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KLONDYKE NUGGETS | |
A Brief Description of the Great Gold Regions in the Northwest | |
Territories and Alaska | |
BY | |
JOSEPH LADUE | |
Founder of Dawson City, N.W.T. | |
Explorer, Miner and Prospector | |
September, 1897 | |
PREFACE. | |
The extraordinary excitement arising from the reports of the discovery | |
of Gold in the Klondyke region in the great Canadian Northwest is not | |
surprising to one who, through personal residence and practical | |
experience, is thoroughly conversant with the locality. | |
Having recently returned for a temporary stay, after a somewhat | |
successful experience, I have received applications for information in | |
numbers so great that it far exceeds my ability and the time at my | |
disposal to make direct replies. | |
I have therefore arranged with the American Technical Book Co., 45 Vesey | |
Street, New York City, for the issue of this brief description, | |
preparatory to the publication of my larger book, "Klondyke Facts," a | |
book of 224 pages, with illustrations and maps, in which will be found a | |
vast fund of practical information, statistics, and all particulars | |
sought for by those who intend emigrating to this wonderful country. | |
It is well-nigh impossible to tell the truth of these recent discoveries | |
of gold, but while I can only briefly describe the territory in this | |
small work, it shall be my endeavor to give the intending prospector, | |
in the large work above mentioned, as many facts as possible, and these | |
may thoroughly be relied upon, as from one who has lived continuously in | |
those regions since 1882. | |
JOSEPH LADUE. | |
* * * * * | |
KLONDYKE NUGGETS | |
CHAPTER I. | |
KLONDYKE. | |
Klondyke! The word and place that has startled the civilized world is | |
to-day a series of thriving mining camps on the Yukon River and its | |
tributaries in the Canadian Northwest Territories. | |
Prior to August 24, 1896, this section of the country had never been | |
heard of. It was on this day that a man named Henderson discovered the | |
first gold. | |
On the first day of the following month the writer commenced erecting | |
the first house in this region and called the place Dawson City, now the | |
central point of the mining camps. | |
Dawson City is now the most important point in the new mining regions. | |
Its population in June, 1897; exceeded 4,000; by June next it cannot be | |
less than 25,000. It has a saw-mill, stores, churches, of the | |
Presbyterian, Baptist, Methodist and Roman Catholic denominations. It is | |
the headquarters of the Canadian Northwest Mounted Police, _and perfect | |
law and order is maintained_. | |
It is at Dawson City that the prospector files his claims with the | |
Government Gold Commissioner, in the recording offices. | |
Dawson City faces on one of the banks of the Yukon River, and now | |
occupies about a mile of the bank. It is at the junction of the Klondyke | |
River with the Yukon River. It is here where the most valuable mining | |
claims are being operated on a scale of profit that the world has | |
hitherto never known. The entire country surrounding is teeming with | |
mineral wealth. | |
Copper, silver and coal can be found in large quantities, but little or | |
no attention is now being paid to these valuable minerals, as every one | |
is engaged in gold-hunting and working the extraordinary placer mining | |
claims already located. | |
The entire section is given up to placer mining. Very few claims had | |
been filed for quartz mining. The fields of gold will not be exhausted | |
in the near future. No man can tell what the end will be. From January | |
to April, 1897, about $4,000,000 were taken out of the few placer claims | |
then being worked. This was done in a territory not exceeding forty | |
square miles. All these claims are located on Klondyke River and the | |
little tributaries emptying into it, and the districts are known as Big | |
Bonanza, Gold Bottom and Honker. | |
I have asked old and experienced miners at Dawson City who mined | |
through California in Bonanza days, and some who mined in Australia, | |
what they thought of the Klondyke region, and their reply has | |
invariably been, "The world never saw so vast and rich a find of gold as | |
we are working now." | |
Dawson City is destined to be the greatest mining camp in the history of | |
mining operations. | |
CHAPTER II. | |
KLONDYKE FACTS. | |
There is a great popular error in reference to the climate of the gold | |
regions. Many reports have appeared in the newspapers which are | |
misleading. It has been even stated that the cold is excessive almost | |
throughout the year. This is entirely a mis-statement. | |
I have found I have suffered more from winter cold in Northern New York | |
than I ever did in Alaska or the Canadian Northwest. | |
I have chopped wood in my shirt-sleeves in front of my door at Dawson | |
City when the thermometer was 70 degrees below zero, and I suffered no | |
inconvenience. We account for this from the fact that the air is very | |
dry. It is a fact that you do not feel this low temperature as much as | |
you would 15 below zero in the East. | |
We usually have about three feet of snow in winter and it is as dry as | |
sawdust. | |
As we have no winter thaws no crust forms on the snow, therefore we | |
travel from the various points that may be necessary with snowshoes. | |
These may be purchased from the Indians in the vicinity of Dawson City | |
at from $5.00 to $10.00 per pair according to the quality. | |
The winter days are very short. In this region there are only two hours | |
from sunrise to sunset. The sun rises and sets away in the south but | |
there is no pitch darkness. | |
The twilight lasts all night and the Northern Lights are very common. | |
Then in summer it is exactly the other way. The day there in July is | |
about twenty hours long. The sun rising and setting in the north. A | |
great deal has been said about the short seasons, but as a matter of | |
fact a miner can work 12 months in the year when in that region. | |
Spring opens about May 1st and the ice commences to break up about that | |
time. The Yukon River is generally clear of ice about May 15. The best | |
part of the miner's work commences then and lasts till about October | |
1st. | |
The winter commences in October but the miner keeps on working through | |
the winter. The rainy season commences in the latter part of August and | |
lasts two or three weeks. | |
A fall of two feet of snow is considered heavy. | |
There is a wide difference in the quantity of snow that accumulates on | |
the coast and the ranges in the interior where the principal mining | |
claims are located. | |
While the fall of snow on the coast is heavy the depth of snow as far | |
down as the Yukon, Stewart and Klondyke rivers is inconsiderable. | |
In my new work on this territory entitled "Klondyke Facts" I deal more | |
largely on the climate of this region. | |
There are still good diggings at Circle City in Alaska, but nearly all | |
the miners have left for Klondyke, not being satisfied with the pay dirt | |
which they were working. I know at least 20 good claims in Circle City. | |
Fort Cudahy, or as it is sometimes called Forty Mile Creek, is now | |
practically exhausted as a mining camp, and the miners have left for | |
other diggings. | |
There will undoubtedly be new and valuable diggings discovered very | |
quickly along this region as it is certain that this enormous territory | |
is rich in gold-bearing districts. | |
The entire country is teeming with mineral wealth. | |
When mining operations commence on coal it will be specially valuable | |
for steamers on the various rivers and greatly assist transportation | |
facilities. | |
In the next few years there will certainly be recorded the most | |
marvellous discoveries in this territory, usually thought to be only a | |
land of snow and ice and fit only to be classed with the Arctic regions. | |
It is marvellous to state that for some years past we have been finding | |
gold in occasional places in this territory, but from the poverty of the | |
people no effort was made to prospect among the places reported. | |
It is my belief that the greatest finds of gold will be made in this | |
territory. It is safe to say that not 2 per cent. of all the gold | |
discovered so far has been on United States soil. | |
The great mass of the work has been done on the Northwest territory, | |
which is under the Canadian Government. | |
It is possible however that further discoveries will be made on American | |
soil, but it is my opinion that the most valuable discoveries will be | |
further east and south of the present claims, and would advise | |
prospectors to work east and south of Klondyke. | |
THE YUKON RIVER AND ITS TRIBUTARIES. | |
"What the Amazon is to South America, the Mississippi to the central | |
portion of the United States, the Yukon is to Alaska. It is a great | |
inland highway, which will make it possible for the explorer to | |
penetrate the mysterious fastnesses of that still unknown region. The | |
Yukon has its source in the Rocky Mountains of British Columbia and the | |
Coast Range Mountains in southeastern Alaska, about 125 miles from the | |
city of Juneau, which is the present metropolis of Alaska. But it is | |
only known as the Yukon River at the point where the Pelly River, the | |
branch that heads in British Columbia, meets with the Lewes River, which | |
heads in southeastern Alaska. This point of confluence is at Fort | |
Selkirk, in the Northwest Territory, about 125 miles south-east of the | |
Klondyke. The Yukon proper is 2,044 miles in length. From Fort Selkirk | |
it flows north-west 400 miles, just touching the Arctic circle; thence | |
southward for a distance of 1,600 miles, where it empties into Behring | |
Sea. It drains more than 600,000 square miles of territory, and | |
discharges one-third more water into Behring Sea than does the | |
Mississippi into the Gulf of Mexico. At its mouth it is sixty miles | |
wide. About 1,500 miles inland it widens out from one to ten miles. A | |
thousand islands send the channel in as many different directions. Only | |
natives who are thoroughly familiar with the river are entrusted with | |
the piloting of boats up the stream during the season of low water. Even | |
at the season of high water it is still so shallow as not to be | |
navigable anywhere by seagoing vessels, but only by flat-bottomed boats | |
with a carrying capacity of four to five hundred tons. The draft of | |
steamers on the Yukon should not exceed three and a half feet. | |
"The Yukon district, which is within the jurisdiction of the Canadian | |
Government and in which the bulk of the gold has been found, has a total | |
area, approximately, of 192,000 square miles, of which 150,768 square | |
miles are included in the watershed of the Yukon. Illustrating this, so | |
that it may appeal with definiteness to the reader, it may be said that | |
this territory is greater by 71,100 square miles than the area of Great | |
Britain, and is nearly three times that of all the New England States | |
combined. | |
"A further fact must be borne in mind. The Yukon River is absolutely | |
closed to navigation during the winter months. In the winter the | |
frost-king asserts his dominion and locks up all approaches with | |
impenetrable ice, and the summer is of the briefest. It endures only for | |
twelve to fourteen weeks, from about the first of June to the middle of | |
September. Then an unending panorama of extraordinary picturesqueness is | |
unfolded to the voyager. The banks are fringed with flowers, carpeted | |
with the all-pervading moss or tundra. Birds countless in numbers and of | |
infinite variety in plumage, sing out a welcome from every treetop. | |
Pitch your tent where you will in midsummer, a bed of roses, a clump of | |
poppies and a bunch of bluebells will adorn your camping. But high above | |
this paradise of almost tropical exuberance giant glaciers sleep in the | |
summit of the mountain wall, which rises up from a bed of roses. By | |
September everything is changed. The bed of roses has disappeared before | |
the icy breath of the winter king, which sends the thermometer down | |
sometimes to seventy degrees below freezing point. The birds fly to the | |
southland and the bear to his sleeping chamber in the mountains. Every | |
stream becomes a sheet of ice, mountain and valley alike are covered | |
with snow till the following May. | |
"That part of the basin of the Yukon in which gold in greater or less | |
quantities has actually been found lies partly in Alaska and partly in | |
British territory. It covers an area of some 50,000 square miles. But so | |
far the infinitely richest spot lies some one hundred miles east of the | |
American boundary, in the region drained by the Klondyke and its | |
tributaries. This is some three hundred miles by river from Circle City. | |
"We have described some of the beauties of the Yukon basin in the summer | |
season, but this radiant picture has its obverse side. | |
"Horseflies, gnats and mosquitoes add to the joys of living throughout | |
the entire length of the Yukon valley. The horsefly is larger and more | |
poignantly assertive than the insect which we know by that name. In | |
dressing or undressing, it has a pleasant habit of detecting any bare | |
spot in the body and biting out a piece of flesh, leaving a wound which | |
a few days later looks like an incipient boil. Schwatka reports that one | |
of his party, so bitten was completely disabled for a week. 'At the | |
moment of infliction.' he adds, 'it was hard to believe that one was not | |
disabled for life.' | |
"The mosquitoes according to the same authority are equally distressing. | |
They are especially fond of cattle, but without any reciprocity of | |
affection. 'According to the general terms of the survival of the | |
fittest and the growth of muscles most used to the detriment of others,' | |
says the lieutenant in an unusual burst of humor, 'a band of cattle | |
inhabiting this district, in the far future, would be all tail and no | |
body, unless the mosquitoes should experience a change of numbers.'" | |
I am indebted to Wm. Ogilvie, Esq., for the following valuable | |
information relative to The Yukon District. | |
"The Yukon District comprises, speaking generally, that part of the | |
Northwest Territories lying west of the water shed of the Mackenzie | |
River; most of it is drained by the Yukon River and its tributaries. It | |
covers a distance of about 650 miles along the river from the coast | |
range of mountains. | |
"In 1848 Campbell established Fort Selkirk at the confluence of the | |
Pelly and Lewes Rivers; it was plundered and destroyed in 1852 by the | |
Coast Indians, and only the ruins now exist of what was at one time the | |
most important post of the Hudson's Bay Company to the west of the Rocky | |
Mountains in the far north. In 1869 the Hudson's Bay Company's officer | |
was expelled from Fort Yukon by the United States Government, they | |
haying ascertained by astronomical observations that the post was not | |
located in British territory. The officer thereupon ascended the | |
Porcupine to a point which was supposed to be within British | |
jurisdiction, where he established Rampart House; but in 1890 Mr. J.H. | |
Turner of the United States Coast Survey found it to be 20 miles within | |
the lines of the United States. Consequently in 1891 the post was moved | |
20 miles further up the river to be within British territory. | |
"The next people to enter the country for trading purposes were Messrs. | |
Harper and McQuestion. They have been trading in the country since 1873 | |
and have occupied numerous posts all along the river, the greater number | |
of which have been abandoned. Mr. Harper is now located as a trader at | |
Fort Selkirk, with Mr. Joseph Ladue under the firm name of Harper & | |
Ladue, and Mr. McQuestion is in the employ of the Alaska Commercial | |
Company at Circle City, which is the distributing point for the vast | |
regions surrounding Birch Creek, Alaska. In 1882 a number of miners | |
entered the Yukon country by the Taiya Pass; it is still the only route | |
used to any extent by the miners, and is shorter than the other passes | |
though not the lowest. In 1883 Lieutenant Schwatka crossed this same | |
pass and descended the Lewes and Yukon Rivers to the ocean. | |
"The explorers found that in proximity to the boundary line there | |
existed extensive and valuable placer gold mines, in which even then as | |
many as three hundred miners were at work. Mr. Ogilvie determined, by a | |
series of lunar observations, the point at which the Yukon River is | |
intersected by the 141st meridian, and marked the same on the ground. He | |
also determined and marked the point at which the western affluent of | |
the Yukon, known as Forty Mile Creek, is crossed by the same meridian | |
line, that point being situated at a distance of about twenty-three | |
miles from the mouth of the creek. This survey proved that the place | |
which had been selected as the most convenient, owing to the physical | |
conformation of the region, from which to distribute the supplies | |
imported for the various mining camps, and from which to conduct the | |
other business incident to the mining operations--a place situate at the | |
confluence of the Forty Mile Creek and the Yukon, and to which the name | |
of Fort Cudahy has been given--is well within Canadian territory. The | |
greater proportion of the mines then being worked Mr. Ogilvie found to | |
be on the Canadian side of the international boundary line, but he | |
reported the existence of some mining fields to the south, the exact | |
position of which with respect to the boundary he did not have the | |
opportunity to fix. | |
"The number of persons engaged in mining in the locality mentioned has | |
steadily increased year by year since the date of Mr. Ogilvie's survey, | |
and it is estimated that at the commencement of the past season not less | |
than one thousand men were so employed. Incident to this mineral | |
development there must follow a corresponding growth in the volume of | |
business of all descriptions, particularly the importation of dutiable | |
goods, and the occupation of tracts of the public lands for mining | |
purposes which according to the mining regulations are subject to the | |
payment of certain prescribed dues and charges. The Alaska Commercial | |
Company, for many years subsequent to the retirement of the Hudson's Bay | |
Company, had a practical monopoly of the trade of the Yukon, carrying | |
into the country and delivering at various points along the river, | |
without regard to the international boundary line or the customs laws | |
and regulations of Canada, such articles of commerce as were required | |
for the prosecution of the fur trade and latterly of placer mining, | |
these being the only two existing industries. With the discovery of | |
gold, however, came the organization of a competing company known as the | |
North American Transportation and Trading Company, having its | |
headquarters in Chicago and its chief trading and distributing post at | |
Cudahy. This company has been engaged in this trade for over three | |
years, and during the past season despatched two ocean steamers from San | |
Francisco to St. Michael, at the mouth of the Yukon, the merchandise | |
from which was, at the last mentioned point, transhipped into river | |
steamers and carried to points inland, but chiefly to the company's | |
distributing centre within Canadian territory. Importations of | |
considerable value, consisting of the immediately requisite supplies of | |
the miners, and their tools, also reach the Canadian portion of the | |
Yukon District from Juneau, in the United States, by way of the Taiya | |
Inlet, the mountain passes, and the chain of waterways leading therefrom | |
to Cudahy. Upon none of these importations had any duty been collected, | |
except a sum of $3,248.80 paid to Inspector Constantine in 1894, by the | |
North American Transportation and Trading Company and others, and it is | |
safe to conclude, especially when it is remembered that the country | |
produces none of the articles consumed within it except fresh meat, that | |
a large revenue was being lost to the public exchequer under the then | |
existing conditions. | |
"For the purpose of ascertaining officially and authoritatively the | |
condition of affairs to which the correspondence referred to in the | |
next preceding paragraph relates, the Honorable the President of the | |
