AN ARCTIC CITY
“You will find a magic city
On the shore of Bering Strait,
Which shall be for you a station
To unload your Arctic freight.
Where the gold of Humboldt’s vision
Has for countless ages lain,
Waiting for the hand of labour
And the Saxon’s tireless brain.”
S. DUNHAM.
Billy, the ex-whaleman, accompanied
us here on board the Thetis, intending to make
his way to Nome City. The commander of the cutter
had let him go free, thinking, no doubt, that the
poor fellow had been sufficiently punished for his
misdeeds by a winter passed amongst the savages of
Northern Siberia. One day during our stay here
a native set out in a skin boat for Nome, and notwithstanding
my warnings and a falling barometer Billy resolved
to accompany him. But shortly after leaving us
the pair encountered a furious gale, which swept them
back to the Cape in an exhausted condition, nearly
frozen to death after a terrible night in the ice.
By the end of a week the latter had
almost disappeared. A vessel could now anchor
with ease off the settlement, but it seemed as though
we should have to wait until the autumn for that happy
consummation. I had therefore decided, after
consultation with the missionary, on risking the journey
in a baidara, when, on the evening of the tenth
day, our longing eyes were gladdened by the sight
of a small steamer approaching the Cape. She
proved to be the Sadie, of the “Alaska
Commercial Company,” returning from her first
trip of the year to Candle Creek, a gold-mining
settlement on the Arctic Ocean, which had been unapproachable
on account of heavy ice. Fortunately for us the
Captain had suddenly resolved to call at Kingigamoot
in case the missionary needed assistance, and on hearing
of our plight at once offered the Expedition a passage
to Nome City, whither the Sadie was bound.
Bidding farewell to our kind friends at the Mission,
without whose assistance we should indeed have fared
badly, we soon were aboard the clean and comfortable
little steamer. A warm welcome awaited us from
her skipper, a jovial Heligolander, who at the same
time imparted to us the joyful news that the war in
South Africa was at an end. Twenty-four hours
later we were once more in civilisation, for during
the summer there is frequent steam communication between
the remote although up-to-date mining city of Nome
and our final destination, New York.
Cape Nome derives its name from the
Indian word “No-me,” which signifies
in English, “I don’t know.”
In former days, when whalers anchored here to trade,
the invariable answer given by the natives to all
questions put by the white men was “No-me,”
meaning that they did not understand, and the name
of the place was thus derived. On Cape Nome,
four years ago an Arctic desert, there now stands a
fine and well-built city. In winter the place
can only be reached by dog-sled, after a fatiguing,
if not perilous, journey across Alaska, but in the
open season you may now travel there almost any week
in large liners from San Francisco. It seemed
like a dream to land suddenly in this modern town,
within a day’s journey of Whalen with all its
savagery and squalor, and it was somewhat trying to
have to walk up the crowded main street in our filthy,
ragged state. Eventually, however, we were rigged
up at a well-stocked clothing establishment in suits
of dittos which would hardly have passed muster in
Bond Street, but which did very well for our purpose.
And that evening, dining at a luxurious hotel, with
people in evening dress, palms, and a string band around
us, I could scarcely realise that only a few days
ago we were practically starving in a filthy Siberian
village. Handsome buildings, churches, theatres,
electric light and telephones are not usually associated
with the ice-bound Arctic, but they are all to be
found in Nome City, which is now connected by telegraph
with the outside world.
And yet the first log-cabin here was
only built in the winter of 1898. This formed
the nucleus of a town of about three thousand inhabitants
by August of the following year, which by the middle
of July 1900 had grown into a colony of more than
twenty thousand people. As sometimes happens,
the first discoverers of gold were not the ones to
profit by their lucky find, for this is what happened.
Early in July 1898 three prospectors, one Blake, an
American, and his two companions, were sailing up
the coast in a small schooner, when, abreast of Cape
Nome, a storm struck their tiny craft and cast her
up on the beach. The gale lasted for several
days, and the men made use of the time prospecting
in the vicinity of the Snake River, which now runs
through the city. At the mouth of Anvil Creek,
good colours were found at a depth of one foot, the
dirt averaging from fifty cents to one dollar the pan.
