar diggings. A strip of land 100 feet wide at highwater mark and thence extending along the river to its lowest water level.

2. The sides of a claim for bar diggings shall be two parallel lines run as nearly as possible at right angles to the stream, and shall be marked by four legal posts, one at each end of the claim at or about high water mark; also one at each end of the claim at or about the edge of the water One of the posts shall be legibly marked with the name of the miner and the date upon which the claim is staked.

3. Dry diggings shall be 100 feet square and shall have placed at each of its four corners a legal post. upon one of which shall be legibly marked the name of the miner and the date upon the claim was staked.

4. Creek and river claims shall be 500 feet long, measured in the direction of the mineral course of the stream, and shall extend in width from base to base of the hill or bench on each side, but when the hills or benches are less than 100 feet apart the claim may be 100 feet in depth. The sides of a claim shall be two parallel lines run as nearly as

i io Golden Alaska.

possible at right angles to the stream. The sides shall be marked with legal posts at or about the edge of the water and at the rear boundary of the claim. One of the legal posts at the stream shall be legibly marked with the name of the miner and the date upon which the claim was staked.

5. Bench claims shall be 100 feet square.

6. In defining the size of claims the}" shall be measured horizontally, irrespective of inequalities on the surface of the ground.

7. If any person or persons shall discover a new mine and such discovery shall be established to the satisfaction of the gold commissioner, a claim for tlie bar diggings 750 feet in length may be granted. A new stratum of auriferous earth or gravel situated in a locality where the claims are abandoned shall for this purpose be deemed a new mine, although the same locality shall have previously been worked at a different level.

8. The forms of application for a grant for placer mining and the grant in the same shall be according to those made, provided or supplied by the goltl commissi* >ner.

(j. A claim shall be recorded with the gold com- missioner in whose district it is situated within three days after the location thereof if it is located within ten miles of the commissioner's office. One dav

Golden Alaska. i i i

extra shall be allowed for making such record for

ever}' additional ten miles and fraction thereof

io. In the event of the absence of the gold com- missioner from his office for entry a claim mav be granted by any person whom he may appoint to perform his duties in his absence.

11. Entry shall not be granted for a claim which lias not been staked by the applicant in person in the manner specified in these resolutions. An affi- davit that the claim was staked out by the applicant shall be embodied in the application.

12. An entry fee of $15 shall be charged the first year and an annual fee of Si 00 for each of the fol- lowing years:

13. After recording a claim the removal of any post by the holder thereof or any person acting in his behalf for the purpose of changing the boun- daries of his claim shall act as a forfeiture of the claim.

14. The entry of every holder for a grant for placer mining must be renewed and his receipt re- linquished and replaced every year, the entry fee be- ing paid each year.

15. Xo miner shall receive a grant for more than one mining claim in the same locality: but the same miner mav hold anv number of claims by purchase, and anv number of miners mav unite to work their

112 Golden Alaska.

claims in common upon such terms as they may ar- range, provided such agreement be registered with the Gold Commissioner and a fee of $15 for each registration.

16. And miner may sell, mortgage, or dispose of his claims, provided such disposal be registered with and a fee of $5 paid to the Gold Commissioner.

17. Every miner shall, during the continuance of his grant, have the exclusive right of entry upon his own claim for the miner-like working thereof, and the construction of a residence thereon, and shall be entitled exclusively to all the proceeds realized there- from; but he shall have no surface rights therein, and the Gold Commissioner may grant to the hold- ers of adjacent claims such rights of entry thereon as may be absolutely necessary for the working of their claims, upon such terms as may to him seem reasonable. He may also grant permits to miners to cut timber thereon for their own use, upon pay- ment of the dues prescribed by the regulation in that behalf.

18. Every miner .-hall be entitled to the use of so much of the water naturally llowing through or past his claim, and not already lawfully appropriated as shall in the opinion of the Gold Commissioner be necessary for the due working thereof, and shall be entitled to drain his own claim free of charge.

.A

,-*

CHILKOOT PASS.

Goldex Alaska. 115

19. A claim shall be deemed to be abandoned and open to occupation and entry by any person when the same shall have remained unworked on working days by the guarantee thereof or by some person in his behalf for the space of seventy-two hours unless sickness or some other reasonable cause may be shown to the satisfaction of the Gold Commissioner, or unless the guarantee is absent on leave given by the commissioner, and the Gold Com- missioner, upon obtaining satisfactory evidence that this provision is not being complied with, may can- cel the entry given in the claim.

20. If the land upon which a claim has been lo- cated is not the property of the Crown it will be necessary for the person who applies for entry to furnish proof that he has acquired from the owner of the land the surface right before entry can be granted.