Privy Council, during the spring of 1894, despatched Inspector Charles | |
Constantine, of the Northwest Mounted Police Force, accompanied by | |
Sergeant Brown, to Fort Cudahy and the mining camps in its vicinity. The | |
report made by Mr. Constantine on his return, established the | |
substantial accuracy of the representations already referred to. The | |
value of the total output of gold for the season of 1894 he estimated at | |
$300,000. | |
"The facts recited clearly establish--first, that the time had arrived | |
when it became the duty of the Government of Canada to make more | |
efficient provision for the maintenance of order, the enforcement of the | |
laws, and the administration of justice in the Yukon country, especially | |
in that section of it in which placer mining for gold is being | |
prosecuted upon such an extensive scale, situated near to the boundary | |
separating the Northwest Territories from the possessions of the United | |
States in Alaska; and, second, that while such measures as were | |
necessary to that end were called for in the interests of humanity, and | |
particularly for the security and safety of the lives and property of | |
the Canadian subjects of Her Majesty resident in that country who are | |
engaged in legitimate business pursuits, it was evident that the revenue | |
justly due to the Government of Canada, under its customs, excise and | |
land laws, and which would go a long way to pay the expenses of | |
government, was being lost for the want of adequate machinery for its | |
collection. | |
"Accordingly in June last a detachment[1] of twenty members of the | |
Mounted Police Force including officers was detailed for service in | |
that portion of the Northwest Territories. The officer in command, in | |
addition to the magisterial and other duties he is required to perform | |
by virtue of his office and under instructions from the Department of | |
Mounted Police, was duly authorized to represent where necessary, and | |
until other arrangements can be made, all the departments of the | |
government having interests in that region. Particularly he is | |
authorized to perform the duties of Dominion lands agent, collector of | |
customs, and collector of inland revenue. At the same time instructions | |
were given Mr. William Ogilvie, the surveyor referred to as having, with | |
Dr. Dawson, been entrusted with the conduct of the first government | |
expedition to the Yukon, to proceed again to that district for the | |
purpose of continuing and extending the work of determining the 141st | |
meridian, of laying out building lots and mining claims, and generally | |
of performing such duties as may be entrusted to him from time to time. | |
Mr. Ogilvie's qualifications as a surveyor, and his previous experience | |
as explorer of this section of the Northwest, peculiarly fit him for the | |
task. | |
[Footnote 1: The detachment was made up as follows:--Inspector C. | |
Constantine, Officer Commanding Yukon Detachment N.W.M. Police; | |
Inspector, D.A.E. Strickland; Assistant Surgeon, A.E. Wills; 2 Staff | |
Sergeants; 2 Corporals; 13 Constables.] | |
"As it appears quite certain, from the report made by Mr. Ogilvie on his | |
return to Ottawa, in 1889, and from the report of Mr. Constantine, that | |
the operations of the miners are being conducted upon streams which have | |
their sources in the United States Territory of Alaska, and flow into | |
Canada on their way to join the Yukon, and as doubtless some of the | |
placer diggings under development are situated on the United States side | |
of the boundary it is highly desirable, both for the purpose of settling | |
definitely to which country any land occupied for mining or other | |
purposes actually belongs, and in order that the jurisdiction of the | |
courts and officers of the United States and Canada, for both civil and | |
criminal purposes, may be established, that the determination of the | |
141st meridian west of Greenwich from the point of its intersection | |
with the Yukon, as marked by Mr. Ogilvie in 1887-88, for a considerable | |
distance south of the river, and possibly also for some distance to the | |
north, should be proceeded with at once. Mr. Ogilvie's instructions | |
require him to go on with the survey with all convenient speed, but in | |
order that this work may be effective for the accomplishment of the | |
object in view the co-operation of the Government of the United States | |
is necessary. Correspondence is in progress through the proper | |
authorities with a view to obtaining this co-operation. It may be | |
mentioned that a United States surveyor has also determined the points | |
at which the Yukon River and Forty Mile Creek are intersected by the | |
141st meridian." | |
ROUTES, DISTANCES, AND TRANSPORTATION. | |
After considerable experience I have decided that the best route for a | |
man to take to the gold regions is from Seattle, Washington, to Juneau, | |
Alaska, and then to Dawson City, by the pass and waterways, and I will | |
therefore describe this route more in detail than any of the others. | |
I am devoting a special chapter to the outfit for travellers, and will | |
therefore deal in this chapter with the route only. | |
The traveller having paid his fare to Seattle should on arrival there | |
have not less than $500. This is the minimum sum necessary to pay his | |
fare from Seattle to Juneau, purchase his outfit and supplies for one | |
year and pay his necessary expenses in the gold region for that length | |
of time. | |
I think it deplorable that so many are starting at this time for the | |
gold-fields. I do not recommend starting before March 15. I will return | |
at that time to my claims on the Klondyke, if it were wise to go sooner, | |
I should certainly go. | |
The reason March 15 is best is that the season is better then. If a man | |
has only, say, $500 and wants to do his own packing over the Taiya Pass, | |
it gives him time to do it by starting March 15, as he will then be in | |
Juneau April 1st. I fear a great deal of hardship for those who started | |
out so as to reach Juneau for winter travel. | |
Of course while I say $500 is sufficient to go to Dawson City, a man | |
should take $1,000 or even more if possible as he will have many | |
opportunities to invest the surplus. | |
While prices will undoubtedly advance at Dawson City owing to the large | |
influx of people, I do not think the advance will be excessive. It has | |
never been the policy of the two trading companies to take advantage of | |
the miners. | |
The traveller having arrived in Juneau from Seattle, a journey of 725 | |
miles by water, immediately purchases his complete outfit as described | |
in another chapter. He then loses no time in leaving Juneau for Dyea, | |
taking a small steamboat which runs regularly to this port via the Lynn | |
Canal. Dyea has recently been made a customs port of entry and the head | |
of navigation this side of the Taiya Pass. The distance between Juneau | |
and Dyea is about one hundred miles. | |
From Dyea, which is the timber-line, he packs his outfit to the foot of | |
the Taiya Pass--the length of which to the summit is about 15 miles. He | |
must now carry his outfit up the Pass, which he generally does in two or | |
more trips according to the weight of his outfit, unless he is able to | |
hire Indians or mules; but so far there are very few Indians to be hired | |
and still fewer mules. | |
He now starts for Lake Lindeman from the head of the Pass, a distance of | |
eight miles--the distance from Dyea to Lake Lindeman being 31 miles. | |
At Lake Lindeman he commences to make his boat, for which he has brought | |
the proper supplies in his outfit, with the exception of the timber, | |
which he finds at Lake Lindeman. He spends one week at Lake Lindeman | |
making his boat and getting ready for the long trip down the waterways | |
to Dawson City, the heart of the Klondyke region. The trip through Lake | |
Lindeman is short, the lake being only five miles long. At the foot of | |
the lake he must portage to Lake Bennet, the portage however being very | |
short, less than a mile. | |
Lake Bennet is 28 miles long, while going through this lake the | |
traveller crosses the boundary between British Columbia and the | |
Northwest Territory. | |
After going down Lake Bennet the traveller comes to Caribou | |
Crossing--about four miles long, which takes him to Lake Tagish, twenty | |
miles in length. After leaving Tagish he finds himself in Mud or Marsh | |
Lake, 24 miles long, then into the Lynx River, on which he continues for | |
27 miles till he comes to Miles Canyon, five-eighths of a mile long. | |
Immediately on leaving Miles Canyon he has three miles of what is called | |
bad river work, which, while not hazardous, is dangerous from the swift | |
current and from being very rocky. Great care has to be taken in going | |
down this part of the river. | |
He now finds himself in White Horse Canyon the rapids of which are | |
three-eighths of a mile in length and one of the most dangerous places | |
on the trip, a man is here guarded by a sign, "Keep a good lookout." | |
No stranger or novice should try to run the White Horse Rapids alone in | |
a boat. He should let his boat drop down the river guided by a rope with | |
which he has provided himself in his outfit and which should be 150 feet | |
long. It would be better if the traveller should portage here, the | |
miners having constructed a portage road on the west side and put down | |
roller-ways in some places on which they roll their boats over. They | |
have also made some windlasses with which they haul their boat up the | |
hill till they are at the foot of the canyon. The White Horse Canyon is | |
very rocky and dangerous and the current extremely swift. | |
After leaving the White Horse Canyon he goes down the river to the head | |
of Lake Labarge, a distance of 14 miles. He can sit down and steer with | |
the current, as he is going down the stream all the way. It is for this | |
reason that in returning from the diggings he should take another | |
route, of which he will get full particulars before leaving Dawson; | |
therefore I do not take the time to give a full description of the | |
return trip via the Yukon to St. Michael. He now goes through Lake | |
Labarge--for 31 miles--till he strikes the Lewes River, this taking him | |
down to Hootalinqua. He is now in the Lewes River which takes him for 25 | |
miles to Big Salmon River and from Big Salmon River 45 miles to Little | |
Salmon River--the current all this time taking him down at the rate of | |
five miles an hour. Of course in the canyons it is very much swifter. | |
The Little Salmon River takes him to Five Finger Rapids, a distance of | |
one hundred and twenty miles. In the Five Finger Rapids the voyage | |
should be made on the right side of the river, going with the current. | |
These rapids are considered safe by careful management, but the novice | |
will already have had sufficient experience in guiding his boat before | |
reaching them. | |
From Five Finger Rapids the traveller goes six miles below, down the | |
Lewes, to the Rink Rapids. On going through the Rink Rapids, he | |
continues on the Lewes River to Fort Selkirk, the trading post of Harper | |
and Ladue, where the Pelly and Lewes, at their junction, form the | |
headwaters of the Yukon. You are now at the head of the Yukon River, and | |
the worst part of your trip is over. | |
You now commence to go down the Yukon, and after a trip of ninety-eight | |
miles, you are in the White River. You keep on the White River for ten | |
miles, to the Stewart River, and then twenty-five miles to Fort Ogilvie. | |
You are now only forty miles from Dawson City. | |
Your journey is now almost ended. After a forty-mile trip on the Yukon, | |
you arrive at Dawson City, where the Klondyke empties in the Yukon. | |
All through this trip you have been going through a mountainous country, | |
the trees there being pine, a small amount of spruce, cottonwood and | |
birch. You have not seen much game, if any, as it is growing scarce | |
along that line of river, and very hard to find. The traveller had | |
therefore better make preparation to depend on the provisions he has | |
brought with him. If he has stopped to fish, he may have been successful | |
in catching whitefish, grayling and lake trout, along the lakes and | |
rivers. | |
The total journey from Seattle to Dawson City has taken about two | |
months. In connection with this trip from Juneau to Dawson City, it is | |
perhaps better to give the reader the benefit of the trip of Mr. William | |
Stewart, who writes from Lake Lindeman, May 31st, 1897, as follows:-- | |
"We arrived here at the south end of the lake last night by boat. We | |
have had an awful time of it. The Taiya Pass is not a pass at all, but a | |
climb right over the mountains. We left Juneau on Thursday, the | |
twentieth, on a little boat smaller than the ferry at Ottawa. There were | |
over sixty aboard, all in one room about ten by fourteen. There was | |
baggage piled up in one end so that the floor-space was only about eight | |
by eight. We went aboard about three o'clock in the afternoon and went | |
ashore at Dyea at seven o'clock Friday night. We got the Indians to pack | |
all our stuff up to the summit, but about fifty pounds each; I had | |
forty-eight pounds and my gun. | |
"We left Dyea, an Indian village, Sunday, but only got up the river one | |
mile. We towed all the stuff up the river seven miles, and then packed | |
it to Sheep Camp. We reached Sheep Camp about seven o'clock at night, on | |
the Queen's Birthday. A beautiful time we had, I can tell you, climbing | |
hills with fifty pounds on our backs. It would not be so bad if we could | |
strap it on rightly. | |
"We left Sheep Camp next morning at four o'clock, and reached the summit | |
at half-past seven. It was an awful climb--an angle of about fifty-five | |
degrees. We could keep our hands touching the trail all the way up. It | |
was blowing and snowing up there. We paid off the Indians, and got some | |
sleighs and sleighed the stuff down the hill. This hill goes down pretty | |
swift, and then drops at an angle of fifty-five degrees for about forty | |
feet, and we had to rough-lock our sleighs and let them go. There was an | |
awful fog, and we could not see where we were going. Some fellows helped | |
us down with the first load, or there would have been nothing left of | |
us. When we let a sleigh go from the top it jumps about fifty feet | |
clear, and comes down in pieces. We loaded up the sleighs with some of | |
our stuff, about two hundred and twenty-five pounds each, and started | |
across the lakes. The trail was awful, and we waded through water and | |
slush two and three feet deep. We got to the mouth of the canyon at | |
about eight o'clock at night, done out. We left there that night, and | |
pushed on again until morning. We got to the bottom of an awful hill, | |
and packed all our stuff from there to the hill above the lake. We had | |
about two and a half miles over hills, in snow and slush. I carried | |
about five hundred pounds over that part of the trail. We had to get | |
dogs to bring the stuff down from the summit to the head of the canyon. | |
"We worked two days bringing the stuff over from the canyon to the hill | |
above the lake. Saturday we worked all day packing down the hill to the | |
lake, and came here on a scow. We were out yesterday morning cutting | |
down trees to build a boat. The timber is small, and I don't think we | |
can get more than four-inch stuff. It rained all afternoon, and we | |
couldn't do anything. There are about fifty boats of all sorts on Lake | |
Bennet, which is about half a mile from here. I have long rubber boots | |
up to the hips, and I did not have them on coming from the summit down, | |
but I have worn them ever since. | |
"We met Barwell and Lewis, of Ottawa, to-day. They were out looking for | |
knees for their boats. They left Ottawa six weeks ago, and have not got | |
any farther than we have. There was a little saw-mill going here, and | |
they have their lumber sawn. We have it that warm some days here that | |
you would fairly roast, and the next day you would be looking for your | |
overcoat. Everybody here seems to be taking in enough food to do them a | |
couple of years. | |
"We are now in Canadian territory, after we passed the summit. I will | |
have to catch somebody going through to Dyea to give him this letter, | |
but I don't know how long before I can get any one going through. This | |
is the last you will hear from me until I get down to the Klondyke." | |
Mr. Stewart adds: "I wrote this in the tent at 11 o'clock at night | |
during twilight." | |
If you take this trip in winter, however, you have to purchase a sled at | |
Juneau, and sled it over the frozen waterways to Dawson City. | |
For the benefit of my readers in Canada and for parties leaving for the | |
great Northwest Territory for the gold fields, I take pleasure in | |
quoting the following description of a Canadian route:-- | |
"Canadians should awaken to the fact that they have emphatically 'the | |
inside track' to their own gold fields, a route not half the distance, | |
largely covered by railways and steamboats, with supply stations at | |
convenient intervals all the way. By this route the gold-fields can be | |
reached in two months or six weeks, and the cost of travel is | |
ridiculously cheap--nearly anybody can afford to go even now, and by the | |
spring it should be fitted out for the accommodation of any amount of | |
traffic. | |
"The details of the information in the following article are given by Mr. | |
A.H.H. Heming, the artist who accompanied Mr. Whitney in his journey | |
towards the Barren Lands, and the data may be accepted as correct, as | |
they were secured from the Hudson Bay officials. | |
"The details of the inland Canadian route, briefly, are as follows: By | |
C.P.R. to Calgary, and thence north by rail to Edmonton; from there by | |
stage to Athabasca Landing, 40 miles; then, there is a continuous | |
waterway for canoe travel to Fort Macpherson, at the mouth of the | |
Mackenzie River, from which point the Peel River lies southward to the | |
gold region. The exact figures are as follows: | |
MILES. | |
Edmonton to Athabasca Landing 40 | |
To Port McMurray 240 | |
Fort Chippewyan 185 | |
Smith Landing 102 | |
Fort Smith 16 | |
Fort Resolution 194 | |
Fort Providence 168 | |
Fort Simpson 161 | |
Fort Wrigley 136 | |
Fort Norman 184 | |
Fort Good Hope 174 | |
Fort Macpherson 282 | |
----- | |
Total 1882 | |
"There are only two portages on this route of any size--that from | |
Edmonton to Athabasca Landing, over which there is a stage and wagon | |
line, and at Smith Landing, sixteen miles, over which the Hudson Bay | |
Company has a tramway. There are four or five other portages of a few | |
hundred yards, but with these exceptions there is a fine "down grade" | |
water route all the way. It is the old Hudson Bay trunk line to the | |
north that has been in use for nearly a century. Wherever there is a | |
lake or a long stretch of deep water river navigation the company has | |
small freight steamers which ply back and forward during the summer | |
between the portage points or shallows. With comparatively little | |
expenditure the company or the Government can improve the facilities | |
along the line so that any amount of freight or any number of passengers | |
can be taken into the gold region at less than half the time and cost | |
that it takes Americans to reach it from Port St. Michael, at the mouth | |
of the Yukon to the Klondyke, exclusive of the steamer trip of 2500 | |
miles from Seattle to Port St. Michael. | |
"Canadians can leave here on a Monday at 11.15 A.M., and reach Edmonton | |
on Friday at 7 P.M. From that point, a party of three men with a canoe, | |
should reach Fort Macpherson easily in from 50 to 60 days, provided they | |
are able-bodied young fellows with experience in that sort of travel. | |
They will need to take canoes from here, unless they propose to hire | |
Indians with large birch bark canoes to carry them. Birch bark canoes | |
can be secured of any size up to the big ones manned by ten Indians that | |
carry three tons. But birch barks are not reliable unless Indians are | |
taken along to doctor them, and keep them from getting water-logged. The | |
Hudson Bay Company will also contract to take freight northward on their | |
steamers until the close of navigation. Travellers to the gold mines | |
leaving now would probably reach Fort Macpherson before navigation | |
closed. | |
"The letter from Rev. Mr. Stringer, the missionary, published in the | |
