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WHITEHORSE IS HEAVEN FOR A SINGLE GIRL | Maclean s

WHITEHORSE IS HEAVEN FOR A SINGLE GIRL | Maclean s
archive.macleans.ca - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from archive.macleans.ca Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

From Sombrero to Cocked Hat | Maclean s | November 1, 1929

MONSTERS ON THE KLONDIKE | Maclean s | September 1, 1948

MONSTERS ON THE KLONDIKE | Maclean s | September 1, 1948
archive.macleans.ca - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from archive.macleans.ca Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

9780877424208: walking the Yukon: A Solo Trek Through the Land of Beyond - AbeBooks

Leaving Skagway, Alaska, in June 1990, Chris Townsend followed the footsteps of the Klondike goldrushers over Chilkoot Pass to Whitehorse, then north across the Yukon s rugged mountains, wild rivers, and muskeg swamps. 83 days later he crossed the Arctic Circle, struggling to the end of his route through two feet of snow. A travel writer in the best 19th-century tradition, Townsend is little given to introspection. His focus is outward, on history, geology, and wildlife, all of which the Yukon offers in abundance. Everywhere he finds reminders of the gaunt men with gold in their eyes and frost-bitten souls chronicled by Robert Service almost a century ago. Townsend keeps meeting fascinating characters, and something about him encourages them to share their stories. Also featured in the book are appendices on gear, provisions, routes, and clothing.

Whatever happened to the ton of gold ship that kickstarted the Klondike Gold Rush?

on local history by local historian David Reamer. Have a question about Anchorage history or an idea for a future article? Go to the form at the bottom of this story. A cheering throng of thousands met the SS Portland as it pulled up to Seattle’s Schwabacher Dock on July 17, 1897. The spectators chanted, over and over, to see the gold. The perhaps slightly bewildered but good-humored miners on board the steamer waved in return. Today, a plaque at the Seattle Waterfront Park notes the location of the festivities. The Seattle Post-Intelligencer ran an extra edition that day with the details. The newspaper declared, “This morning the steamship Portland, from St. Michaels for Seattle, passed up Sound with more than a ton of solid gold on board.” Of the 68 passengers, “hardly a man has less than $7,000 and one or two have more than $100,000 in yellow nuggets.”

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