21. If the occupier of the lands has not received a patent thereof the purchase money of the surface rights must be paid to the Crown and a patent of the surface rights will issue to the party who ac- quired the mining rights. The money so collected will either be refunded to the occupier of the land when he is entitled to a patent there or will be cred- ited to him on account of payment of land.

22. When the party obtaining the mining rights

n6 Golden Alaska.

cannot make an arrangement with the owner there- of for the acquisition of the surface rights it shall be lawful for him to give notice to the owner or his agents or the occupier to appoint an arbitrator to act with another arbitrator named by him in order to award the amount of compensation to which the owner or occupier shall be entitled.

The royalty and reserve additions to this, made since the recent discoveries and on account of them, are as follows:

j. A royalty of 10 per cent will be collected for the government on all amounts taken out of any one claim up to S500 a week, and after that 20 per cent. This royalty will be collected on gold taken from streams already being worked, but in regard to all future discoveries the government proposes

2. That upon every river and creek where mining locations shall be staked out every alternate claim shall be the property of the government.

These regulations, say the Canadians, are made with the purpose of developing a country, which, as elsewhere shown in this pamphlet, is capable of supporting a large permanent population and varied industries. Whether they can be enforced remains to be seen, and difficulties will certainly attend the collection of a royalty on gold-dust. The effect of these regulations, it is believed bv the authors, will

Golden Alaska. 117

be to encourage permanent settlement and the treat- ment of mining as a regular industry and not simply as an adventurous speculation. Another effect, un- doubtedly, will be to cause immigrants, including Canadians themselves, to prospect and mine on the United States side of the line, whenever they have an equal opportunity for success.

The boundary dispute does not as yet seriously affect the question or rights and privileges in the new gold regions, as the disputed part of the line, southeast of Alaska, runs through a region not yet occupied, and practically the whole of Lynn Canal is administered by the United States, and the Ca- nadians act as though it were decided that their boundary was farther inland than some of them pretend. From Alt. St. Elias north, the 141st me- ridian is the undisputed boundary, and this has been fixed by an international commission, crossing the Yukon at a marked point near the mouth of Forty Mile Creek. Nearly or quite all of the diggings upon which are written Alaskan territory, as also are the valuable placers on Birch and Miller creeks. It will be a matter of extreme difficulty along this part of the boundary to prevent smuggling, to dis- cover and collect Canadian royalties, and to capture criminals except by international cooperation.

1 1 8 Golden Alaska.

CLIMATE, ACRICULTURE AND HEALTH.

The Weather Bureau has made public a state- ment in regard to the climate of Alaska, which says: "The climates of the coast and the interior of Alaska are unlike in many respects, and the differences are intensified in this as perhaps in few other countries by exceptional physical conditions. The fringe of islands that separates the mainland from the Pacific Ocean from Dixon Sound north, and also a strip of the mainland for possibly twenty miles back from the sea, following the sweep of the coast as it curves to the northwestward to the western extremity of Alaska form a distinct climatic division which may be termed temperate Alaska. The temperature rare- ly falls to zero; winter does not set in until Dec. I, and by the last of May the snow has disappeared ex- cept on the mountains.

"The mean winter temperature of Sitka is 32.5, but little less than that of Washington. D. C. The rainfall of temperate Alaska is notorious the world over, not only as regards the quantity, but also as to the manner of it.- falling, viz.: in long and inces- sant rains and drizzles. Cloud and fog naturally abound, there being on an average but sixty-six clear davs in thr vear.

GENERAL VIEW OF SILVER BOW BASIN, NEAR JUNEAU.

Golden Alaska. 121

"North of the Aleutian Islands the coast climate becomes more rigorous in winter, but in summer the difference is much less marked.

"The climate of the interior is one of extreme rigor in winter, with a brief but relatively hot sum- mer, especially when the sky is free from cloud.

"In the Klondike region in midwinter the sun rises from 9:30 to 10 a. m., and sets from 2 to 3 p. m., the total length of daylight being about four hours. Remembering that the sun rises but a few degrees above the horizon and that it is wholly ob- scured on a great many days, the character of the winter months may easily be imagined.

"We are indebted to the United States coast and geodetic survey for a series of six months' observa- tions on the Yukon, not far from the site of the present gold discoveries. The observations were made with standard instruments, and are wholly re- liable. The mean temperatures of the months Oc- tober, 1889, to April, 1890, both inclusive, are as fol- lows: October, 33 degrees; November, 8 degrees; December, 11 degrees, below zero; January, 17 be- low zero; February, 15 below zero; March, 6 above; April 20 above. The daily mean temperature fell and remained below the freezing point (32 degrees) from Nov. 4, 1889, to April 21, 1890, thus giving 168 days as the length of the closed season of 1889-

122 (.]< ildex Alaska.