Spectator on July 2, shows that the ice had only commenced to run in the | |
Peel River, which is the water route south-east from Fort Macpherson | |
into the gold region, on September 30 last year. | |
"Any Canadians who are anxious to get into the Klondyke ahead of the | |
Americans can leave between now and August 1, reach Fort Macpherson, | |
and if winter comes on they can exchange their canoes for dog trains, | |
and reach the Klondyke without half the difficulty that would be | |
experienced on the Alaska route. The great advantage of the inland route | |
is that it is an organized line of communication. Travellers need not | |
carry any more food than will take them from one Hudson Bay post to the | |
next, and then there is abundance of fish and wild fowl en route. They | |
can also be in touch with such civilization as prevails up there, can | |
always get assistance at the posts, and will have some place to stay | |
should they fall sick or meet with an accident. If they are lucky enough | |
to make their pile in the Klondyke, they can come back by the dog sled | |
route during the winter. (There is one winter mail to Fort Macpherson in | |
winter.) Dogs for teams can be purchased at nearly any of the line of | |
Hudson Bay posts that form a chain of road-houses on the trip. | |
"Parties travelling alone will not need to employ guides until they get | |
near Fort Macpherson, and from there on to the Klondyke, as the rest of | |
the route from Edmonton is so well defined, having been travelled for | |
years, that no guides are required. | |
"You don't need a couple of thousand dollars to start for Klondyke | |
to-morrow by the Edmonton route. All you need is a good constitution, | |
some experience in boating and camping, and about $150. Suppose a party | |
of three decide to start. First they will need to purchase a canoe, | |
about $35 or less; first-class ticket from Hamilton to Edmonton, $71.40; | |
second class, ditto, $40.90; cost of food at Edmonton for three men for | |
two months (should consist of pork, flour, tea and baking-powder), $35; | |
freight on canoe to Edmonton, $23. Total for three men from Hamilton to | |
Fort Macpherson, provided they travel second-class on the C.P.R. will be | |
$218.70. These figures are furnished by Mr. Heming, who has been over | |
the route 400 miles north of Edmonton, and got the rest of his data | |
from the Hudson Bay officials. | |
"If three men chip in $150 each they would have a margin of over $200 for | |
purchasing their tools and for transport from Fort Macpherson to the | |
Klondyke. This is how it may be done on the cheap, though Mr. Heming | |
considers it ample for any party starting this summer. Prices will | |
likely rise on the route when the rush begins. If the Hudson Bay people | |
are alive to their interests they will forward a large amount of | |
supplies for Fort Macpherson immediately and make it the base of | |
supplies for the Klondyke during the coming winter. | |
"Parties should consist of three men each, as that is the crew of a | |
canoe. It will take 600 pounds of food to carry three men over the | |
route. Passengers on the C.P.R. are entitled to carry 600 pounds of | |
baggage. The paddling is all down stream, except when they turn south up | |
Peel River, and sails should be taken, as there is often a favorable | |
wind for days. | |
"There are large scows on the line, manned by ten men each and known as | |
'sturgeon heads.' They are like canal boats, but are punted along and | |
are used by the Hudson Bay people for taking forward supplies to the | |
forts. | |
The return trip to the United States is usually made by the Yukon | |
steamers from Dawson City direct to St. Michael via the Yukon and Anvik | |
River, thence by ocean steamer from St. Michael to San Francisco." | |
The following letter is interesting to the prospector as showing the | |
difficulties to overcome up the Taiya Pass to Lake Lindeman. | |
_Winnipeg_, July 27, 1897. | |
A letter has been received from George McLeod, one of the members of the | |
Winnipeg party of gold hunters that left here recently for the Yukon. | |
He wrote from Lake Lindeman under date of July 4, and states that the | |
party expected to leave on the journey from the river a week later. They | |
had a fine boat, with a freight capacity of two tons about completed. | |
The real work of the expedition started when the small steamer which | |
conveyed the party from Juneau arrived at Dyea. The men had to transfer | |
their goods to a lighter one mile from shore, each man looking after his | |
own packages. After getting everything ashore the party was organized | |
for ascent of the mountain pass, which at the hardest point is 3,000 | |
feet above sea level. McLeod and his chum, to save time and money too, | |
engaged 35 Indians to pack their supplies over the mountains, but they | |
had to carry their own bedding and grub to keep them on the road. It is | |
fifteen miles to the summit of the pass and the party made twelve miles | |
the first day, going into camp at night tired from climbing over rocks, | |
stumps, logs and hills, working through rivers and creeks and pushing | |
their way through brush. At the end of twelve miles they thought they | |
had gone fifty. On the second day out they began to scale the summit of | |
the mountain. Hill after hill confronted them, each one being steeper | |
than the last. There was snow on the top of the mountain, and rain was | |
falling, and this added greatly to the difficulties of the ascent. In | |
many places the men had to crawl on their hands and knees, so | |
precipitous was the mountain side. Time after time the men would slip | |
back several inches, but they recovered themselves and went at it again. | |
Finally, the summit was gained, McLeod being the first of the party to | |
reach the top. After resting and changing their clothes the descent was | |
commenced. McLeod and his chums purchased sleighs, on which they loaded | |
their goods and hauled for five miles. This was extremely laborious | |
work, and the men were so used up working in the scorching sun that | |
they were compelled to work at nights and sleep during the day. Two days | |
after the descent began the sleighs were abandoned, and the men packed | |
the goods for three miles and a half. They were fortunate in securing | |
the services of a man who had two horses to convey the goods to Lake | |
Lindeman. | |
McLeod says the worry in getting over the pass is terrible, and he has | |
no desire to repeat the experience. He advises all who go in to have | |
their goods packed all the way from Dyea to Lake Lindeman. It costs 17 | |
or 18 cents per pound for packing. | |
McLeod expected that Klondyke would not be reached before July 25. | |
I think it specially valuable for the reader to give him the approximate | |
distances to Fort Cudahy, which is below Dawson City via the various | |
routes. | |
This table of distances has been prepared by Mr. James Ogilvie, and I | |
also give a number of his notes which will be of great value to the | |
traveller when making the trip from Juneau to Dawson City. | |
APPROXIMATE DISTANCES TO FORT CUDAHY. | |
VIA ST. MICHAEL. | |
Miles. | |
San Francisco to Dutch Harbor 2,400 | |
Seattle or Victoria to Dutch Harbor 2,000 | |
Dutch Harbor to St. Michael 750 | |
St. Michael to Cudahy 1,600 | |
VIA TAIYA PASS. | |
Victoria to Taiya 1,000 | |
Taiya to Cudahy 650 | |
VIA STIKINE RIVER. | |
Victoria to Wrangell 750 | |
Wrangell to Telegraph Creek 150 | |
Telegraph Creek to Teslin Lake 150 | |
Teslin Lake to Cudahy 650 | |
DISTANCES FROM HEAD OF TAIYA INLET. | |
Miles | |
Head of canoe navigation, Taiya River 5.90 | |
Forks of Taiya River 8.38 | |
Summit of Taiya Pass 14.76 | |
Landing at Lake Lindeman 23.06 | |
Foot of Lake Lindeman 27.49 | |
Head of Lake Bennet 28.09 | |
Boundary line B.C. and N.W.T. (Lat 60 deg.) 38.09 | |
Foot of Lake Bennet 53.85 | |
Foot of Caribou Crossing (Lake Nares) 56.44 | |
Foot of Tagish Lake 73.25 | |
Head of Marsh Lake 78.15 | |
Foot of Marsh Lake 97.21 | |
Head of Miles Canon 122.94 | |
Foot of Miles Canon 123.56 | |
Head of White Horse Rapids 124.95 | |
Foot of White Horse Rapids 125.33 | |
Tahkeena River 139.92 | |
Head of Lake Labarge 153.07 | |
Foot of Lake Labarge 184.22 | |
Teslintoo River 215.88 | |
Big Salmon River 249.33 | |
Little Salmon River 285.54 | |
Five Finger Rapids 344.83 | |
Pelly River 403.29 | |
White River 499.11 | |
Stewart River 508.91 | |
Sixty-Mile Creek 530.41 | |
Dawson City--The Principal Mining Town 575.70 | |
Fort Reliance 582.20 | |
Forty-Mile River 627.08 | |
Boundary Line. 667.43 | |
"Another route is now being explored between Telegraph Creek and Teslin | |
Lake and will soon be opened. Telegraph Creek is the head of steamer | |
navigation on the Stikine River and is about 150 miles from Teslin Lake. | |
The Yukon is navigable for steamers from its mouth to Teslin Lake, a | |
distance of 2,300 miles. A road is being located by the Dominion | |
Government. A grant of $2,000 has been made by the province of British | |
Columbia for opening it. | |
"J. Dalton, a trader, has used a route overland from Chilkat Inlet to | |
Fort Selkirk. Going up the Chilkat and Klaheela Rivers, he crosses the | |
divide to the Tahkeena River and continues northward over a fairly open | |
country practicable for horses. The distance from the sea to Fort | |
Selkirk is 350 miles. | |
"Last summer a Juneau butcher sent 40 head of cattle to Cudahy. G. | |
Bounds, the man in charge, crossed the divide over the Chilkat Pass, | |
followed the shore of Lake Arkell and, keeping to the east of Dalton's | |
trail, reached the Yukon just below the Rink Rapids. Here the cattle | |
were slaughtered and the meat floated down on a raft to Cudahy, where it | |
retailed at $1 a pound. | |
"It is proposed to establish a winter road somewhere across the country | |
travelled over by Dalton and Bounds. The Yukon cannot be followed, the | |
ice being too much broken, so that any winter road will have to be | |
overland. A thorough exploration is now being made of all the passes at | |
the head of Lynn Canal and of the upper waters of the Yukon. In a few | |
months it is expected that the best routes for reaching the district | |
from Lynn Canal will be definitely known. | |
"It is said by those familiar with the locality that the storms which | |
rage in the upper altitudes of the coast range during the greater part | |
of the time, from October to March, are terrific. A man caught in one of | |
them runs the risk of losing his life, unless he can reach shelter in a | |
short time. During the summer there is nearly always a wind blowing from | |
the sea up Chatham Strait and Lynn Canal, which lie in almost a straight | |
line with each other, and at the head of Lynn Canal are Chilkat and | |
Chilkoot Inlets. The distance from the coast down these channels to | |
the open sea is about 380 miles. The mountains on each side of the | |
water confine the currents of air, and deflect inclined currents in the | |
direction of the axis of the channel, so that there is nearly always a | |
strong wind blowing up the channel. Coming from the sea, this wind is | |
heavily charged with moisture, which is precipitated when the air | |
currents strike the mountains, and the fall of rain and snow is | |
consequently very heavy. | |
"In Chilkat Inlet there is not much shelter from the south wind, which | |
renders it unsafe for ships calling there. Capt. Hunter told me he would | |
rather visit any other part of the coast than Chilkat. | |
"To carry the survey from the island across to Chilkoot Inlet I had to | |
get up on the mountains north of Haines mission, and from there could | |
see both inlets. Owing to the bad weather I could get no observation for | |
azimuth, and had to produce the survey from Pyramid Island to Taiya | |
Inlet by reading the angles of deflection between the courses. At Taiya | |
Inlet I got my first observation, and deduced the azimuths of my courses | |
up to that point. Taiya Inlet has evidently been the valley of a | |
glacier; its sides are steep and smooth from glacial action; and this, | |
with the wind almost constantly blowing landward, renders getting upon | |
the shore difficult. Some long sights were therefore necessary. The | |
survey was made up to the head of the Inlet on the 2d of June. | |
Preparations were then commenced for taking the supplies and instruments | |
over the coast range of mountains to the head of Lake Lindeman on the | |
Lewes River. Commander Newell kindly aided me in making arrangements | |
with the Indians, and did all he could to induce them to be reasonable | |
in their demands. This, however, neither he nor any one else could | |
accomplish. They refused to carry to the lake for less than $20 per | |
hundred pounds, and as they had learned that the expedition was an | |
English one, the second chief of the Chilkoot Indians recalled some | |
memories of an old quarrel which the tribe had with the English many | |
years ago, in which an uncle of his was killed, and he thought we should | |
pay for the loss of his uncle by being charged an exorbitant price for | |
our packing, of which he had the sole control. Commander Newell told him | |
I had a permit from the Great Father at Washington to pass through his | |
country safely, that he would see that I did so, and if the Indians | |
interfered with me they would be punished for doing so. After much talk | |
they consented to carry our stuff to the summit of the mountain for $10 | |
per hundred pounds. This is about two-thirds of the whole distance, | |
includes all the climbing and all the woods, and is by far the most | |
difficult part of the way. | |
"On the 6th of June 120 Indians, men, women and children, started for | |
the summit. I sent two of my party with them to see the goods delivered | |
at the place agreed upon. Each carrier when given a pack also got a | |
ticket, on which was inscribed the contents of the pack, its weight, and | |
the amount the individual was to get for carrying it. They were made to | |
understand that they had to produce these tickets on delivering their | |
packs, but were not told for what reason. As each pack was delivered one | |
of my men receipted the ticket and returned it. The Indians did not seem | |
to understand the import of this; a few of them pretended to have lost | |
their tickets; and as they could not get paid without them, my | |
assistant, who had duplicates of every ticket, furnished them with | |
receipted copies, after examining their packs. | |
"While they were packing to the summit I was producing the survey, and I | |
met them on their return at the foot of the canon, about eight miles | |
from the coast, where I paid them. They came to the camp in the early | |
morning before I was up, and for about two hours there was quite a | |
hubbub. When paying them I tried to get their names, but very few of | |
them would give any Indian name, nearly all, after a little reflection, | |
giving some common English name. My list contained little else than | |
Jack, Tom, Joe, Charlie, &c. some of which were duplicated three and | |
four times. I then found why some of them had pretended to lose their | |
tickets at the summit. Three or four who had thus acted presented | |
themselves twice for payment, producing first the receipted ticket, | |
afterwards the one they claimed to have lost, demanding pay for both. | |
They were much taken aback when they found that their duplicity had been | |
discovered. | |
"These Indians are perfectly heartless. They will not render even the | |
smallest aid to each other without payment; and if not to each other, | |
much less to a white man. I got one of them, whom I had previously | |
assisted with his pack, to take me and two of my party over a small | |
creek in his canoe. After putting us across he asked for money, and I | |
gave him half a dollar. Another man stepped up and demanded pay, stating | |
that the canoe was his. To see what the result would be, I gave to him | |
the same amount as to the first. Immediately there were three or four | |
more claimants for the canoe. I dismissed them with a blessing, and made | |
up my mind that I would wade the next creek. | |
"While paying them I was a little apprehensive of trouble, for they | |
insisted on crowding into my tent, and for myself and the four men who | |
were with me to have attempted to eject them would have been to invite | |
trouble. I am strongly of the opinion that these Indians would have been | |
much more difficult to deal with if they had not known that Commander | |
Newell remained in the inlet to see that I got through without accident. | |
"While making the survey from the head of tide water I took the azimuths | |
and altitudes of several of the highest peaks around the head of the | |
inlet, in order to locate them, and obtain an idea of the general | |
height of the peaks in the coast range. As it does not appear to have | |
been done before, I have taken the opportunity of naming all the peaks, | |
the positions of which I fixed in the above way. The names and altitudes | |
appear on my map. | |
"While going up from the head of canoe navigation on the Taiya River I | |
took the angles of elevation of each station from the preceding one. I | |
would have done this from tide water up, but found many of the courses | |
so short and with so little increase in height that with the instrument | |
I had it was inappreciable. From these angles I have computed the height | |
of the summit of the Taiya Pass,[2] above the head of canoe navigation, | |
as it appeared to me in June, 1887, and find it to be 3,378 feet. What | |
depth of snow there was I cannot say. The head of canoe navigation I | |
estimate at about 120 feet above tide water. Dr. Dawson gives it as 124 | |
feet. | |
[Footnote 2: The distance from the head of Taiya Inlet to the summit of | |
the pass is 15 miles, and the whole length of the pass to Lake Lindeman | |
is 23 miles. Messrs. Healy and Wilson, dealers in general merchandise | |
and miners' supplies at Taiya, have a train of pack horses carrying | |
freight from the head of Lynn Canal to the summit. They hope to be able | |
to take freight through to Lake Lindeman with their horses during the | |
present season.] | |
"I determined the descent from the summit to Lake Lindeman by carrying | |
the aneroid from the lake to the summit and back again, the interval of | |
time from start to return being about eight hours. Taking the mean of | |
the readings at the lake, start and return, and the single reading at | |
the summit, the height of the summit above the lake was found to be | |
1,237 feet. While making the survey from the summit down to the lake I | |
took the angles of depression of each station from the preceding one, | |
and from these angles I deduced the difference of height, which I found | |
to be 1,354 feet, or 117 feet more than that found by the aneroid. This | |
is quite a large difference; but when we consider the altitude of the | |
place, the sudden changes of temperature, and the atmospheric | |
conditions, it is not more than one might expect. | |
"While at Juneau I heard reports of a low pass from the head of Chilkoot | |
Inlet to the head waters of Lewes River. During the time I was at the | |
head of Taiya Inlet I made inquiries regarding it, and found that there | |
was such a pass, but could learn nothing definite about it from either | |
whites or Indians. As Capt. Moore, who accompanied me, was very anxious | |
to go through it, and as the reports of the Taiya Pass indicated that no | |
wagon road or railroad could ever be built through it, while the new | |
pass appeared, from what little knowledge I could get of it, to be much | |
lower and possibly feasible for a wagon road, I determined to send the | |
captain by that way, if I could get an Indian to accompany him. This, I | |
found, would be difficult to do. None of the Chilkoots appeared to know | |
anything of the pass, and I concluded that they wished to keep its | |
existence and condition a secret. The Tagish, or Stick Indians, as the | |
interior Indians are locally called, are afraid to do anything in | |
opposition to the wishes of the Chilkoots; so it was difficult to get | |
any of them to join Capt. Moore; but after much talk and encouragement | |
from the whites around, one of them named "Jim" was induced to go. He | |
had been through this pass before, and proved reliable and useful. The | |
information obtained from Capt. Moore's exploration I have incorporated | |
in my plan of the survey from Taiya Inlet, but it is not as complete as | |
I would have liked. I have named this pass "White Pass," in honor of the | |