Satisfied that they had made an important discovery,
the men returned as soon as the weather would permit
to their permanent camp in Golovin Bay, down coast,
for provisions and mining tools, and thus lost, perhaps,
the richest gold-producing property yet discovered
in Alaska. How the secret got about was never
known (perhaps “tanglefoot” was not unconnected
with its disclosure), but three Swedes (one of whom
was then a reindeer-herder and is now a millionaire),
got wind of the news, and quickly and quietly set
out for Cape Nome, which they reached late in September
of the same year. Ascending Snake River, they
prospected Anvil and other Creeks, and in three days
took out $1800 (nearly L400). After staking all
the claims of apparent value, the Swedes returned to
Golovin Bay, and having staked their ground, were
not afraid to communicate the news of their discovery.
It was, therefore, only after all the good claims
had been appropriated that poor Blake and his associates
discovered that their anticipated golden harvest had
been reaped by the energetic Scandinavians.
Fresh finds speedily followed, notably
of one rich spot about five miles west of Nome, where
$9000 was rocked out of a hole twelve foot square
and four feet deep in three days. Then gold began
to appear on the beach. Small particles of it
were found in the very streets, so that this Arctic
township may almost be said to have been at one time
literally paved with gold. In 1899 the seashore
alone produced between $1,750,000 and $2,000,000.
The presence here of a numerous and
influential Press astonished me more than anything
else. Nome City can boast of no less than three
newspapers, and no sooner was the Expedition comfortably
installed in the “Golden Gate Hotel” than
it was besieged by the usual reporters. The rapidity
with which the interviews were published would have
done credit to a London evening paper, and I could
only admire the versatility of the gentleman who,
only four hours after our arrival, brought out a special
edition of the Nome Nugget, containing a portrait
of His Royal Highness the Duke of the Abruzzi in full
naval uniform, which was described as his humble servant:
the writer! The jealousy amongst these Arctic
editors is as keen and bitter as it ever was in Eatanswill,
and the next day the following paragraph appeared
in the News, a rival publication:
“One of our contemporaries has
celebrated the rescue of some explorers from starvation
by publishing the picture of Prince Louis of Savoy
under the caption ‘Harry de Windt.’
But the Italian prince is also an explorer, and probably
all explorers look alike to the Nugget!”
Nome City impressed me at first as
being a kind of squalid Monte Carlo. There is
the same unrest, the same feverish quest for gold,
and the same extravagance of life as in the devil’s
garden on the blue Mediterranean. On landing,
I was struck with the number of well-dressed men and
women who rub shoulders in the street with the dilapidated-looking
mining element. In the same way palatial banks
and prim business houses are incongruously scattered
amongst saloons and drinking bars. Front Street,
facing the sea, is the principal thoroughfare, so crowded
at midday that you can scarcely get along. It
is paved with wood, imported here at enormous expense,
and a pavement of the same material is raised about
two feet above the roadway. Here are good shops
where everything is cheap, for during the great gold-rush
Nome was over-stocked. Wearing apparel may be
purchased here even cheaper than in San Francisco,
and everything is on the same scale; oranges, for
instance, which two years ago cost one dollar apiece
and which are now sold in the streets for five cents.
Luxurious shaving saloons abound, also restaurants one
kept by a Frenchman who is deservedly reaping a golden
harvest.
In summer there is no rest here throughout
the twenty-four hours. People wander aimlessly
about the streets, eternally discussing quartz and
placer-claims, and recent strikes, which here form
the sole topic of conversation, like a run on zero
or the cards at Monaco. Port Said is suggested
by the dusty, flashy streets and cosmopolitan crowd,
also by the fact that gambling saloons and even shops
remain open all night, or so long as customers are
stirring, which is generally from supper until breakfast-time,
for at this season of perpetual daylight no one ever
seemed to go to bed. The sight of the principal
street at four in the morning, with music halls, restaurants,
drinking and dancing saloons blazing with electricity
in the cold, grey light of a midnight sun was both
novel and unique. At this hour the night-houses
were always crowded, and you might re-visit them at
midday and find the same occupants still out of bed,
drinking, smoking, and gambling, yet as quiet and
orderly in their demeanour as a company of Quakers.
For, notwithstanding its large percentage of the riff-raff
element, crime is very rare in Nome. I frequently
visited the gambling saloons, where gum-booted, mud-stained
prospectors elbowed women in dainty Parisian gowns
and men in the conventional swallowtail, but I never
once saw a shot fired, nor even a dispute, although
champagne flowed like water. These places generally
consisted of a spacious and gaudily decorated hall
with a drinking bar surrounded by various roulette,
crap, and faro tables. The price
of a drink admitted you to an adjoining music hall,
where I witnessed a variety entertainment that would
scarcely have passed the London County Council.