"(jo, assuming that outdoor operations are controlled by temperature only. The lowest temperatures registered during the winter were: Thirty-two de- grees below zero in November, 47 below in De- cember. 59 below in January, 55 below in February, 45 below in March, and 26 below in April.

"The greatest continuous cold occurred in Feb- ruary, 1890, when the daily mean for five consecu- tive days was 47 degrees below zero.

"Greater cold than that here noted has been ex- perienced in the L'nited States for a very short time, but never has it continued so very cold for so long a time as in the interior of Alaska. The winter sets in as early a> September, when snow-storms may be expected in the mountain- and passes. Head- way during one of those storms is impossible, and the traveler who is overtaken by one of them is indeed fortunate it' he escapes with his life. Snow- storms of great severity may occur in any month from September to May. inclusive.

"The changes of temperature from winter to sum- mer are rapid, owing to the great increase in the length of the day. In May the sun rise- at about 3 a. m. and sets about o p. m. In June it rises about half past 1 in the morning, and sets at about half past 10. giving about twenty hours of day-light and diffuse twilight the remainder of the time.

Golden Alaska. 123

"The mean summer temperature in the interior doubtless ranges between 60 and 70 degrees, ac- cording to elevation, being highest in the middle and lower Yukon valleys."

Accurate data of the temperature in the Klon- dike district were kept at Fort Constantine last year. The temperature first touched zero Nov. 10, and the zero weather recorded in the spring was on April 29.

Between Dec. 19 and Feb. 6 it never rose above zero. The lowest actual point, 65 below, accurred on Jan. 27, and on twenty-four days during the win- ter the temperature was below 50.

On March 12 it first rose above the freezing point, but no continuous mild weather occurred until May 4, after which date the temperature during the bal- ance of the month frequently rose above 60 de- grees.

The Yukon River froze up on Oct. 28 and broke up on May 17.

The long and severe winter and the frozen moss- covered ground are serious obstacles to agriculture and stock raising. The former can change but lit- tle with coming seasons, but the latter, by gradually burning off areas, can be overcome to some extent. On such burned tracts hardy vegetables have been and may be raised, and the area open to such use

124 Golden Alaska.

is considerable. Potatoes do well and barley will mature a fair crop.

Live stock may be kept by providing an abund- ance of shelter and feed and housing them during the winter. In summer an abundance of the finest grass pasture can be had, and great quantities of na- tural hay can be cut in various places.

Diseases: In spite of all that is heard in the newspapers regarding the healthfulness of the cli- mate of Alaska and the upper Yukon, the Census Report of Alaska offers its incontestable statistics to the effect that the country is not more salubrious, nor its people more healthy than could be expected in a region of violent climate, where the most ordi- nary laws of health remain almost totally ignored. From the Government Report we quote the follow- ing:

"Those diseases which are most fatal to life in one section of Alaska seem to be applicable to all others. In the first place, the native children receive little or no care, and for the first few years of their lives are more often naked than clothed, at all seasons of the year. Consumption is the simple and compre- hensive title for the disease which destroys the greater -number of the people of Alaska. Aluet, In- dian and Eskimo suffer from it alike; and all alike exhibit the same stolid indifference to its slow and

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Goldex Alaska. 127

fatal progress, make no attempt to ward it off, take no special precautions even when the disease reaches its climax.

Xext to consumption, the scrofulous diseases, in the forms of ulcers, eat into the vitals and destroy them until the natives have the appearance of lepers to unaccustomed eyes. As a consequence of their neglect and the exigencies of the native life, forty or fifty years is counted among them as comparatively great age, and none are without the ophthalmic dis- eases necessarily attendant on existence in smoky barabaras. Against snow-blindness the Eskimo people use peculiar goggles, but by far the greater evil, the smoke poisoning of the ophmalmic nerve is neither overcome nor prevented by any of them. All traders carry medicine chests and do what they can to relieve suffering, but it requires a great deal of medicine to make an impression on the native constitution, doses being about four times what would suffice an Englishman or American.

128 Golden Alaska.

OUTFITS, SUPPLIES, ETC.