late Hon. Thos. White, Minister of the Interior, under whose authority | |
the expedition was organized. Commencing at Taiya Inlet, about two miles | |
south of its north end, it follows up the valley, of the Shkagway River | |
to its source, and thence down the valley of another river which Capt. | |
Moore reported to empty into the Takone or Windy Arm of Bove Lake | |
(Schwatka). Dr. Dawson says this stream empties into Taku Arm, and in | |
that event Capt. Moore is mistaken. Capt. Moore did not go all the way | |
through to the lake, but assumed from reports he heard from the miners | |
and others that the stream flowed into Windy Arm, and this also was the | |
idea of the Indian "Jim" from what I could gather from his remarks in | |
broken English and Chinook. Capt. Moore estimates the distance from tide | |
water to the summit at about 18 miles, and from the summit to the lake | |
at about 22 to 23 miles. He reports the pass as thickly timbered all the | |
way through. | |
"The timber line on the south side of the Taiya Pass, as determined by | |
barometer reading, is about 2,300 feet above the sea, while on the north | |
side it is about 1,000 feet below the summit. This large difference is | |
due, I think, to the different conditions in the two places. On the | |
south side the valley is narrow and deep, and the sun cannot produce its | |
full effect. The snow also is much deeper there, owing to the quantity | |
which drifts in from the surrounding mountains. On the north side the | |
surface is sloping, and more exposed to the sun's rays. On the south | |
side the timber is of the class peculiar to the coast, and on the north | |
that peculiar to the interior. The latter would grow at a greater | |
altitude than the coast timber. It is possible that the summit of White | |
Pass is not higher than the timber line on the north of the Taiya Pass, | |
or about 2,500 feet above tide water, and it is possibly even lower than | |
this, as the timber in a valley such as the White Pass would hardly live | |
at the same altitude as on the open <DW72> on the north side. | |
"Capt. Moore has had considerable experience in building roads in | |
mountainous countries. He considers that this would be an easy route for | |
a wagon road compared with some roads he has seen in British Columbia. | |
Assuming his distances to be correct, and the height of the pass to be | |
probably about correctly indicated, the grades would not be very steep, | |
and a railroad could easily be carried through if necessary. | |
"After completing the survey down to the lake, I set about getting my | |
baggage down too. Of all the Indians who came to the summit with packs, | |
only four or five could be induced to remain and pack down to the lake, | |
although I was paying them at the rate of $4 per hundred pounds. After | |
one trip down only two men remained, and they only in hopes of stealing | |
something. One of them appropriated a pair of boots, and was much | |
surprised to find that he had to pay for them on being settled with. I | |
could not blame them much for not caring to work, as the weather was | |
very disagreeable--it rained or snowed almost continuously. After the | |
Indians left I tried to get down the stuff with the aid of my own men, | |
but it was slavish and unhealthy labor, and after the first trip one of | |
them was laid up with what appeared to be inflammatory rheumatism. The | |
first time the party crossed, the sun was shining brightly, and this | |
brought on snow blindness, the pain of which only those who have | |
suffered from this complaint can realize. I had two sleds with me which | |
were made in Juneau specially for the work of getting over the mountains | |
and down the lakes on the ice. With these I succeeded in bringing about | |
a ton and a-half to the lakes, but found that the time it would take to | |
get all down in this way would seriously interfere with the programme | |
arranged with Dr. Dawson, to say nothing of the suffering of the men and | |
myself, and the liability to sickness which protracted physical exertion | |
under such uncomfortable conditions and continued suffering from snow | |
blindness expose us to. I had with me a white man who lived at the head | |
of the inlet with a Tagish Indian woman. This man had a good deal of | |
influence with the Tagish tribe, of whom the greater number were then | |
in the neighborhood where he resided, trying to get some odd jobs of | |
work, and I sent him to the head of the inlet to try and induce the | |
Tagish Indians to undertake the transportation, offering them $5 per | |
hundred pounds. In the meantime Capt. Moore and the Indian "Jim" had | |
rejoined me. I had their assistance for a day or two, and "Jim's" | |
presence aided indirectly in inducing the Indians to come to my relief. | |
"The Tagish are little more than slaves to the more powerful coast | |
tribes, and are in constant dread of offending them in any way. One of | |
the privileges which the coast tribes claim is the exclusive right to | |
all work on the coast or in its vicinity, and the Tagish are afraid to | |
dispute this claim. When my white man asked the Tagish to come over and | |
pack they objected on the grounds mentioned. After considerable ridicule | |
of their cowardice, and explanation of the fact that they had the | |
exclusive right to all work in their own country, the country on the | |
side of the north side of the coast range being admitted by the coast | |
Indians to belong to the Tagish tribe just as the coast tribes had the | |
privilege of doing all the work on the coast side of the mountains, and | |
that one of their number was already working with me unmolested, and | |
likely to continue so, nine of them came over, and in fear and trembling | |
began to pack down to the lake. After they were at work for a few days | |
some of the Chilkoots came out and also started to work. Soon I had | |
quite a number at work and was getting my stuff down quite fast. But | |
this good fortune was not to continue. Owing to the prevailing wet, cold | |
weather on the mountains, and the difficulty of getting through the soft | |
wet snow, the Indians soon began to quit work for a day or two at a | |
time, and to gamble with one another for the wages already earned. Many | |
of them wanted to be paid in full, but this I positively refused, | |
knowing that to do so was to have them all apply for their earnings and | |
leave me until necessity compelled them to go to work again. I once for | |
all made them distinctly understand that I would not pay any of them | |
until the whole of the stuff was down. As many of them had already | |
earned from twelve to fifteen dollars each, to lose which was a serious | |
matter to them, they reluctantly resumed work and kept at it until all | |
was delivered. This done, I paid them off, and set about getting my | |
outfit across the lake, which I did with my own party and the two | |
Peterborough canoes which I had with me. | |
"These two canoes travelled about 3,000 miles by rail and about 1,000 | |
miles by steamship before being brought into service. They did | |
considerable work on Chilkoot and Tagish Inlets, and were then packed | |
over to the head of Lewes River (Lake Lindeman), from where they were | |
used in making the survey of Lewes and Yukon Rivers. In this work they | |
made about 650 landings. They were then transported on sleighs from the | |
boundary on the Yukon to navigable water on the Porcupine. | |
"In the spring of 1888 they descended the latter river, heavily loaded, | |
and through much rough water, to the mouth of Bell's River, and up it to | |
McDougall's Pass. They were then carried over the pass to Poplar River | |
and were used in going down the latter to Peel River, and thence up | |
Mackenzie River 1,400 miles; or, exclusive of railway and ship carriage, | |
they were carried about 170 miles and did about 2,500 miles of work for | |
the expedition, making in all about 1,700 landings in no easy manner and | |
going through some very bad water. I left them at Fort Chipewyan in | |
fairly good condition, and, with a little painting, they would go | |
through the same ordeal again. | |
"After getting all my outfit over to the foot of Lake Lindeman I set some | |
of the party to pack it to the head of Lake Bennet. | |
"I employed the rest of the party in looking for timber to build a boat | |
to carry my outfit of provisions and implements down the river to the | |
vicinity of the international boundary, a distance of about 700 miles. | |
It took several days to find a tree large enough to make plank for the | |
boat I wanted, as the timber around the upper end of the lake is small | |
and scrubby. My boat was finished on the evening of the 11th of July, | |
and on the 12th I started a portion of the party to load it and go ahead | |
with it and the outfit to the canon. They had instructions to examine | |
the canon and, if necessary, to carry a part of the outfit past it--in | |
any case, enough to support the party back to the coast should accident | |
necessitate such procedure. With the rest of the party I started to | |
carry on the survey, which may now be said to have fairly started ahead | |
on the lakes. This proved tedious work, on account of the stormy | |
weather. | |
"In the summer months there is nearly always a wind blowing in from the | |
coast; it blows down the lakes and produces quite a heavy swell. This | |
would not prevent the canoes going with the decks on, but, as we had to | |
land every mile or so, the rollers breaking on the generally flat beach | |
proved very troublesome. On this account I found I could not average | |
more than ten miles per day on the lakes, little more than half of what | |
could be done on the river. | |
"The survey was completed to the canon on the 20th of July. There I | |
found the party with the large boat had arrived on the 18th, having | |
carried a part of the supplies past the canon, and were awaiting my | |
arrival to run through it with the rest in the boat. Before doing so, | |
however, I made an examination of the canon. The rapids below it, | |
particularly the last rapid of the series (called the White Horse by the | |
miners), I found would not be safe to run. I sent two men through the | |
canon in one of the canoes to await the arrival of the boat, and to be | |
ready in case of an accident to pick us up. Every man in the party was | |
supplied with a life-preserver, so that should a casualty occur we would | |
all have floated. Those in the canoe got through all right; but they | |
would not have liked to repeat the trip. They said the canoe jumped | |
about a great deal more than they thought it would, and I had the same | |
experience when going through in the boat. | |
"The passage through is made in about three minutes, or at the rate of | |
about 12-1/2 miles an hour. If the boat is kept clear of the sides there | |
is not much danger in high water; but in low water there is a rock in | |
the middle of the channel, near the upper end of the canon, that renders | |
the passage more difficult. I did not see this rock myself, but got my | |
information from some miners I met in the interior, who described it as | |
being about 150 yards down from the head and a little to the west of the | |
middle of the channel. In low water it barely projects above the | |
surface. When I passed through there was no indication of it, either | |
from the bank above or from the boat. | |
"The distance from the head to the foot of the canon is five-eighths of | |
a mile. There is a basin about midway in it about 150 yards in diameter. | |
This basin is circular in form, with steep sloping sides about 100 feet | |
high. The lower part of the canon is much rougher to run through than | |
the upper part, the fall being apparently much greater. The sides are | |
generally perpendicular, about 80 to 100 feet high, and consist of | |
basalt, in some places showing hexagonal columns. | |
"The White Horse Rapids are about three-eighths of a mile long. They are | |
the most dangerous rapids on the river, and are never run through in | |
boats except by accident. They are confined by low basaltic banks, | |
which, at the foot, suddenly close in and make the channel about 30 | |
yards wide. It is here the danger lies, as there is a sudden drop and | |
the water rashes through at a tremendous rate, leaping and seething like | |
a cataract. The miners have constructed a portage road on the west side, | |
and put down rollways in some places on which to shove their boats over. | |
They have also made some windlasses with which to haul their boats up | |
hill, notably one at the foot of the canon. This roadway and windlasses | |
must have cost them many hours of hard labor. Should it ever be | |
necessary, a tramway could be built past the canon on the east side with | |
no great difficulty. With the exception of the Five Finger Rapids these | |
appear to be the only serious rapids on the whole length of the river. | |
"Five Finger Rapids are formed by several islands standing in the | |
channel and backing up the water so much as to raise it about a foot, | |
causing a swell below for a few yards. The islands are composed of | |
conglomerate rock, similar to the cliffs on each side of the river, | |
whence one would infer that there has been a fall here in past ages. For | |
about two miles below the rapids there is a pretty swift current, but | |
not enough to prevent the ascent of a steamboat of moderate power, and | |
the rapids themselves I do not think would present any serious obstacle | |
to the ascent of a good boat. In very high water warping might be | |
required. Six miles below these rapids are what are known as 'Rink | |
Rapids,' This is simply a barrier of rocks, which extends from the | |
westerly side of the river about half way across. Over this barrier | |
there is a ripple which would offer no great obstacle to the descent of | |
a good canoe. On the easterly sides there is no ripple, and the current | |
is smooth and the water apparently deep. I tried with a 6 foot paddle, | |
but could not reach the bottom. | |
"On the 11th of August I met a party of miners coming out who had passed | |
Stewart River a few days before. They saw no sign of Dr. Dawson having | |
been there. This was welcome news for me, as I expected he would have | |
reached that point long before I arrived, on account of the many delays | |
I had met with on the coast range. These miners also gave me the | |
pleasant news that the story told at the coast about the fight with the | |
Indians at Stewart River was false, and stated substantially what I have | |
already repeated concerning it. The same evening I met more miners on | |
their way out, and the next day met three boats, each containing four | |
men. In the crew of one of them was a son of Capt. Moore, from whom the | |
captain got such information as induced him to turn back and accompany | |
them out. | |
"Next day, the 13th, I got to the mouth of the Pelly, and found that Dr. | |
Dawson had arrived there on the 11th. The doctor also had experienced | |
many delays, and had heard the same story of the Indian uprising in the | |
interior. I was pleased to find that he was in no immediate want of | |
provisions, the fear of which had caused me a great deal of uneasiness | |
on the way down the river, as it was arranged between us in Victoria | |
that I was to take with me provisions for his party to do them until | |
their return to the coast. The doctor was so much behind the time | |
arranged to meet me that he determined to start for the coast at once. I | |
therefore set about making a short report and plan of my survey to this | |
point; and, as I was not likely to get another opportunity of writing at | |
such length for a year, I applied myself to a correspondence designed to | |
satisfy my friends and acquaintances for the ensuing twelve months. This | |
necessitated three days' hard work. | |
"On the morning of the 17th the doctor left for the outside world, | |
leaving me with a feeling of loneliness that only those who have | |
experienced it can realize. I remained at the mouth of the Pelly during | |
the next day taking magnetic and astronomical observations, and making | |
some measurements of the river. On the 19th I resumed the survey and | |
reached White River on the 25th. Here I spent most of a day trying to | |
ascend this river, but found it impracticable, on account of the swift | |
current and shallow and very muddy water. The water is so muddy that it | |
is impossible to see through one-eighth of an inch of it. The current is | |
very strong, probably eight miles or more per hour, and the numerous | |
bars in the bed are constantly changing place. After trying for several | |
hours, the base men succeeded in doing about half a mile only, and I | |
came to the conclusion that it was useless to try to get up this stream | |
to the boundary with canoes. Had it proved feasible I had intended | |
making a survey of this stream to the boundary, to discover more | |
especially the facilities it offered for the transport of supplies in | |
the event of a survey of the International Boundary being undertaken. | |
"I reached Stewart River on the 26th. Here I remained a day taking | |
magnetic observations, and getting information from a miner, named | |
McDonald, about the country up that river. McDonald had spent the summer | |
up the river prospecting and exploring. His information will be given in | |
detail further on. | |
"Fort Reliance was reached on the 1st of September, and Forty Mile River | |
(Cone-Hill River of Schwatka) on the 7th. In the interval between Fort | |
Reliance and Forty Mile River there were several days lost by rain. | |
"At Forty Mile River I made some arrangements with the traders there | |
(Messrs. Harper & McQuestion) about supplies during the winter, and | |
about getting Indians to assist me in crossing from the Yukon to the | |
head of the Porcupine, or perhaps on to the Peel River. I then made a | |
survey of the Forty Mile River up to the canon. I found the canon would | |
be difficult of ascent, and dangerous to descend, and therefore, | |
concluded to defer further operations until the winter, and until after | |
I had determined the longitude of my winter post near the boundary, when | |
I would be in a much better position to locate the intersection of the | |
International Boundary with this river, a point important to determine | |
on account of the number and richness of the mining claims on the river. | |
"I left Forty Mile River for the boundary line between Alaska and the | |
Northwest Territories on the 12th September, and finished the survey to | |
that point on the 14th. I then spent two days in examining the valley of | |
the river in the vicinity of the boundary to get the most extensive view | |
of the horizon possible, and to find a tree large enough to serve for a | |
transit stand. | |
"Before leaving Toronto I got Mr. Foster to make large brass plates with | |
V's on them, which could be screwed firmly to a stump, and thus be made | |
to serve as a transit stand. I required a stump at least 22 inches in | |
diameter to make a base large enough for the plates when properly placed | |
for the transit. In a search which covered about four miles of the river | |
bank, on both sides, I found only one tree as large as 18 inches. I | |
mention this fact to give an idea of the size of the trees along the | |
river in this vicinity. I had this stump enlarged by firmly fixing | |
pieces on the sides so as to bring it up to the requisite size. This | |
done, I built around the stump a small transit house of the ordinary | |
form and then mounted and adjusted my transit. Meanwhile, most of the | |
party were busy preparing our winter quarters and building a magnetic | |
observatory. As I had been led to expect extremely low temperatures | |
during the winter, I adopted precautionary measures, so as to be as | |
comfortable as circumstances would permit during our stay there. | |
DESCRIPTION OF THE YUKON, ITS AFFLUENT STREAMS, AND THE ADJACENT | |
COUNTRY. | |
"I will now give, from my own observation and from information received, | |
a more detailed description of the Lewes River, its affluent streams, | |
and the resources of the adjacent country. | |
"For the purpose of navigation a description of the Lewes River begins | |
at the head of Lake Bennet. Above that point, and between it and Lake | |
Lindeman, there is only about three-quarters of a mile of river, which | |
is not more than fifty or sixty yards wide, and two or three feet deep, | |
and is so swift and rough that navigation is out of the question. | |
"Lake Lindeman is about five miles long and half a mile wide. It is deep | |
enough for all ordinary purposes. Lake Bennet[3] is twenty-six and a | |
quarter miles long, for the upper fourteen of which it is about half a | |
mile wide. About midway in its length an arm comes in from the west, | |
which Schwatka appears to have mistaken for a river, and named Wheaton | |
River. This arm is wider than the other arm down to that point, and is | |
reported by Indians to be longer and heading in a glacier which lies in | |
the pass at the head of Chilkoot Inlet. This arm is, as far as seen, | |
surrounded by high mountains, apparently much higher than those on the | |
arm we travelled down. Below the junction of the two arms the lake is | |
about one and a half miles wide, with deep water. Above the forks the | |
water of the east branch is muddy. This is caused by the streams from | |
the numerous glaciers on the head of the tributaries of Lake Lindeman. | |
[Footnote 3: A small saw-mill has been erected at the head of Lake | |
Bennet; lumber for boat building sells at $100 per M. Boats 25 feet long | |
and 5 feet beam are $60 each. Last year the ice broke up in the lake on | |
the 12th June, but this season is earlier and the boats are expected to | |
go down the lake about the 1st of June.] | |
"A stream which flows into Lake Bennet at the south-west corner is also | |
very dirty, and has shoaled quite a large portion of the lake at its | |
mouth. The beach at the lower end of this lake is comparatively flat and | |
the water shoal. A deep, wide valley extends northwards from the north | |
end of the lake, apparently reaching to the canon, or a short distance | |
above it. This may have been originally a course for the waters of the | |
river. The bottom of the valley is wide and sandy, and covered with | |
scrubby timber, principally poplar and pitch-pine. The waters of the | |
lake empty at the extreme north-east angle through a channel not more | |
than one hundred yards wide, which soon expands into what Schwatka | |
called Lake Nares.[4] Through this narrow channel there is quite a | |
current, and more than 7 feet of water, as a 6 foot paddle and a foot of | |
arm added to its length did not reach the bottom. | |
[Footnote 4: The connecting waters between Lake Bennet and Tagish Lake | |
constitute what is now called Caribou Crossing.] | |
"The hills at the upper end of Lake Lindeman rise abruptly from the | |
water's edge. At the lower end they are neither so steep nor so high. | |
"Lake Nares is only two and a half miles long, and its greatest width is | |
about a mile; it is not deep, but is navigable for boats drawing 5 or 6 | |
feet of water; it is separated from Lake Bennet by a shallow sandy point | |
of not more than 200 yards in length. | |
"No streams of any consequence empty into either of these lakes. A small | |
river flows into Lake Bennet on the west side, a short distance north of | |
the fork, and another at the extreme north-west angle, but neither of | |
them is of any consequence in a navigable sense. | |
"Lake Nares flows through a narrow curved channel into Bove Lake | |
(Schwatka). This channel is not more than 600 or 700 yards long, and the | |
water in it appears to be sufficiently deep for boats that could | |
navigate the lake. The land between the lakes along this channel is low, | |
swampy, and covered with willows, and, at the stage in which I saw it, | |
did not rise more than 3 feet above the water. The hills on the | |
south-west side <DW72> up easily, and are not high; on the north side | |
the deep valley already referred to borders it; and on the east side the | |
mountains rise abruptly from the lake shore. | |
"Bove Lake (called Tagish Lake by Dr. Dawson) is about a mile wide for | |
the first two miles of its length, when it is joined by what the miners | |
have called the Windy Arm. One of the Tagish Indians informed me they | |
called it Takone Lake. Here the lake expands to a width of about two | |
miles for a distance of some three miles, when it suddenly narrows to | |
about half a mile for a distance of a little over a mile, after which it | |
widens again to about a mile and a half or more. | |
"Ten miles from the head of the lake it is joined by the Taku Arm from | |
the south. This arm must be of considerable length, as it can be seen | |
for a long distance, and its valley can be traced through the mountains | |
much farther than the lake itself can be seen. It is apparently over a | |
mile wide at its mouth or junction. | |
"Dr. Dawson includes Bove Lake and these two arms under the common name | |
of Tagish Lake. This is much more simple and comprehensive than the | |
various names given them by travellers. These waters collectively are | |
the fishing and hunting grounds of the Tagish Indians, and as they are | |
really one body of water, there is no reason why they should not be all | |
included under one name. | |
"From the junction with the Taku Arm to the north end of the lake the | |
distance is about six miles, the greater part being over two miles wide. | |
The west side is very flat and shallow, so much so that it was | |
impossible in many places to get our canoes to the shore, and quite a | |
distance out in the lake there was not more than 5 feet of water. The | |
members of my party who were in charge of the large boat and outfit, | |
went down the east side of the lake and reported the depth about the | |
same as I found on the west side, with many large rocks. They passed | |
through it in the night in a rainstorm, and were much alarmed for the | |
safety of the boat and provisions. It would appear that this part of the | |
lake requires some improvement to make it in keeping with the rest of | |
the water system with which it is connected. | |
"Where the river debouches from it, it is about 150 yards wide, and for | |
a short distance not more than 5 or 6 feet deep. The depth is, however, | |
soon increased to 10 feet or more, and so continues down to what | |
Schwatka calls Marsh Lake. The miners call it Mud Lake, but on this name | |
they do not appear to be agreed, many of them calling the lower part of | |
Tagish or Bove Lake "Mud Lake," on account of its shallowness and flat | |
muddy shores, as seen along the west side, the side nearly always | |
travelled, as it is more sheltered from the prevailing southerly winds. | |
The term "Mud Lake" is, however, not applicable to this lake, as only a | |
comparatively small part of it is shallow or muddy; and it is nearly as | |
inapplicable to Marsh Lake, as the latter is not markedly muddy along | |
the west side, and from the appearance of the east shore one would not | |
judge it to be so, as the banks appear to be high and gravelly. | |
"Marsh Lake is a little over nineteen miles long, and averages about two | |
miles in width. I tried to determine the width of it as I went along | |
with my survey, by taking azimuths of points on the eastern shore from | |
different stations of the survey; but in only one case did I succeed, as | |
there were no prominent marks on that shore which could be identified | |
from more than one place. The piece of river connecting Tagish and Marsh | |
Lakes is about five miles long, and averages 150 to 200 yards in width, | |
and, as already mentioned, is deep, except for a short distance at the | |
head. On it are situated the only Indian houses to be found in the | |
interior with any pretension to skill in construction. They show much | |
more labor and imitativeness than one knowing anything about the Indian | |
in his native state would expect. The plan is evidently taken from the | |
Indian houses on the coast, which appear to me to be a poor copy of the | |
houses which the Hudson's Bay Company's servants build around their | |
trading posts. These houses do not appear to have been used for some | |
time past, and are almost in ruins. The Tagish Indians are now generally | |
on the coast, as they find it much easier to live there than in their | |
own country. As a matter of fact, what they make in their own country is | |
taken from them by the Coast Indians, so that there is little inducement | |
for them to remain. | |
"The Lewes River, where it leaves Marsh Lake, is about 200 yards wide, | |
and averages this width as far as the canon. I did not try to find | |
bottom anywhere as I went along, except where I had reason to think it | |
shallow, and there I always tried with my paddle. I did not anywhere | |
find bottom with this, which shows that there is no part of this stretch | |
of the river with less than six feet of water at medium height, at which | |
stage it appeared to me the river was at that time. | |
"From the head of Lake Bennet to the canon the corrected distance is | |
ninety-five miles, all of which is navigable for boats drawing 5 feet or | |
more. Add to this the westerly arm of Lake Bennet, and the Takone or | |
Windy Arm of Tagish Lake, each about fifteen miles in length, and the | |
Taku Arm of the latter lake, of unknown length, but probably not less | |
than thirty miles, and we have a stretch of water of upwards of one | |
hundred miles in length, all easily navigable; and, as has been pointed | |
out, easily connected with Taiya Inlet through the White Pass. | |
"No streams of any importance enter any of these lakes so far as I know. | |
A river, called by Schwatka "McClintock River," enters Marsh Lake at the | |
lower end from the east. It occupies a large valley, as seen from the | |
westerly side of the lake, but the stream is apparently unimportant. | |
Another small stream, apparently only a creek, enters the south-east | |
angle of the lake. It is not probable that any stream coming from the | |
east side of the lake is of importance, as the strip of country between | |
the Lewes and Teslintoo is not more than thirty or forty miles in | |
width at this point. | |
"The Taku Arm of Tagish Lake, is, so far, with the exception of reports | |
from Indians, unknown; but it is equally improbable that any river of | |
importance enters it, as it is so near the source of the waters flowing | |
northwards. However, this is a question that can only be decided by a | |
proper exploration. The canon I have already described and will only add | |
that it is five-eighths of a mile long, about 100 feet wide, with | |
perpendicular banks of basaltic rock from 60 to 100 feet high. | |
"Below the canon proper there is a stretch of rapids for about a mile; | |
then about half a mile of smooth water, following which are the White | |
Horse Rapids, which are three-eighths of a mile long, and unsafe for | |
boats. | |
"The total fall in the canon and succeeding rapids was measured and | |
found to be 32 feet. Were it ever necessary to make this part of the | |
river navigable it will be no easy task to overcome the obstacles at | |
this point; but a tram or railway could, with very little difficulty, be | |
constructed along the east side of the river past the canon. | |
"For some distance below the White Horse Rapids the current is swift and | |
the river wide, with many gravel bars. The reach between these rapids | |
and Lake Labarge, a distance of twenty-seven and a half miles, is all | |
smooth water, with a strong current. The average width is about 150 | |
yards. There is no impediment to navigation other than the swift | |
current, and this is no stronger than on the lower part of the river, | |
which is already navigated; nor is it worse than on the Saskatchewan and | |
Red Rivers in the more eastern part of our territory. | |
"About midway in this stretch the Tahkeena River[5] joins the Lewes. | |
This river is, apparently, about half the size of the latter. Its waters | |
are muddy, indicating the passage through a clayey district. I got some | |
indefinite information about this river, from an Indian who happened to | |
meet me just below its mouth, but I could not readily make him | |
understand me, and his replies were a compound of Chinook, Tagish, and | |
signs, and therefore largely unintelligible. From what I could | |
understand with any certainty, the river was easy to descend, there | |
being no bad rapids, and it came out of a lake much larger than any I | |
had yet passed. | |
[Footnote 5: The Tahkeena was formerly much used by the Chilkat Indians | |
as a means of reaching the interior, but never by the miners owing to | |
the distance from the sea to its head.] | |
"Here I may remark that I have invariably found it difficult to get | |
reliable or definite information from Indians. The reasons for this are | |
many. Most of the Indians it has been my lot to meet are expecting to | |
make something, and consequently are very chary about doing or saying | |
anything unless they think they will be well rewarded for it. They are | |
naturally very suspicions of strangers, and it takes some time, and some | |
knowledge of their language, to overcome this suspicion and gain their | |
confidence. If you begin at once to ask questions about their country, | |
without previously having them understand that you have no unfriendly | |
motive in doing so, they become alarmed, and although you may not meet | |
with a positive refusal to answer questions, you make very little | |
progress in getting desired information. On the other hand I have met | |
cases where, either through fear or hope of reward, they were only too | |
anxious to impart all they knew or had heard, and even more if they | |
thought it would please their hearer. I need hardly say that such | |
information is often not at all in accordance with the facts. | |
"I have several times found that some act of mine when in their | |
presence has aroused either their fear, superstition or cupidity. As an | |
instance: on the Bell River I met some Indians coming down stream as I | |
was going up. We were ashore at the time, and invited them to join us. | |
They started to come in, but very slowly, and all the time kept a | |
watchful eye on us. I noticed that my double-barrelled shot gun was | |
lying at my feet, loaded, and picked it up to unload it, as I knew they | |
would be handling it after landing. This alarmed them so much that it | |
was some time before they came in, and I don't think they would have | |
come ashore at all had they not heard that a party of white men of whom | |
we answered the description, were coming through that way (they had | |
learned this from the Hudson's Bay Company's officers), and concluded we | |
were the party described to them. After drinking some of our tea, and | |
getting a supply for themselves, they became quite friendly and | |
communicative. | |
"I cite these as instances of what one meets with who comes in contact | |
with Indians, and of how trifles affect them. A sojourn of two or three | |
days with them and the assistance of a common friend would do much to | |
disabuse them of such ideas, but when you have no such aids you must not | |
expect to make much progress. | |
"Lake Labarge is thirty-one miles long. In the upper thirteen it varies | |
from three to four miles in width; it then narrows to about two miles | |
for a distance of seven miles, when it begins to widen again, and | |
gradually expands to about, two and a-half or three miles, the lower six | |
miles of it maintaining the latter width. The survey was carried along | |
the western shore, and while so engaged I determined the width of the | |
upper wide part by triangulation at two points, the width of the narrow | |
middle part at three points, and the width of the lower part, at three | |
points. Dr. Dawson on his way out made a track survey of the eastern | |
shore. The western shore is irregular in many places, being indented by | |
large bays, especially at the upper and lower ends. These bays are, as a | |
rule, shallow, more especially those at the lower end. | |
"Just above where the lake narrows in the middle there is a large | |
island. It is three and a-half miles long and about half a mile in | |
width. It is shown on Schwatka's map as a peninsula, and called by him | |
Richtofen Rocks. How he came to think it a peninsula I cannot | |
understand, as it is well out in the lake; the nearest point of it to | |
the western shore is upwards of half a mile distant, and the extreme | |
width of the lake here is not more than five miles, which includes the | |
depth of the deepest bays on the western side. It is therefore difficult | |
to understand that he did not see it as an island. The upper half of | |
this island is gravelly, and does not rise very high above the lake. The | |
lower end is rocky and high, the rock being of a bright red color. | |
"At the lower end of the lake there is a large valley extending | |
northwards, which has evidently at one time been the outlet of the lake. | |
Dr. Dawson has noted it and its peculiarities. His remarks regarding it | |
will be found on pages 156-160 of his report entitled 'Yukon District | |
and Northern portion of British Columbia,' published in 1889. | |
"The width of the Lewes River as it leaves the lake is the same as at | |
its entrance, about 200 yards. Its waters when I was there were murky. | |
This is caused by the action of the waves on the shore along the lower | |
end of the lake. The water at the upper end and at the middle of the | |
lake is quite clear, so much so that the bottom can be distinctly seen | |
at a depth of 6 or 7 feet. The wind blows almost constantly down this | |
lake, and in a high wind it gets very rough. The miners complain of much | |
detention owing to this cause, and certainly I cannot complain of a lack | |
of wind while I was on the lake. This lake was named after one Mike | |
Labarge, who was engaged by the Western Union Telegraph Company, | |
exploring the river and adjacent country for the purpose of connecting | |
Europe and America by telegraph through British Columbia, and Alaska, | |
and across Behring Strait to Asia, and thence to Europe. This | |
exploration took place in 1867, but it does not appear that Labarge | |
then, nor for some years after, saw the lake called by his name. The | |
successful laying of the Atlantic cable in 1866 put a stop to this | |
project, and the exploring parties sent out were recalled as soon as | |
word could be got to them. It seems that Labarge had got up as far as | |
the Pelly before he received his recall; he had heard something of a | |
large lake some distance further up the river, and afterwards spoke of | |
it to some traders and miners who called it after him. | |
"After leaving Lake Labarge the river, for a distance of about five | |
miles, preserves a generally uniform width and an easy current of about | |
four miles per hour. It then makes a short turn round a low gravel | |
point, and flows in exactly the opposite of its general course for a | |
mile when it again turns sharply to its general direction. The current | |
around this curve and for some distance below it--in all four or five | |
miles--is very swift. I timed it in several places and found it from six | |
to seven miles an hour. It then moderates to four or five, and continues | |
so until the Teslintoo River is reached, thirty-one and seven tenths | |
miles from Lake Labarge. The average width of this part of the river is | |
about 150 yards, and the depth is sufficient to afford passage for boats | |
drawing at least 5 feet. It is, as a rule, crooked, and consequently a | |
little difficult to navigate. | |
"The Teslintoo[6] was so called by Dr. Dawson--this, according to | |
information obtained by him, being the Indian name. It is called by the | |
miners 'Hootalinkwa' or Hotalinqua, and was called by Schwatka, who | |
appears to have bestowed no other attention to it, the Newberry, | |
although it is apparently much larger than the Lewes. This was so | |
apparent that in my interim reports I stated it as a fact. Owing to | |
circumstances already narrated, I had not time while at the mouth to | |
make any measurement to determine the relative size of the rivers; but | |
on his way out Dr. Dawson made these measurements, and his report, | |
before referred to, gives the following values of the cross sections of | |
each stream: Lewes, 3,015 feet; Teslintoo, 3,809 feet. In the same | |
connection he states that the Lewes appeared to be about 1 foot above | |
its lowest summer level, while the Teslintoo appeared to be at its | |
lowest level. Assuming this to be so, and taking his widths as our data, | |
it would reduce his cross section of the Lewes to 2,595 feet. Owing, | |
however, to the current in the Lewes, as determined by Dr. Dawson, being | |
just double that of the Teslintoo, the figures being 5.68 and 2.88 miles | |
per hour, respectively, the discharge of the Lewes, taking these figures | |