Houses. Almost every item has been taken into consideration by the prospectors starting out to face an Alaskan winter except the item of shelter when they shall have put their boats in winter dock. The result will be that many hundreds will find them- selves in the bleak region with plenty of money and victuals, but insufficient protection from the cold weather. From accounts that have come from Alaska and British Columbia, there are more men there skilled in digging" and bookkeeping than in carpentry, and more picks and shovels than axes and planes. With the arrival of parties that have lately gone to the headwaters of the Yukon, there will necessarily be an immense demand for houses, for without them the miners will freeze. This mat- ter is beginning to receive attention in San Fran- cisco and Seattle, and preparations are now under way to provide gold seekers with houses.

Within a week negotiations have been conducted between parties in San Francisco and this city for the shipment of entire houses to the gold re- gions. The houses will be constructed in sections, so that they may be carried easily in boats up the Yukon or packed on sleds and carried through the rough country in baggage trains. A New York

Golden Alaska. 131

firm which make- a specialty of such houses has re- ceived orders for as many as can be sent there.

Xo tents are used in winter, as they become coated with ice from the breath of the sleepers and are also apt to take fire.

Clothing for Men. A year's supply of winter clothing ought be taken, especial pains being taken to supply plenty of warm, durable underwear. Old- timer- in the country wear in winter a coat or blouse of dressed d r skin, wit! tl hair on. coming down to the knees and held by a belt round the waist. It has a hood which may be thrown back on the shoulders when not needed. This shirt is trimmed with white deer-kin or wolfskin, while those worn in extreme weather are often lined with fur. Xext in importance to them are the torbassa or Eskimo boots. These are of reindeer skin, taken from the . .'.'. r the hair is short, smooth and stiff. These are sewed together to make the tops of the boots which come up nearly to the knee, where the}- are tied. The sole is of sealskin, turned over at heel and toe and gathered up so as to protect those parts an '. then brought up on each side. They are

::.'.• :h larger than the foot ai 1 ; n a pad of dry gras- which, fold 1 to fit the sole, thickens the boo: and forms an additional prote to the foot. A pair of strings tied about the ankle

132 Golden Alaska.

*

from either side complete a covering admirably adapted to the necessities of winter travel. If the newcomer can get such garments as these he will be well provided against winter rigors.

Women going to the mines are advised to take two pairs of extra heavy all-wool blankets, one small pillow, one fur robe, one warm shawl, one fur coat, easy fitting; three warm woollen dresses, with com- fortable bodices and shirts knee length, flannel-lined preferable; three pairs of knickers or bloomers to match the dresses, three suits of heavy all-wool un- derwear, three warm flannel night dresses, four pairs of knitted woollen stockings, one pair of rub- ber boots, three gingham aprons that reach from neck to knees, small roll of flannel for insoles, wrap- ping the feet and bandages; a sewing kit, such toilet articles as are absolutely necessary, including some skin unguent to protect the face from the icy cold, two light blouses or shirt waists for summer wear, one oilskin blanket to wrap her effects in, to be secured at Juneau or St. Michael; one fur cape, two pairs of fur gloves, two pairs of surseal moccasins, two pairs of muclucs wet weather moccasins.

She wears what she pleases en route to Juneau or St. Michael, and when she makes her start for the diggings she lays aside every civilized traveling garb, including shoes and stays, until she comes out.

Golden Alaska. 135

Instead of carrying the fur robe, fur coat and rub- ber boots along", she can get them on entering Alas- ka, but the experienced ones say, take them along. Leggings and shoes are not so safe nor desirable as the moccasins. A trunk- is not the thing to trans- port baggage in. Tt is much better in a pack, with the oilskin cover well tied on. The things to add that are useful, but not absolutely necessary, are chocolate, coffee and the smaller light luxuries.

Beds are made on a platform raised a few feet from the floor, and about seven feet wide. Often consists of a raindeer skin with the hair on and one end sewn up so as to make a sort of bag to put the feet in. A pillow of wild goose feathers, and a pair of blankets. Sheets, which have been un- known heretofore, may become essential, but such a conventionality as a counterpane would better be left behind.

Provisions. There was a report that Canadian mounted police would guard the passes during the latter part of the summer of [897 and refuse admis- sion to anyone who did not bring a year's provisions with him. This has been estimated as weighing 1,800 pounds. Whether this is true or not, it is cer- tain that no one should go into the Yukon country without taking a large supply of food, and taking it from his starting-point. Whatever is the most

136 Golden Alaska.

condensed and nutritions is the cheapest, and this should be collected with great care. There is well- grounded fear that famine may overtake all the camps there before the opening of navigation in the spring. Newspapers on August 2nd reported agents of the Alaska Commercial Company as saying:

"We shall refuse to take passengers at all in our next steamer. We could sell every berth at the price we have been asking S250, as against $120 last spring but we shall not sell one. We shall fill up with provisions, and I have no doubt the Facific Coast Company will do the same. We are afraid. Those who are mad to get to the diggings will probably be able to get transportation by char- tering tramp steamers, and there is a serious risk that there will not be food enough for them at Ju- neau or on the Yukon. After the season closes it will be next to impossible to get supplies into the Yukon country, and a large proportion of the gold seekers may starve to death. That would be an ominous beginning for the new camp. Alaska is not like California or Australia or South Africa. It produces nothing. When the supplies from out- side are exhausted, famine must follow to what de- gree no i.UL' can tell."