again in 18,644 feet, and of the Teslintoo 11,436 feet. To reduce the | |
Lewes to its lowest level the doctor says would make its discharge | |
15,600 feet. | |
[Footnote 6: The limited amount of prospecting that has been done on | |
this river is said to be very satisfactory, fine gold having been found | |
in all parts of the river. The lack of supplies is the great drawback to | |
its development, and this will not be overcome to any extent until by | |
some means heavy freight can be brought over the coast range to the head | |
of the river. Indeed, owing to the difficulties attending access and | |
transportation, the great drawback to the entire Yukon district at | |
present is the want of heavy mining machinery and the scarcity of | |
supplies. The government being aware of the requirements and | |
possibilities of the country, has undertaken the task of making | |
preliminary surveys for trails and railroads, and no doubt in the near | |
future the avenue for better and quicker transportation facilities will | |
be opened up.] | |
"The water of the Teslintoo is of a dark brown color, similar in | |
appearance to the Ottawa River water, and a little turbid. | |
Notwithstanding the difference of volume of discharge, the Teslintoo | |
changes completely the character of the river below the junction, and a | |
person coming up the river would, at the forks, unhesitatingly pronounce | |
the Teslintoo the main stream. The water of the Lewes is blue in color, | |
and at the time I speak of was somewhat dirty--not enough so, however, | |
to prevent one seeing to a depth of two or three feet. | |
"At the junction of the Lewes and Teslintoo I met two or three families | |
of the Indians who hunt in the vicinity. One of them could speak a | |
little Chinook. As I had two men with me who understood his jargon | |
perfectly, with their assistance I tried to get some information from | |
him about the river. He told me the river was easy to ascend, and | |
presented the same appearance eight days journey up as at the mouth; | |
then a lake was reached, which took one day to cross; the river was then | |
followed again for half a day to another lake, which took two days to | |
traverse: into this lake emptied a stream which they used as a highway | |
to the coast, passing by way of the Taku River. He said it took four | |
days when they had loads to carry, from the head of canoe navigation on | |
the Teslintoo to salt water on the Taku Inlet; but when they come light | |
they take only one to two days. He spoke also of a stream entering the | |
large lake from the east which came from a distance; but they did not | |
seem to know much about it, and considered it outside their country. If | |
their time intervals are approximately accurate, they mean that there | |
are about 200 miles of good river to the first lake, as they ought | |
easily to make 25 miles a day on the river as I saw it. The lake takes | |
one day to traverse, and is at least 25 miles long, followed by say 12 | |
of river, which brings us to the large lake, which takes two days to | |
cross, say 50 or 60 more--in all about 292 miles--say 300 to the head of | |
canoe navigation; while the distance from the head of Lake Bennet to the | |
junction is only 188. Assuming the course of the Teslintoo to be nearly | |
south (it is a little to the east of it), and throwing out every fourth | |
mile for bends, the remainder gives us in arc three degrees and a | |
quarter of latitude, which, deducted from 61 deg. 40', the latitude of the | |
junction, gives us 58 deg. 25', or nearly the latitude of Juneau. | |
"To make sure that I understood the Indian aright, and that he knew what | |
he was speaking about, I got him to sketch the river and lake, as he | |
described them, on the sand, and repeat the same several times. | |
"I afterwards met Mr. T. Boswell, his brother, and another miner, who | |
had spent most of the summer on the river prospecting, and from them I | |
gathered the following: | |
"The distance to the first, and only lake which they saw, they put at | |
175 miles, and the lake itself they call at least 150 miles long, as it | |
took them four days to row in a light boat from end to end. The portage | |
to the sea they did not appear to know anything about, but describe a | |
large bay on the east side of the lake, into which a river of | |
considerable size entered. This river occupies a wide valley, surrounded | |
by high mountains. They thought this river must head near Liard River. | |
This account differs materially from that given by the Indian, and to | |
put them on their guard, I told them what he had told me, but they still | |
persisted in their story, which I find differs a good deal from the | |
account they gave Dr. Dawson, as incorporated in his report. | |
"Many years ago, sixteen I think, a man named Monroe prospected up the | |
Taku and learned from the Indians something of a large lake not far from | |
that river. He crossed over and found it, and spent some time in | |
prospecting, and then recrossed to the sea. This man had been at Forty | |
Mile River, and I heard from the miners there his account of the | |
appearance of the lake, which amounted generally to this: The Boswells | |
did not know anything about it." It was unfortunate the Boswells did not | |
remain at Forty Mile all winter, as by a comparison of recollections | |
they might have arrived at some correct conclusion. | |
"Conflicting as these descriptions are, one thing is certain: this | |
branch, if it has not the greater discharge, is the longer and more | |
important of the two, and offers easy and uninterrupted navigation for | |
more than double the distance which the Lewes does, the canon being only | |
ninety miles above the mouth of the Teslintoo. The Boswells reported it | |
as containing much more useful timber than the Lewes, which indeed one | |
would infer from its lower altitude. | |
"Assuming this as the main river, and adding its length to the | |
Lewes-Yukon below the junction, gives upward of 2,200 miles of river, | |
fully two-thirds of which runs through a very mountainous country, | |
without an impediment to navigation. | |
"Some indefinite information, was obtained as to the position of this | |
river in the neighborhood of Marsh Lake tending to show that the | |
distance between them was only about thirty or forty miles. | |
"Between the Teslintoo and the Big Salmon, so called by the miners, or | |
D'Abbadie by Schwatka, the distance is thirty-three and a-half miles, in | |
which the Lewes preserves a generally uniform width and current. For a | |
few miles below the Teslintoo it is a little over the ordinary width, | |
but then contracts to about two hundred yards which it maintains with | |
little variation. The current is generally from four to five miles per | |
hour. | |
"The Big Salmon I found to be about one hundred yards wide near the | |
mouth, the depth not more than four or five feet, and the current, so | |
far as could be seen, sluggish. None of the miners I met could give me | |
any information concerning this stream; but Dr. Dawson was more | |
fortunate, and met a man who had spent most of the summer of 1887 | |
prospecting on it. His opinion was that it might be navigable for small | |
stern-wheel steamers for many miles. The valley, as seen from the mouth, | |
is wide, and gives one the impression of being occupied by a much more | |
important stream. Looking up it, in the distance could be seen many high | |
peaks covered with snow. As the date was August it is likely they are | |
always so covered, which would make their probable altitude above the | |
river 5,000 feet or more. | |
"Dr. Dawson, in his report, incorporates fully the notes obtained from | |
the miners. I will trespass so far on these as to say that they called | |
the distance to a small lake near the head of the river, 190 miles from | |
the mouth. This lake was estimated to be four miles in length; another | |
lake about 12 miles above this was estimated to be twenty-four miles | |
long, and its upper end distant only about eight miles from the | |
Teslintoo. These distances, if correct, make this river much more | |
important than a casual glance at it would indicate; this, however, will | |
be more fully spoken of under its proper head. | |
"Just below the Big Salmon the Lewes takes a bend of nearly a right | |
angle. Its course from the junction with the Tahkeena to this point is | |
generally a little east of north; at this point it turns to nearly west | |
for some distance. Its course between here and its confluence with the | |
Pelly is north-west, and, I may add, it preserves this general direction | |
down to the confluence with the Porcupine. The river also changes in | |
another respect; it is generally wider, and often expands into what | |
might be called lakes, in which are islands. Some of the lakes are of | |
considerable length, and well timbered. | |
"To determine which channel is the main one, that is, which carries the | |
greatest volume of water, or is best available for the purposes of | |
navigation, among these islands, would require more time than I could | |
devote to it on my way down; consequently I cannot say more than that I | |
have no reason to doubt that a channel giving six feet or more of water | |
could easily be found. Whenever, in the main channel, I had reason to | |
think the water shallow, I tried it with my paddle, but always failed to | |
find bottom, which gives upward of six feet. Of course I often found | |
less than this, but not in what I considered the main channel. | |
"Thirty-six and a quarter miles below the Big Salmon, the Little | |
Salmon--the Daly of Schwatka--enters the Lewes. This river is about 60 | |
yards wide at the mouth, and not more than two or three feet in depth. | |
The water is clear and of a brownish hue; there is not much current at | |
the mouth, nor as far as can be seen up the stream. The valley which, | |
from the mouth, does not appear extensive, bears north-east for some | |
distance, when it appears to turn more to the east. Six or seven miles | |
up, and apparently on the north side, some high cliffs of red rock, | |
apparently granite, can be seen. It is said that some miners have | |
prospected this stream, but I could learn nothing definite about it. | |
"Lewes River makes a turn here to the south-west, and runs in that | |
direction six miles, when it again turns to the north-west for seven | |
miles, and then makes a short, sharp turn to the south and west around a | |
low sandy point, which will, at some day in the near future, be cut | |
through by the current, which will shorten the river three or four | |
miles. | |
"Eight miles below Little Salmon River, a large rock called the Eagle's | |
Nest, stands up in a gravel <DW72> on the easterly bank of the river. It | |
rises about five hundred feet above the river, and is composed of a | |
light gray stone. What the character of this rock is I could not | |
observe, as I saw it only from the river, which is about a quarter of a | |
mile distant. On the westerly side of the river there are two or three | |
other isolated masses of apparently the same kind of rock. One of them | |
might be appropriately called a mountain; it is south-west from the | |
Eagle's Nest and distant from it about three miles. | |
"Thirty-two miles below Eagle's Nest Rock, Nordenskiold River enters | |
from the west. It is an unimportant stream, being not more than one | |
hundred and twenty feet wide at the mouth, and only a few inches deep. | |
The valley, as far as can be seen, is not extensive, and, being very | |
crooked, it is hard to tell what its general direction is. | |
"The Lewes, between the Little Salmon and the Nordenskiold, maintains a | |
width of from two to three hundred yards, with an occasional expansion | |
where there are islands. It is serpentine in its course most of the way, | |
and where the Nordenskiold joins it is very crooked, running several | |
times under a hill, named by Schwatka Tantalus Butte, and in other | |
places leaving it, for a distance of eight miles. The distance across | |
from point to point is only half a mile. | |
"Below this to Five Finger Rapids, so-called from the fact that five | |
large masses of rock stand in mid-channel, the river assumes its | |
ordinary straightness and width, with a current from four to five miles | |
per hour. I have already described Five Finger Rapids; I do not think | |
they will prove anything more than a slight obstruction in the | |
navigation of the river. A boat of ordinary power would probably have to | |
help herself up with windlass and line in high water. | |
"Below the rapids, for about two miles, the current is strong--probably | |
six miles per hour--but the water seems to be deep enough for any boat | |
that is likely to navigate it. | |
"Six miles below this, as already noticed, Rink Rapids are situated. | |
They are of no great importance, the westerly half of the stream only | |
being obstructed. The easterly half is not in any way affected, the | |
current being smooth and the water deep. | |
"Below Five Finger Rapids about two miles a small stream enters from | |
the east. It is called by Dr. Dawson Tatshun River. It is not more than | |
30 or 40 feet wide at the mouth, and contains only a little clear, | |
brownish water. Here I met the only Indians seen on the river between | |
Teslintoo and Stewart Rivers. They were engaged in catching salmon at | |
the mouth of the Tatshun, and were the poorest and most unintelligent | |
Indians it has ever been my lot to meet. It is needless to say that none | |
of our party understood anything they said, as they could not speak a | |
word of any language but their own. I tried by signs to get some | |
information from them about the stream they were fishing in, but failed. | |
I tried in the same way to learn if there were any more Indians in the | |
vicinity, but again utterly failed. I then tried by signs to find out | |
how many days it took to go down to Pelly River, but although I have | |
never known these signs to fail in eliciting information in any other | |
part of the territory, they did not understand. They appeared to be | |
alarmed by our presence; and, as we had not yet been assured as to the | |
rumor concerning the trouble between the miners and Indians, we felt a | |
little apprehensive, but being able to learn nothing from them we had to | |
put our fears aside and proceed blindly. | |
"Between Five Finger Rapids and Pelly River, fifty-eight and a | |
half-miles, no streams of any importance enter the Lewes; in fact, with | |
the exception of the Tatshun, it may be said that none at all enter. | |
"About a mile below Rink Rapids the river spreads out into a lake-like | |
expanse, with many islands; this continues for about three miles, when | |
it contracts to something like the usual width; but bars and small | |
islands are very numerous all the way to Pelly River. About five miles | |
above Pelly River there is another lake-like expanse filled with | |
islands. The river here for three or four miles is nearly a mile wide, | |
and so numerous and close are the islands that it is impossible to tell | |
when floating among them where the shores of the river are. The current, | |
too, is swift, leading one to suppose the water shallow; but I think | |
even here a channel deep enough for such boats as will navigate this | |
part of the river can be found. Schwatka named this group of islands | |
"Ingersoll Islands." | |
"At the mouth of the Pelly the Lewes is about half a mile wide, and here | |
too there are many islands, but not in groups as at Ingersoll Islands. | |
"About a mile below the Pelly, just at the ruins of Fort Selkirk, the | |
Yukon was found to be 565 yards wide; about two-thirds being ten feet | |
deep, with a current of about four and three-quarter miles per hour; the | |
remaining third was more than half taken up by a bar, and the current | |
between it and the south shore was very slack. | |
"Pelly River at its mouth is about two hundred yards wide, and continues | |
this width as far up as could be seen. Dr. Dawson made a survey and | |
examination of this river, which will be found in his report already | |
cited, "Yukon District and Northern British Columbia." | |
"Just here for a short distance the course of the Yukon is nearly west, | |
and on the south side, about a mile below the mouth of the Lewes, stands | |
all that remains of the only trading post ever built by white men in the | |
district. This post was established by Robert Campbell, for the Hudson's | |
Bay Company in the summer of 1848. It was first built on the point of | |
land between the two rivers, but this location proving untenable on | |
account of flooding by ice jams in the spring, it was, in the season of | |
1852, moved across the river to where the ruins now stand. It appears | |
that the houses composing the post were not finished when the Indians | |
from the coast on Chilkat and Chilkoot Inlets came down the river to put | |
a stop to the competitive trade which Mr. Campbell had inaugurated, and | |
which they found to seriously interfere with their profits. Their method | |
of trade appears to have been then pretty much as it is now--very | |
onesided. What they found it convenient to take by force they took, and | |
what it was convenient to pay for at their own price they paid for. | |
"Rumors had reached the post that the coast Indians contemplated such a | |
raid, and in consequence the native Indians in the vicinity remained | |
about nearly all summer. Unfortunately, they went away for a short time, | |
and during their absence the coast Indians arrived in the early morning, | |
and surprised Mr. Campbell in bed. They were not at all rough with him, | |
but gave him the privilege of leaving the place within twenty-four | |
hours, after which he was informed that he was liable to be shot if seen | |
by them in the locality. They then pillaged the place and set fire to | |
it, leaving nothing but the remains of the two chimneys which are still | |
standing. This raid and capture took place on the 1st August, 1852. | |
"Mr. Campbell dropped down the river, and met some of the local Indians | |
who returned with him, but the robbers had made their escape. I have | |
heard that the local Indians wished to pursue and overtake them, but to | |
this Mr. Campbell would not consent. Had they done so it is probable not | |
many of the raiders would have escaped, as the superior local knowledge | |
of the natives would have given them an advantage difficult to estimate, | |
and the confidence and spirit derived from the aid and presence of a | |
white man or two would be worth much in such a conflict. | |
"Mr. Campbell went on down the river until he met the outfit for his | |
post on its way up from Fort Yukon, which he turned back. He then | |
ascended the Pelly, crossed to the Liard, and reached Fort Simpson, on | |
the Mackenzie, late in October. | |
"Mr. Campbell's first visit to the site of Fort Selkirk was made in | |
1840, under instructions from Sir George Simpson, then Governor of the | |
Hudson's Bay Company. He crossed from the head waters of the Liard to | |
the waters of the Pelly. It appears the Pelly, where he struck it, was a | |
stream of considerable size, for he speaks of its appearance when he | |
first saw it from 'Pelly Banks,' the name given the bank from which he | |
first beheld it, as a 'splendid river in the distance.' In June, 1843, | |
he descended the Pelly to its confluence with the larger stream, which | |
he named the 'Lewes.' Here he found many families of the native | |
Indians--'Wood Indians,' he called them. These people conveyed to him, | |
as best they could by word and sign, the dangers that would attend a | |
further descent of the river, representing that the country below theirs | |
was inhabited by a tribe of fierce cannibals, who would assuredly kill | |
and eat them. This so terrified his men that he had to return by the way | |
he came, pursued, as he afterwards learned, by the Indians, who would | |
have murdered himself and party had they got a favorable opportunity. | |
Thus it was not until 1850 that he could establish, what he says he all | |
along believed, 'that the Pelly and Yukon were identical.' This he did | |
by descending the river to where the Porcupine joins it, and where in | |
1847 Fort Yukon was established by Mr. A.H. Murray for the Hudson's Bay | |
Company. | |
"With reference to the tales told him by the Indians of bad people | |
outside of their country, I may say that Mackenzie tells pretty much the | |
same story of the Indians on the Mackenzie when he discovered and | |
explored that river in 1789. He had the advantage of having Indians | |