Tt was further understood at this date that there are 2.000 tons of food at St. Michael, and the Alaska

Golden Alaska. 139

Company has three large and three small steamers to carry it up river. It is hard to ascertain how much there is at Juneau; it is vaguely stated— that there are 5,000 tons. At a pinch steamers might p work their way for several months to come through" the ice to that port from Seattle, which is only three days distant. But it may be nip and tuck if there is any rush of gold seekers from the East.

Alaskan Mails. Between Seattle and Sitka the mail steamers ply regularly. On the City of To-

peka there has been established a regular sea post- office service. W. R. Curtis is the clerk in charge. Between Sitka and Juneau there is a closed pouch steamboat service. Seattle makes up closed pouches for Douglas, Fort Wrangel, Juneau, Killisnoo, Ket- chikan, Mary Island, Sitka, and Metlakatlah. Con- necting at Sitka is other sea service between that point and Unalaska, 1,400 miles to the west. This service consists of one trip a month between Sitka and Unalaska from xA.pril to October and leaves Sit- ka immediately upon arrival of the mails from Seat- tle. Captain J. E. Hanson is acting clerk. From Unalaska the mails are dispatched to St. Michael and thence to points on the Yukon.

The Postoffice department has perfected not only a summer but a winter star route service between Juneau and Circle City. The route is overland and

140 Golden Alaska.

by boats and rafts over the lakes and down the Yu- kon, and is 900 miles long". A Chicago man named Beddoe carries the summer mail, making five trips between June and November, and is paid $500 a trip. Two Juneau men, Frank Corwin and Albert Hayes, operate the winter service and draw for each round trip $1,700 in gold. About 1,200 letters are carried on each trip. The cost of forwarding let- ters from Circle City to Dawson City is one dollar for each letter and two for each paper, the mails being sent over once a month. The Chilkoot Pass is crossed with the mail by means of Indian car- riers. On the previous trips the carriers, after fin- ishing the pass, built their boats, but they now have their own to pass the lakes and the Lewes River.

In the winter transportation is carried on by means of dogsleds, and it is hoped that under the present contracts there will be no stoppage, no matter how low the temperature may go. The contractor has reported that he was sending a boat, in sections, by way of St. Michael, up the Yukon River, to be used on the waterway of the route, and it is thought much time will be saved by this, as formerly it was necessary for the carriers to stop and build boats or rafts to pass the lakes.

Contracts have been made with two steamboat companies for two trips from Seattle to St. Michael.

Golden Alaska 143

When the steamers reach St. Michael, the mail will be transferred to the flat-bottomed boats running up the Y.ukon as far as Circle City. It is believed the boats now run further up.

The contracts for the overland route call for only first-class matter, whereas the steamers in summer carry everything, up to five tons, each trip.

Sledges and Dogs. The sleds are heavy and shod with bone sawed from the upper edge of the jaw of the bowright whale. The rest of the sled is of spruce and will carry from six to eight hundred pounds. The sleds used in the interior are lighter and differently constructed. They consist of a nar- row box four feet long, the front half being covered or boxed in, mounted on a floor eight feet long rest- ing on runners. In this box the passenger sits, wrapped in rabbit skins so that he can hardly move, his head and shoulders only projecting. In front and behind and on top of the box is placed all the luggage, covered with canvas and securely lashed, to withstand all the jolting and possible upsets, and our snow shoes within easy reach.

An important item is the dog- whip, terrible to the dog if used by a skillful hand and terrible to the user if he be a novice; for he is sure to half strangle himself or to hurt his own face with the business end of the lash. The whip T measured had a handle

144 Golden Alaska.

nine inches long and lash thirty feet, and weighed four pounds. The lash was of folded and plaited seal hide, and for five feet from the handle measured five inches round, then for fourteen feet it gradually tapered off, ending in a single thong half an inch thick and eleven feet long. Wonderful the dex- terity with which a driver can pick out a dog and almost a spot on a dog with this lash. The lash must be trailing at full length behind, when a jerk and turn of the wrist causes it to fly forward, the thick part first, and the tapering end continuing the motion till it is at full length in front, and the lash making the fur fly from the victim. But often it is made to crack over the heads of the dogs as a warning.