along with him whose language was radically the same as that of the | |
people he was coming among, and his statements are more explicit and | |
detailed. Everywhere he came in contact with them they manifested, | |
first, dread of himself and party, and when friendship and confidence | |
were established they nearly always tried to detain him by representing | |
the people in the direction he was going as unnaturally bloodthirsty and | |
cruel, sometimes asserting the existence of monsters with supernatural | |
powers, as at Manitou Island, a few miles below the present Fort Good | |
Hope, and the people on a very large river far to the west of the | |
Mackenzie, probably the Yukon, they described to him as monsters in | |
size, power and cruelty. | |
"In our own time, after the intercourse that there has been between them | |
and the whites, more than a suspicion of such unknown, cruel people | |
lurks in the minds of many of the Indians. It would be futile for me to | |
try to ascribe an origin for these fears, my knowledge of their language | |
and idiosyncrasies being so limited. | |
"Nothing more was ever done in the vicinity of Fort Selkirk[7] by the | |
Hudson's Bay Company after these events, and in 1869 the Company was | |
ordered by Capt. Charles W. Raymond, who represented the United States | |
Government, to evacuate the post at Fort Yukon, he having found that it | |
was west of the 141st meridian. The post was occupied by the Company, | |
however, for some time after the receipt of this order, and until | |
Rampart House was built, which was intended to be on British territory, | |
and to take the trade previously done at Fort Yukon. | |
[Footnote 7: This is now a winter port for steamboats of the North | |
American Transportation and Trading Company, plying the Yukon and its | |
tributaries. There is also a trading post here owned by Harper & Ladue.] | |
"Under present conditions the Company cannot very well compete with the | |
Alaska Commercial Company, whose agents do the only trade in the | |
district,[8] and they appear to have abandoned--for the present at | |
least--all attempt to do any trade nearer to it than Rampart House to | |
which point, notwithstanding the distance and difficulties in the way, | |
many of the Indians on the Yukon make a trip every two or three years to | |
procure goods in exchange for their furs. The clothing and blankets | |
brought in by the Hudson's Bay Company they claim are much better than | |
those traded on their own river by the Americans. Those of them that I | |
saw who had any English blankets exhibited them with pride, and | |
exclaimed 'good,' They point to an American blanket in contempt, with | |
the remark 'no good,' and speak of their clothing in the same way. | |
[Footnote 8: Since the date of this report the North American | |
Transportation and Trading Company, better known in the Yukon valley as | |
"Captain Healy's Company," has established a number of posts on the | |
river.] | |
"On many maps of Alaska a place named 'Reed's House' is shown on or near | |
the upper waters of Stewart River. I made enquiries of all whom I | |
thought likely to know anything concerning this post, but failed to | |
elicit any information showing that there ever had been such a place. I | |
enquired of Mr. Reid, who was in the Company's service with Mr. Campbell | |
at Fort Selkirk, and after whom I thought, possibly, the place had been | |
called, but he told me he knew of no such post, but that there was a | |
small lake at some distance in a northerly direction from Fort Selkirk, | |
where fish were procured. A sort of shelter had been made at that point | |
for the fishermen, and a few furs might have been obtained there, but it | |
was never regarded as a trading post. | |
"Below Fort Selkirk, the Yukon River is from five to six hundred yards | |
broad, and maintains this width down to White River, a distance of | |
ninety-six miles. Islands are numerous, so much so that there are very | |
few parts of the river where there are not one or more in sight. Many of | |
them are of considerable size, and nearly all are well timbered. Bars | |
are also numerous, but almost all are composed of gravel, so that | |
navigators will not have to complain of shifting sand bars. The current | |
as a general thing, is not so rapid as in the upper part of the river, | |
averaging about four miles per hour. The depth in the main channel was | |
always found to be more than six feet. | |
"From Pelly River to within twelve miles of White River the general | |
course of the river is a little north of west; it then turns to the | |
north, and the general course as far as the site of Fort Reliance is due | |
north. | |
"White River enters the main river from the west. At the mouth it is | |
about two hundred yards wide, but a great part of it is filled with | |
ever-shifting sand-bars, the main volume of water being confined to a | |
channel not more than one hundred yards in width. The current is very | |
strong, certainly not less than eight miles per hour. The color of the | |
water bears witness to this, as it is much the muddiest that I have ever | |
seen.[9] | |
[Footnote 9: The White River very probably flows over volcanic deposits | |
as its sediments would indicate; no doubt this would account for the | |
discoloration of its waters. The volcanic ash appears to cover a great | |
extent of the Upper Yukon basin drained by the Lewes and Pelly Rivers. | |
Very full treatment of the subject is given by Dr. Dawson, in his report | |
entitled "Yukon District and Northern portion of British Columbia."] | |
"I had intended to make a survey of part of this river as far as the | |
International Boundary, and attempted to do so; but after trying for | |
over half a day, I found it would be a task of much labor and time, | |
altogether out of proportion to the importance of the end sought, and | |
therefore abandoned it. The valley as far as can be seen from the mouth, | |
runs about due west for a distance of eight miles; it then appears to | |
bear to the south-west; it is about two miles wide where it joins the | |
Pelly valley and apparently keeps the same width as far as it can be | |
seen. | |
"Mr. Harper, of the firm of Harper & Ladue, went up this river with | |
sleds in the fall of 1872 a distance of fifty or sixty miles. He | |
describes it as possessing the same general features all the way up, | |
with much clay soil along its banks. Its general course, as sketched by | |
him on a map of mine, is for a distance of about thirty miles a little | |
north-west, thence south-west thirty or thirty-five miles, when it | |
deflects to the north-west running along the base of a high mountain | |
ridge. If the courses given are correct it must rise somewhere near the | |
head of Forty Mile River; and if so, its length is not at all in keeping | |
with the volume of its discharge, when compared with the known length | |
and discharge of other rivers in the territory. Mr. Harper mentioned an | |
extensive flat south of the mountain range spoken of, across which many | |
high mountain peaks could be seen. One of these he thought must be Mount | |
St. Elias, as it overtopped all the others; but, as Mount St. Elias is | |
about one hundred and eighty miles distant, his conclusion is not | |
tenable. From his description of this mountain it must be more than | |
twice the height of the highest peaks seen anywhere on the lower river, | |
and consequently must be ten or twelve thousand feet above the sea. He | |
stated that the current in the river was very swift, as far as he | |
ascended, and the water muddy. The water from this river, though | |
probably not a fourth of the volume of the Yukon, discolors the water of | |
the latter completely; and a couple of miles, below the junction the | |
whole river appears almost as dirty as White River. | |
"Between White and Stewart Rivers, ten miles, the river spreads out to a | |
mile and upwards in width, and is a maze of islands and bars. The survey | |
was carried down the easterly shore, and many of the channels passed | |
through barely afforded water enough to float the canoes. The main | |
channel is along the westerly shore, down which the large boat went, and | |
the crew reported plenty of water. | |
"Stewart River enters from the east in the middle of a wide valley, with | |
low hills on both sides, rising on the north sides in steps or terraces | |
to distant hills of considerable height. The river half a mile or so | |
above the mouth, is two hundred yards in width. The current is slack and | |
the water shallow and clear, but dark . | |
"While at the mouth I was fortunate enough to meet a miner who had spent | |
the whole of the summer of 1887 on the river and its branches | |
prospecting and exploring. He gave me a good deal of information of | |
which I give a summary. He is a native of New Brunswick, Alexander | |
McDonald by name, and has spent some years mining in other places, but | |
was very reticent about what he had made or found. Sixty or seventy | |
miles up the Stewart a large creek enters from the south which he called | |
Rose Bud Creek or River, and thirty or forty miles further up a | |
considerable stream flows from the north-east, which appears to be | |
Beaver River, as marked on the maps of that part of the country. From | |
the head of this stream he floated down on a raft taking five days to do | |
so. He estimated his progress at forty or fifty miles each day, which | |
gives a length of from two hundred to two hundred and fifty miles. This | |
is probably an over-estimate, unless the stream is very crooked, which, | |
he stated, was not the case. As much of his time would be taken up in | |
prospecting, I should call thirty miles or less a closer estimate of his | |
progress. This river is from fifty to eighty yards wide and was never | |
more than four or five feet deep, often being not more than two or | |
three; the current, he said, was not at all swift. Above the mouth of | |
this stream the main river is from one hundred to one hundred and thirty | |
yards wide with an even current and clear water. Sixty or seventy miles | |
above the last-mentioned branch another large branch joins, which is | |
possibly the main river. At the head of it he found a lake nearly thirty | |
miles long, and averaging a mile and a half in width, which he called | |
Mayhew Lake, after one of the partners in the firm of Harper, McQuestion | |
& Co. | |
"Thirty miles or so above the forks on the other branch there are | |
falls, which McDonald estimated to be from one to two hundred feet in | |
height. I met several parties who had seen these falls, and they | |
corroborate this estimate of their height. McDonald went on past the | |
falls to the head of this branch and found terraced gravel hills to the | |
west and north; he crossed them to the north and found a river flowing | |
northward. On this he embarked on a raft and floated down it for a day | |
or two, thinking it would turn to the west and join the Stewart, but | |
finding it still continuing north, and acquiring too much volume to be | |
any of the branches he had seen while passing up the Stewart, he | |
returned to the point of his departure, and after prospecting among the | |
hills around the head of the river, he started westward, crossing a high | |
range of mountains composed principally of shales with many thin seams | |
of what he called quartz, ranging from one to six inches in thickness. | |
"On the west side of this range he found a river flowing out of what he | |
called Mayhew Lake, and crossing this got to the head of Beaver River, | |
which he descended as before mentioned. | |
"It is probable the river flowing northwards, on which he made a journey | |
and returned, was a branch of Peel River. He described the timber on the | |
gravel terraces of the watershed as small and open. He was alone in this | |
unknown wilderness all summer, not seeing even any of the natives. There | |
are few men so constituted as to be capable of isolating themselves in | |
such a manner. Judging from all I could learn it is probable a | |
light-draught steamboat could navigate nearly all of Stewart Iver and | |
its tributaries. | |
"From Stewart River to the site of Fort Reliance,[10] seventy-three and | |
a quarter miles, the Yukon is broad and full of islands. The average | |
width is between a half and three quarters of a mile, but there are many | |
expansions where it is over a mile in breadth; however, in these places | |
it cannot be said that the waterway is wider than at other parts of the | |
river, the islands being so large and numerous. In this reach no streams | |
of any importance enter. | |
[Footnote 10: This was at one time a trading post occupied by Messrs. | |
Harper & McQuestion.] | |
"About thirteen miles below Stewart River a large valley joins that of | |
the river, but the stream occupying it is only a large creek. This | |
agrees in position with what has been called Sixty Mile Creek, which was | |
supposed to be about that distance above Fort Reliance, but it does not | |
agree with descriptions which I received of it; moreover as Sixty Mile | |
Creek is known to be a stream of considerable length, this creek would | |
not answer its description. | |
"Twenty-two and a half miles from Stewart River another and larger creek | |
enters from the same side; it agrees with the descriptions of Sixty Mile | |
Creek, and I have so marked it on my map. This stream is of no | |
importance, except for what mineral wealth may be found on it.[11] | |
[Footnote 11: Sixty Mile Creek is about one hundred miles long, very | |
crooked, with a swift current and many rapids, and is therefore not easy | |
to ascend. | |
Miller, Glacier, Gold, Little Gold and Bedrock Creeks are all | |
tributaries of Sixty Mile. Some of the richest discoveries in gold so | |
far made in the interior since 1894 have been upon these creeks, | |
especially has this been the case upon the two first mentioned. There is | |
a claim upon Miller Creek owned by Joseph Boudreau from which over | |
$100,000 worth of gold is said to have been taken out. | |
Freight for the mines is taken up Forty Mile Creek in summer for a | |
distance of 30 miles, then portaged across to the heads of Miller and | |
Glacier Creeks. In the winter it is hauled in by dogs. | |
The trip from Cudahy to the post at the mouth of Sixty Mile River is | |
made by ascending Forty Mile River a small distance, making a short | |
portage to Sixty Mile River and running down with its swift current. | |
Coming back on the Yukon, nearly the whole of the round trip is made | |
down stream. | |
Indian Creek enters the Yukon from the east about 30 miles below Sixty | |
Mile. It is reported to be rich in gold, but owing to the scarcity of | |
supplies its development has been retarded. | |
At the mouth of Sixty Mile Creek a townsite of that name is located, it | |
is the headquarters for upwards of 100 miners and where they more or | |
less assemble in the winter months. | |
Messrs. Harper & Co. have a trading post and a saw-mill on an island at | |
the mouth of the creek; both, of which are in charge of Mr. J. Ladue, | |
one of the partners of the firm, and who was at one time in the employ | |
of the Alaska Commercial Company.] | |
"Six and a half miles above Port Reliance the Thron-Diuck[12] River of | |
the Indians (Deer River of Schwatka) enters from the east. It is a small | |
river about forty yards wide at the mouth, and shallow; the water is | |
clear and transparent, and of beautiful blue color. The Indians catch | |
great numbers of salmon here. They had been fishing shortly before my | |
arrival, and the river, for some distance up, was full of salmon traps. | |
[Footnote 12: Dawson City is situated at the mouth of the Thron-Diuck | |
now known as Klondyke, and although it was located only a few months ago | |
it is the scene of great activity. Very rich deposits of gold have been | |
lately found on Bonanza Creek and other affluents of the Thron-Diuck.] | |
"A miner had prospected up this river for an estimated distance of forty | |
miles, in the season of 1887. I did not see him, but got some of his | |
information at second hand. The water being so beautifully clear I | |
thought it must come through a large lake not far up; but as far as he | |
had gone no lakes were seen. He said the current was comparatively | |
slack, with an occasional 'ripple' or small rapid. Where he turned back | |
the river is surrounded by high mountains, which were then covered with | |
snow, which accounts for the purity and clearness of the water. | |
"It appears that the Indians go up this stream a long distance to hunt, | |
but I could learn nothing definite as to their statements concerning it. | |
"Twelve and a half miles below Fort Reliance, the Chandindu River, as | |
named by Schwatka, enters from the east. It is thirty to forty yards | |
wide at the mouth, very shallow, and for half a mile up is one | |
continuous rapid. Its valley is wide and can be seen for a long distance | |
looking north-eastward from the mouth. | |
"Between Fort Reliance and Forty Mile River (called Cone Hill River by | |
Schwatka) the Yukon assumes its normal appearance, having fewer islands | |
and being narrower, averaging four to six hundred yards wide, and the | |
current being more regular. This stretch is forty-six miles long, but | |
was estimated by the traders at forty, from which the Forty Mile River | |
took its name. | |
"Forty Mile River[13] joins the main river from the west. Its general | |
course as far up as the International Boundary, a distance of | |
twenty-three miles, is south-west; after this it is reported by the | |
miners to run nearer south. Many of them claim to have ascended this | |
stream for more than one hundred miles, and speak of it there as quite a | |
large river. They say that at that distance it has reached the level of | |
the plateau, and the country adjoining it they describe as flat and | |
swampy, rising very little above the river. It is only a short distance | |
across to the Tanana River--a large tributary of the Yukon--which is | |
here described as an important stream. However, only about twenty-three | |
miles of Forty Mile River are in Canada; and the upper part of it and | |
its relation to other rivers in the district have no direct interest for | |
us. | |
[Footnote 13: Forty Mile townsite is situated on the south side of the | |
Forty Mile River at its junction with the Yukon. The Alaska Commercial | |
Company has a station here which was for some years in charge of L.N. | |
McQuestion; there are also several blacksmith shops, restaurants, | |
billiard halls, bakeries, an opera house and so on. Rather more than | |
half a mile below Forty Mile townsite the town of Cudahy was founded on | |
the north side of Forty Mile River in the summer of 1892. It is named | |
after a well known member of the North American Transportation and | |
Trading Company. In population and extent of business the town bears | |
comparison with its neighbor across the river. The opposition in trade | |
has been the means of very materially reducing the cost of supplies and | |
living. The North American Transportation and Trading Company has | |
erected a saw-mill and some large warehouses. Fort Constantine was | |
established here immediately upon the arrival of the Mounted Police | |
detachment in the latter part of July, 1895. It is described further on | |
in an extract from Inspector Constantine's supplementary report for the | |
year 1895.] | |
"Forty Mile River is one hundred to one hundred and fifty yards wide at | |
the mouth, and the current is generally strong, with many small rapids. | |
Eight miles up is the so-called canon; it is hardly entitled to that | |
distinctive name, being simply a crooked contraction of the river, with | |
steep rocky banks, and on the north side there is plenty of room to walk | |
along the beach. At the lower end of the canon there is a short turn and | |
swift water in which are some large rocks; these cannot generally be | |
seen, and there is much danger of striking them running down in a boat. | |
At this point several miners have been drowned by their boats being | |
upset in collision with these rocks. It is no great distance to either | |
shore, and one would think an ordinary swimmer would have no difficulty | |
in reaching land; but the coldness of the water soon benumbs a man | |
completely and renders him powerless. In the summer of 1887, an Indian, | |
from Tanana, with his family, was coming down to trade at the post at | |
the mouth of Forty Mile River; his canoe struck on these rocks and | |