The eleven flogs were harnessed to the front of the sled, each by a separate thong of seal hide, all of different lengths, fastened to a light canvas har- ness. The nearest dog was about fifteen feet from the sled, and the leader, with bells on her. about fifty feet, the thongs thus increasing in length by about three feet. When the going is good the dogs spread out like the fingers of a hand, but when the snow is deep the}" fall into each other's tracks in almost single file. As they continually cross and recross each other, the thongs get gradually plaited almost up to the rearmost dog, when a halt is called,

A TEAM OF DOGS AND DOG SLEDGES.

Golden Alaska. 147

the dogs are made to lie down, and the driver care- fully disentangles them, taking care that no dog gets away meanwhile. They are guided by the voice, using "husk}," that is, Eskimo words: "Owk," go to the right; "arrah," to the left, and "holt," straight on. But often one of the men must run ahead on snowshoes for the dogs to follow him.

The dogs are of all colors, somewhat the height of the Newfoundland, but with shorter legs. The usual number is from five to seven, according to the load.

List of prices that have been current in Dawson City during 1897:

Flour, per 100 lbs $12.00 to $120.00

Moose ham, ner lb 1.00 to 2.00

Caribou meat, lb 65

Beans, per lb 10

Rice, per lb 25 to .75

Sugar, per lb 25

Bacon, per lb ' 40 to .80

Butter, per roll 1.50 to 2.50

Eggs, per doz 1 .50 to 3.00

Better eggs, doz 2.00

Salmon, each 1.00 to 1.50

Potatoes, per lb 25

Turnips, per lb 15

Tea, per lb 1 .00 to 3.00

Coffee, per lb 50 to 2.25

Dried fruits, per lb 35

148 ( Ioldex Alaska.

Canned fruits 50 to ^.25

Lemons, each 20 to .25

Oranges, each 50

Tobacco, per 11) 1.50 to 2.00

Liquors, per drink 53

Shovels 2.50 to 18.00

Picks 5.00 to 7.00

Coal oil, per gal 1 .00 to 2. 50

Overalls 1.50

Underwear, per suit 5.00 to 7.50

Shoes 5.00 to 8.00

Rubber boots 15.00 to 18.00

Based on supply and demand the above quoted prices may vary several hundred per cent, on some articles at any time.

Fare to Seattle by way of Northern Pacific, $81.50.

Fee for Pullman sleeper, $20.50.

Fee for tourist sleeper, run only west of St. Paul $55.

Meals served in dining car for entire trip, $16.

Meals are served at stations along the route a la carte.

Distance from Xew York to Seattle. 3.290 miles.

Days required to make the journey, about six.

Fare for steamer from Seattle to Juneau, includ- ing cabin and meals. $35.

Days. Seattle to Juneau, about five.

Number of miles from Seattle to Juneau, 725.

Golden Alaska. 149

Cost of living" in Juneau, about $3 per day.

Distance on Lynn Canal to Healey's Store, steamboat, seventy-five miles.

Number of days, New York to Healey's Store, twelve.

Cost of complete outfit for overland journey, about $150.

Cost of provisions for one year, about $200.

Cost of dogs, sled and outfit, about $150.

Steamer leaves Seattle once a week,

Best time to start is early in the Spring.

Total cost of trip, New York to Klondike, about $667.

Number of days required for journey, New York to Klondike, thirty-six to forty.

Total distance, New York to the mines at Klon- dike, 4,650 miles.

<»v:

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and Points.

Aldington, C-9. Alitak, C-5. Anchor, C-5. Anxiety, A-6. Banks, C-5. Barnabas, C-5. Barrow, A-4. Bartolome, C-9. Becher, A-6. Beet hey, A-6. Belcher, A-3. Black, C-5. Blossom, A-3. Campbell, B-6. Chlniak, C-5. Chitnak, B-l. Christy, A-4. Cleare, C-6. Collie, A-3. Constantine, C-4. Cross, C-8. Current, C-5. Dall, B-2. Dan by, B-3. Denbigh, B-3. Douglas, B-2. Douglas, C-5. Dyer. A-2. Dyer, B-3. Edward, C-8. Elizabeth, C-5. Eroline, C-4. Espenberg, A-3. Etolin, B-2. Fairweatuer, C-8. Foggy, C-4. Franklin, A-3. Glasenap, C-8. Grenville, C-5.