upset, and he was thrown clear of the canoe, but the woman and children | |
clung to it. In the rough water he lost sight of them, and concluded | |
that they were lost: it is said he deliberately drew his knife and cut | |
his throat, thus perishing, while his family were hauled ashore by some | |
miners. The chief of the band to which this Indian belonged came to the | |
post and demanded pay for his loss, which he contended was occasioned by | |
the traders having moved from Belle Isle to Forty Mile, thus causing | |
them to descend this dangerous rapid, and there is little doubt that had | |
there not been so many white men in the vicinity he would have tried to | |
enforce his demand. | |
"The length of the so-called canon is about a mile. Above it the river | |
up to the boundary is generally smooth, with swift current and an | |
occasional ripple. The amount of water discharged by this stream is | |
considerable; but there is no prospect of navigation, it being so swift | |
and broken by small rapids. | |
"From Forty Mile River to the boundary the Yukon preserves the same | |
general character as between Fort Reliance and Forty Mile, the greatest | |
width being about half a mile and the least about a quarter. | |
"Fifteen miles below Forty Mile River a large mass of rock stands on the | |
east bank. This was named by Schwatka 'Roquette Rock,' but is known to | |
the traders as Old Woman Rock; a similar mass, on the west side of the | |
river, being known as Old Man Rock. | |
"The origin of these names is an Indian legend, of which the following | |
is the version given to me by the traders;-- | |
"In remote ages there lived a powerful shaman, pronounced Tshaumen by | |
the Indians, this being the local name for what is known as medicine man | |
among the Indians farther south and east. The Tshaumen holds a position | |
and exercises an influence among the people he lives with, something | |
akin to the wise men or magi of olden times in the East. In this | |
powerful being's locality there lived a poor man who had the great | |
misfortune to have an inveterate scold for a wife. He bore the | |
infliction for a long time without murmuring, in hopes that she would | |
relent, but time seemed only to increase the affliction; at length, | |
growing weary of the unceasing torment, he complained to the Tshaumen | |
who comforted him, and sent him home with the assurance that all would | |
soon be well. | |
"Shortly after this he went out to hunt, and remained away for many days | |
endeavoring to get some provisions for home use, but without avail; he | |
returned weary and hungry, only to be met by his wife with a more than | |
usually violent outburst of scolding. This so provoked him that he | |
gathered all his strength and energy for one grand effort and gave her a | |
kick that sent her clean across the river. On landing she was converted | |
into the mass of rock which remains to this day a memorial of her | |
viciousness and a warning to all future scolds. The metamorphosis was | |
effected by the Tshaumen, but how the necessary force was acquired to | |
send her across the river (here about half a mile wide), or whether the | |
kick was administered by the Tshaumen or the husband, my narrator could | |
not say. He was altogether at a loss to account for conversion of the | |
husband into the mass of rock on the west side of the river; nor can I | |
offer any theory unless it is that he was _petrified_ by astonishment at | |
the result. | |
"Such legends as this would be of interest to ethnologists if they could | |
be procured direct from the Indians, but repeated by men who have little | |
or no knowledge of the utility of legendary lore, and less sympathy with | |
it, they lose much of their value. | |
"Between Forty Mile River and the boundary line no stream of any size | |
joins the Yukon; in fact, there is only one stream, which some of the | |
miners have named Sheep Creek, but as there is another stream further | |
down the river, called by the same name, I have named it Coal Creek. It | |
is five miles below Forty Mile, and comes in from the east, and is a | |
large creek, but not at all navigable. On it some extensive coal seams | |
were seen, which will be more fully referred to further on. | |
* * * * * | |
"At the boundary the river is somewhat contracted, and measures only | |
1,280 feet across in the winter; but in summer, at ordinary water level, | |
it would be about one hundred feet wider. Immediately below the boundary | |
it expands to its usual width, which is about 2,000 feet. The area of | |
the cross section measured is 22,268 feet, the sectional area of the | |
Teslintoo, as determined by Dr. Dawson and already referred to, is 3,809 | |
feet; that of the Lewes at the Teslintoo, from the same authority, is | |
3,015 feet. Had the above cross-section been reduced to the level at | |
which the water ordinarily stands during the summer months, instead of | |
to the height at which it stood in the middle of September when it was | |
almost at its lowest, the sectional area would have been at least 50 per | |
cent more, and at spring flood level about double the above area. | |
"It is a difficult matter to determine the actual discharge at the place | |
of the cross-section, owing to the irregularity in the depth and | |
current, the latter being in the deep channel at the east side, when I | |
tried it in September, approximately 4.8 miles per hour; while on the | |
bar in midstream it was not more than 2.5 miles per hour; and between | |
the bar and the westerly shore there was very little current. | |
"The river above this for some miles was no better for the purpose of | |
cross-section measurement. At the boundary it is narrow and clear of | |
bars and islands for some miles, but here I did not have an opportunity | |
to determine the rate of the current before the river froze up, and | |
after it froze the drift ice was jammed and piled so high that it would | |
have been an almost endless task to cut holes through it. | |
"The current from the boundary down to the confluence with the Porcupine | |
is said to be strong and much the same as that above; from the Porcupine | |
down, for a distance of five or six hundred miles it is called medium | |
and the remainder easy. | |
"From Stewart River to the mouth of the Yukon is about 1,650 miles, and | |
the only difficult place in all this distance is the part near the | |
confluence with the Porcupine, which has evidently been a lake in past | |
ages but is now filled with islands; it is said that the current here is | |
swift, and the channels generally narrow, rendering navigation | |
difficult." | |
CHAPTER III. | |
ADVICE TO BEGINNERS. | |
Men who are thinking of going to the Klondyke regions and taking a trip | |
of this character for the first time, will do well to carefully read the | |
chapter on "Outfit for Miners." It is a great mistake to take anything | |
except what is necessary; the trip is a long arduous one, and a man | |
should not add one pound of baggage to his outfit that can be dispensed | |
with. I have known men who have loaded themselves up with rifles, | |
revolvers and shot-guns. This is entirely unnecessary. Revolvers will | |
get you into trouble, and there is no use of taking them with you, as | |
large game of any character is rarely found on the trip. I have | |
prospected through this region for some years and have only seen one | |
moose. You will not see any large game whatever on your trip from Juneau | |
to Dawson City, therefore do not take any firearms along. | |
You will find a list of the implements for the miner in the chapter on | |
"Outfit for Miners." | |
The miners here are a very mixed class of people. They represent many | |
nationalities and come from all climates. Their lives are certainly not | |
enviable. | |
The regulation miner's cabin is 12 by 14 with walls six feet high and | |
gables eight feet in height. The roof is heavily earthed and the cabin | |
is generally kept very warm. Two, or sometimes three or four men will | |
live in a house of this size. The ventilation is usually bad, the | |
windows being very small. Those miners who do not work their claims | |
during the winter confine themselves to these small huts most of the | |
time. Very often they become indolent and careless, only eating those | |
things which are most easily cooked or prepared. During the busy time in | |
summer when they are shovelling in, they work hard and for long hours, | |
sparing little time for eating and much less for cooking. | |
This manner of living is quite common amongst beginners, and soon leads | |
to debility and sometimes to scurvy. Old miners have learned from | |
experience to value health more than gold, and they therefore spare no | |
expense in procuring the best and most varied outfit of food that can be | |
obtained. | |
In a cold climate such as this, where it is impossible to get fresh | |
vegetables and fruits, it is most important that the best substitutes | |
for these should be provided. Nature helps to supply these wants by | |
growing cranberries and other wild fruits in abundance, but men in | |
summer are usually too busy to avail themselves of these. | |
The diseases met with in this country are dyspepsia, anaemia, scurvy | |
caused by improperly cooked food, sameness of diet, overwork, want of | |
fresh vegetables, overheated and badly ventilated houses; rheumatism, | |
pneumonia, bronchitis, enteritis, cystitis and other acute diseases, | |
from exposure to wet and cold; debility and chronic diseases, due to | |
excesses. | |
Men coming to Klondyke should be sober, strong and healthy. They should | |
be practical men, able to adapt themselves quickly to their | |
surroundings. Special care should be taken to see that their lungs are | |
sound, that they are free from rheumatism and rheumatic tendency, and | |
that their joints, especially knee joints, are strong and have never | |
been weakened by injury, synovitis or other disease. It is also very | |
important to consider their temperaments. Men should be of cheerful, | |
hopeful dispositions and willing workers. Those of sullen, morose | |
natures, although they may be good workers, are very apt, as soon as the | |
novelty of the country wears off, to become dissatisfied, pessimistic | |
and melancholy. | |
CHAPTER IV. | |
OUTFIT FOR MINERS. | |
In giving any advice for outfits for miners, I should first state that | |
it is a great mistake to purchase anything whatever before arriving at | |
Juneau, Alaska. This has been a supply point for that region for upwards | |
of ten years, and store-keepers and supply companies carry in stock | |
exactly what is necessary for the miners. You will find that their | |
prices are reasonable, considering the difference in cost of | |
transportation at any point you might decide to purchase from in the | |
United States; in fact it is the saving of money to buy in Juneau. | |
In the matter of clothing, of course, it must be left to the individual | |
taste and means of the purchaser, but the miners usually adopt the | |
native costume of the region. The boots are generally made by the coast | |
Indians and are of different varieties. The water boot is made of seal | |
and walrus. It is important to take a pair of rubber boots along. | |
Additional boots can be purchased at Dawson City. The native boots cost | |
from two to five dollars a pair. Trousers are generally made from | |
Siberian fawn skins and the skin of the marmot or the ground squirrel. | |
The outer garments are generally made of the marmot skin. The people at | |
Dawson City who are not engaged in mining, such as store-keepers, | |
clerks, etc., generally wear these garments. Good warm flannels are | |
important. Everything in the way of underwear is made of flannel, such | |
as shirts. The cost of flannel shirts at Dawson City is $5. Rubber | |
boots at Dawson City are $10 to $12.00 a pair. Blankets and robes are | |
used for bedding, and should be purchased at Juneau. Wolf skins make the | |
best robes. Good ones cost $100 apiece, but cheaper ones can be obtained | |
from the bear, mink, and red fox and Arctic Hare. Warm socks are made | |
from the skin of the Arctic Hare. | |
If you have any delay at Juneau, you will, probably, be asked to take | |
trips to the Giant Glaciers, but my advice is to stay in Juneau until | |
the steamer is ready to start for Dyea. You will need all the rest you | |
can get before starting up the Pass. | |
In the matter of provisions, the following is a list which is considered | |
sufficient to last a man on his trip from Juneau to Dawson City:-- | |
20 pounds of flour, | |
12 pounds of bacon, | |
12 " " beans, | |
4 " " butter, | |
5 " " vegetables, | |
4 cans of condensed milk, | |
5 pounds of sugar, | |
1 pound of tea, | |
3 pounds of coffee, | |
1 1-2 pound of salt, | |
5 pounds of corn meal, | |
A small portion of pepper and mustard. | |
The following utensils should be taken:-- | |
1 frying pan, | |
1 water kettle, | |
1 Yukon stove, | |
1 bean pot, | |
2 plates, | |
1 tin drinking cup, | |
1 tea pot, | |
1 knife and fork, | |
1 large and 1 small cooking pan. | |
The following tools should he brought as part of the outfit:--These will | |
be found absolutely necessary to build a boat at Lake Lindeman:-- | |
1 jack plane, | |
1 whip saw, | |
1 cross-cut saw, | |
1 axe, | |
1 hatchet, | |
1 hunting-knife. | |
6 pounds of assorted nails, | |
1 pound of oakum, | |
5 pounds of pitch, | |
150 feet of rope, | |
1 Juneau sled. | |
It is also necessary to have one good duck tent and a rubber blanket. | |
A good piece of mosquito netting will not be heavy and will also be very | |
great comfort on the trip. | |
Do not forget to put in a good supply of matches, and take a small | |
supply of fishing tackle, hooks, etc. | |
It is very important that you have a pair of snow glasses to guard | |
against snow blindness. | |
It will be interesting to know the prices at Dawson City for supplies: | |
When I left in June, 1896. | |
Flour was sold in 50 pound bags at $6.00 a bag. | |
Fresh beef was supplied at 50 cents a pound. | |
Bacon was 40 cents. | |
Coffee was 50 cents per pound. | |
Brown sugar was 20 cents per pound and granulated sugar was 25 cents a | |
pound. | |
Condensed milk was 50 cents per can. | |
Pick axes were $6.00 each. | |
Miners' shovels were $2.00 each. | |
Lumber right at Dawson City was $130.00 per thousand feet undressed, and | |
$150.00 per thousand feet dressed. | |
It is well perhaps to advise the traveller to supply himself with a | |
small medicine box which can be purchased in Juneau, but it is not | |
necessary if he enjoys good rugged health. | |
On arriving at Dawson City, luxuries will be found to be very high; what | |
is to be considered a very cheap cigar in the United States, two for 5 | |
cents, sells in Dawson City at 50 cents each. | |
Liquors command very high prices. Whisky sells in the saloons for 50 | |
cents a glass, and fluctuates from $15.00 to $25.00 per gallon, | |
according to the supplies received from the at present overtaxed | |
transportation companies. There was about 12,000 gallons of whisky | |
imported into the territory from Canada the past year. Smoking tobacco | |
was selling at $1.50 a pound and good plug cut and fancy tobacco was | |
selling at $2.00 a pound. | |
The demand for medicine is very light, but the local traders carry a | |
small stock of patent and proprietary medicines. | |
CHAPTER V. | |
MINERS' LUCK. | |
The reports already received of the finds of gold seem beyond belief but | |
the greater part of them are actual facts, and the following came under | |
my personal observation:-- | |
Alexander McDonald, on Claim No. 30, Eldorado, on the Klondyke, started | |
drifting on his claim with four men. The men agreed to work the claim on | |
shares, the agreement being that they should work on shares by each | |
receiving half of what they could get out. The five together took out | |
$95,000.00 in twenty-eight days. The ground dug up was found to measure | |
but 40 square feet. This was an exceptional find. The men are of course | |
working the claim and had 460 square feet on the claim still to work out | |
when I left for the East. | |
People in the East or elsewhere can hardly realize what a small space a | |
mining claim is in this vast and comparatively unexplored territory. | |
William Leggatt on Claim No. 13, Eldorado, together with William Gates | |
and a miner named Shoots, purchased their claim from a miner named | |
Stewart, and his partner, for the sum of $45,000.00. They did not have | |
money to make the payment in cash but made a first payment of $2,000.00 | |
with the agreement to pay the balance of the purchase price, $43,000.00, | |
prior to July 1st, 1897. They sunk a shaft and commenced taking out | |
$1,000.00 per day. | |
They worked the pay dirt until about May 15, 1897, when they found that | |
they had taken out $62,000.00, and the space of the claim worked was | |
only _twenty-four square feet_. | |
A young man who went to the Klondyke recently writes that he is taking | |
out $1,800.00 a day from his claim. | |
It is stated on good authority that one claim yielded $90,000 in 45 | |
feet up and down the stream. Clarence Berry bought out his two partners, | |
paying one $35,000 and the other $60,000, and has taken up $140,000 from | |
the winter dump alone. Peter Wiborg has purchased more ground. He | |
purchased his partner's interest in a claim, paying $42,000. A man by | |
the name of Wall has all he thinks he wants, and is coming out. He sold | |
his interests for $50,000. Nearly all the gold is found in the creek bed | |
on the bed rock, but there are a few good bench diggings. | |
Perhaps the most interesting reading in the _Mining Record_ is the | |
letters written by men in the Klondyke to friends in Juneau. Here is one | |
from "Casey" Moran: | |
DAWSON, March 20, 1897. | |
"FRIEND GEORGE: Don't pay any attention to what any one says, but come | |
in at your earliest opportunity. My God! it is appalling to hear the | |
truth, but nevertheless the world has never produced its equal before. | |
Well, come. That's all. Your friend, | |
"CASEY." | |
Burt Shuler, writing from Klondyke under date of June 5, says: | |
"We have been here but a short time and we all have money. Provisions | |
are much higher than they were two years ago and clothing is clean out | |
of sight. One of the A.C. Co.'s boats was lost in the spring, and there | |
will be a shortage of provisions again this fall. There is nothing that | |
a man could eat or wear that he cannot get a good price for. First-class | |
rubber boots are worth from an ounce of gold to $25 a pair. The price of | |
flour has been raised from $4 to $6, as it was being freighted from | |
Forty Mile. Big money can be made by bringing a small outfit over the | |
trail this fall. Wages have been $15 per day all winter, though a | |
reduction to $10 was attempted, but the miners quit work.... Here is a | |
creek that is eighteen miles long, and, as far as is known, without a | |
miss. There are not enough men in the country to-day to work the claims. | |
Several other creeks show equal promise, but very little work has been | |
done on the latter. I have seen gold dust until it seems almost as cheap | |
as sawdust. If you are coming in, come prepared to stay two years at | |
least; bring plenty of clothing and good rubber boots." | |
Thus far little attempt to mine quartz has been made in the interior of | |
Alaska and the Northwest, although many quartz croppings have been seen. | |
It would cost too much to take in the machinery and to build a plant | |
until transportation facilities are better. In time, however, quartz | |
mining operations will commence, for the placer mines were washed down | |
from the mother veins somewhere. If the washings have made the richest | |
placers in the world, what must the mother veins be? One dares hardly to | |
imagine. | |
This is a brief description of the gold region in the Northwest. | |
For further and more detailed information on Routes and Distances, | |
Transportations, Mining Laws, How to Stake a Claim, Where to Register | |
Your Claim, Modes of Placer Mining and Quartz Mining, Return of Gold | |
from the Diggings, Mortality, Cost of Living, etc., I refer the reader | |
to my book on this subject entitled "Klondyke Facts," a work of about | |
224 pages. It is published in paper covers at 50 cents a copy with maps | |
and illustrations, and is sent postpaid by the publishers on receipt of | |
50 cents. | |
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End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Klondyke Nuggets, by Joseph Ladue | |
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