Lazareff, D-3. ittyna Leontovich, C-8. »ttysto Lewis, A-2. plitna

Lisburne, A-2. lvllle, Low, C-5. p,per-,J

Lowenstern, A-8.J',e.^i f Lutke, D-3. khkak

Manbv, C-7. J1- A'-

Manning, A-7. lta> B Martin, A-? . Martin. C-6. Meuchikof, C-4. Muzon, D-9. Narrow, C-5.

iggetloi igati, B ikett, . sh, A-3 rty-nd

Newenham, C-3. kona,

rsde, I

•odpas!

)kucha

isstiak

pikpui

glixalil

noko,

pewik,

Nome, B-2. Ocean, C-7. Ommaney, C-8. Pankoff, D-3. Peirce, C-3. Pellew, B-6. Pillar, C-5. Pitt, A-5.

Prince of Wales, hnsoa Providence, C-4. lknui * Puget. C-6. ilucna,

Resurrection, C-6n,dl,k> Rodknoft', C-8. irjuk'.,( Rodnev, B-2. tsnunil. Romaiiof. B-8. 'ssilof, Romanzof, B-2. iviavaz Saritchey, D-2. iy,lh' L Seniavin, C-3. Seppinge, A-2. Sitkagi. C-7. Smith. B-2. Spencer, A-2. Spencer, C-8. St. Augustine, D-alk> 4B: St. Elias, C-7. 30; A^ St. Hennogenes, *>kput

vwleel nak, B anarch atena, atsutal awasin

Money Order Offices. ^ Post Offices not 1

b-7.

ne, B-7. B-4.

A-5.

5-6.

-4.

at, A-4.

6.

jscat, A-4.

-6

V-5.

,'e, B-7. B-6. ;-6.

er, B-6. tna, A-4. itua, A-4. g, A-5. :, A-4. fi-4. A-3. B-6. 1-5. B-7. \-7. '-5. :, B-3. B-5

ak, A-3. -4.

:, A-3. -3.

argat, A-6. B-6.

;akat, B-5 a. B-6. 6.

'. V-3.

Ray, A-5. Robertson, B-6. Salmon, A-7. Selawik, A-4. Slana. B-6. Soonkakat, B-4. Stikine, C-9. Sticker, A-7. Snshitna, B-6. Taclat, B-5. Tahkandik, A-7. Tanana, B-6. Tasnioio, B-6. Tatotlindu, B-7. Ta/.lina, B-6. Teiknell, B-6. Traodee, A-7. Tokai, B-7. Tovikakal, A-5. Ugaguk, C-4. Ugashik, C-4. Unalaklik, B-4. Volkmar, B-6. White, B-7. Whvmper. A-6. Woliek, A-3. Yukon, B-3.

Towns, pop.

Afo^nak, C-5 409

Alaganik, B-6 ... 48

Anagnak, C-4

Anvik, B-3 191

Attanak, A-4

Attenmtit, A-4

Belkoffski, D-3 185

Belle Isle. B-8

Cape Sabine, A-2

Chilkat. C-8 153

71'

Katniai, C-4

Ketchikan, C-9

Killisnoo, C-9

Kipmak, B-3

Klawock, C-9 287

Kodiak, C-5 * 495

Kogei ting, C-4 133

Kutlik. B-3 31

Leather Village, B-4

Lorintr, C-9 200

Marv Island, D-9

Metlakahtla *

Mitchell, A-8 238

Morzhovoi, D-3 68

Kig-a-lek, A-6

Nikolski, A-ll

Nulato, B-4 118

Nushaeak, C-4 268

Old Morzhovoi, C-3

Orca, B-6

Ounalaska. A-ll

Pastolik, B-3 113

Redoubt Kolmakoff, B-4

Sandpoiut, C-3

Seward, C-5

Shaeeliik, B-3

Shakan. C-9

Shaktolik. B-3

Sitka, C-8 * 1190

St. Orlovsk, C-5

Sntkum, C-4

Suworof, C-4

Takti. C-9

Tikchik, B-4

Dkak, C-4

Unalaklik. B-3 175

Unalas^a, D-2 817

Unga, C-3 159

Village, C-4

Wrangel, C-9

Yakitat, C-8

Addenda.

Pop.

Weare, B 5

Circle City, B7

Dawson. U '■

Klondyke River. B8

Klond\ke District, B8 .. Dyea, C8

Rand, McNally & Co.'s

Large Map of Alaska

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From United States and Dominion of Canada Official Survey, revised to July 29, 1897, shows in detail

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MARAH ELLIS RYAN'S WORKS

A FLOWER OF FRANCE.

A Story of Old Louisiana. The story is well told.— Herald, New York.

A real romance— just the kind of romance one delights in.— Times, boston Full of stirring incident and picturesque description.— Press, Philadelphia. The interest holds the reader until the closing page.— Inter Ocean, Chicago. Told with great fascination and brightness. v * * The general impression Jelightful. * * * Many thrilling scenes. Herald, Chicago. A thrilling story of passion and action. - Commercial, Memphis.

A PAGAN OF THE ALLEGHANIES.

A genuine art work.— Chicago Tribune.

A remarkable book, original and dramatic in conception, and pure and noble in tone. Boston Literary World.

REV. DAVID SWING said: -The books of Marah Ellis Ryan give great pleasure to all the uest class of readers " A Pagan of the Alleghanies " is one of her best works; but all she writes is high and pure. Her words are all true to nature, and, with her, nature is a great theme.

ROBERT G. 1NGEHSOLL says: -Your description of scenery and seasons of the capture of the mountains by spring of tree and fern, of laurel, cloud and mist, and the woods of the forest, are true, poetic, and beautiful. To say the least, the pagan saw and appreciated many of the difficulties and contradictions that grow out of and belong to creeds. He saw how hard it is to harmonize what we see and know with the idea that over all is infinite power and goodness * * the divine spark called Genius is in your brain.

SQUAW ^LOUISE.

Vigorous, natural, entertaining.— Boston Times A notable performance. Chicago Tribune. A very strong story, indeed.— Chicago Times.

TOLD IN THE HILLS.

A book that is more than clever. It is healthy, brave, and inspiring.— St Louis Post-Dispatch.

The character of Stuart is one of the finest which has been drawn by an American woman in many a day, and it is depicted with an appreciation hardly to be expected even from a man.— Boston Herald.

IN LOVE'S DOMAINS.

There are imagination and poetical expressions in the stories, and readers will find them interesting-— New York Sun.

The longest story, "Galeed," is a strong, nervous story, covering a wide range, and dealing in a masterly way with some intricate questions of what might be termed amatory psychology. San Francisco Chronicle.

MERZE ; The Story of an Actress.

We can not doubt that the author is one of the best living orators of her sex. The book will possess a strong attraction for women —Chicago Herald.

This is the story of the life of an actress, told in the graphic style of Mrs Ryan It is very interesting. Ne w Orleans Picayune.

FOR SALE BY ALL BOOKSELLERS HAND. McNALLY & CO., Publishers, Chicago and fciew York

ESTABLISHED 1840.

GEO. B. CARPENTER & CO.

MANUFACTURERS OF

Miners' and Camping

_Jfess£^?*3?*iS&fc._

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.uaska-Klondike

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CAPITAL STOCK...500,000 Shares.

Par Value...$10.00 each.

Full Paid— Non-Assessable, ********

This Company is a

Transportation,

Commercial, and Mining Corporation

owning large GOLD GRAVEL claims on the Yukon, Klondike, and other rivers in Alaska, and now have under construction steamers to ply on the Yukon next season.

The Board of Directors are a sufficient guarantee that the affairs of the Company will be well managed.

DIRECTORS.

JAMES RICE,

Late Secretary State of Colorado. WM. SHAW,

Capitalist, Chicago. E. M. TITCOMB, Vice-Pres't and Gen'l Manager,

Eastman Fruit Despatch Co. H. C. FASH,

Member Maritime Exchange, New York. GEO. W. MORGAN,

Circle City, Alaska.

A limited amount of Shares are offered at $10.00 per Share.

For information, address,

Alaska-Klondike Cold Mining Co.

96 BROADWAY, NEW YORK.

Hon. JAMES RICE, president.

W. L. BOYD, SECRETARY.

+ HO! FOR THE

t Klondike :

X REGIONS AND THE T

I Gold Fields

of Alaska

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#

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A !n fact, we can supply you with anything and ^k

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It has nearly Soo pages, over 13.000 illustrations,

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A CHICAGO. ?

UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA AT LOS ANGELES

THE UNIVERSITY LIBRARY This Look is DUE on the last date stamped "below

1 ,D FEC'D LD-URC j

Wfc FEB 3 1.9751

5* «G,

JUL 5 1950

\Pk lo id

APR 1 7 REC^

AY 9 1951

MAR 12 1975

iftittL

18«M

BUTTLE REJECTS!* BY BINDERY

T &o *\

»>m-l, '41(1122)

3 1158 00019 9

iiniiii»iii)!iiHiiRN REGI0NAL UBRARV A A 000177 358

fe;;ky:

.