But gambling was the chief attraction, and it seemed
to be fair, for cheating is clearly superfluous with
three zeros! Many of the frequenters of these
night-houses appeared to be foreigners, chiefly Swedes
and Germans, and a few Frenchmen, and the company
was very mixed, Jews, Greeks, and Levantines being
numerous amongst the men, whilst the ladies were mostly
flashily dressed birds of passage from San Francisco,
only here for a brief space before flitting South,
like the swallows, at the first fall of snow.
There was a delightfully free-and-easy,
laisser-aller air about everybody and everything
at Nome City, which would, perhaps, have jarred upon
an ultra-respectable mind. Most of the ladies
at the Golden Gate Hotel were located there in couples,
unattended, permanently at any rate, by male protectors.
The bedroom adjoining mine was occupied by two of
these Californian houris, whose habits were
apparently not framed on Lucretian lines. For
the manager appeared at my bedside early one morning
with a polite request that I would rise and dress as
quietly as possible, as the “ladies” next
door had just gone to bed for the first time in three
days, and rather needed a rest!
A stroll through the streets of Nome
at midday was also amusing, although the sun blazed
down with a force which recalled summer-days in Hong-kong
or Calcutta. It was then hard to picture these
warm and sunlit streets swept by howling blizzards
and buried in drifts which frequently rise to the
roofs of the houses, until their inmates have to be
literally dug out after a night of wind and snow.
But when we were at Nome, Cairo in August would have
seemed cool by comparison, and I began to doubt whether
ice here could ever exist, for nothing around was
suggestive of a Northern clime. The open-air life,
muslin-clad women, gaily striped awnings, and Neapolitan
fruit-sellers seemed to bear one imperceptibly to
some sunlit town of Italy or Spain, thousands of miles
away from this gloomy world (in winter) of cold and
darkness. Only occasionally a skin-clad Eskimo
from up coast would slouch shyly through the busy
throng, rudely recalling the fact that we were still
within the region of raw seal-meat and walrus-hide
huts.
Most of the prospectors I met here
had no use for the place as a gold-mining centre,
but I should add that these grumblers were usually
inexperienced men, who had come in with no knowledge
whatever of quartz or placer-mining. On the other
hand, fortunes have been made with remarkable ease
and rapidity, as in the case of one of the first pioneers,
Mr. Lindeberg, a young Swede (already mentioned), who
arrived here as a reindeer-herder and now owns the
largest share of Anvil Creek. From this about
$3,000,000 have been taken in two years, and the lucky
proprietor has recently laid a line of railway to his
claims, about seven miles out of Nome. Anvil
Creek has turned out the largest nugget ever found
in Alaska.
Generally speaking, however, Nome
is no place for a poor man, although when we were
there five dollars a day (and all found) could be easily
earned on the Creeks. I invariably found men connected
with large companies enthusiastic, and grub-stakers
down on their luck. Lack of water in this district
has proved a stumbling block which will shortly be
dispelled by machinery. Anvil Creek will probably
yield double the output hitherto extracted when this
commodity has been turned on, and this is now being
done at an enormous cost by its enterprising proprietors.
But the days are past when nuggets were picked up here
on the beach, for it now needs costly machinery to
find them in the interior. Even during the first
mad rush, when Nome was but a town of tents, many
who expected to find the country teeming with gold
were disappointed. In those days men would often
rush ashore, after restless nights passed on board
ship in wakeful anticipation, catch up half a dozen
handfuls of earth, and finding nothing, cry, “I
told you it was all a fake,” and re-embark on
the first steamer for San Francisco. It therefore
came to pass that patient, hard-working men like Lindeberg,
inured to hardship and privation, whose primary object
in the country was totally unconnected with mining,
have made colossal fortunes solely by dogged perseverance
and the sweat of their brow. The general opinion
here seemed to be that at the present time a man with
a capital of, say, L10,000 could succeed here, but
even then it was doubtful whether the money could
not be more profitably invested in a more temperate
clime, and one involving less risk to life and limb.
Although epidemics occasionally occur,
Nome cannot be called unhealthy. The greatest
variation of temperature is probably from 40 deg.
below zero in winter to 90 deg. above in summer,
and the dry, intense cold we experienced in Northern
Siberia is here unknown. Only a short time ago
the sea journey to Nome was no less hazardous than
the land trip formerly was over the dreaded Chilkoot
Pass and across the treacherous lakes to Dawson City.
In those days catastrophes were only too frequent
in that graveyard of the Pacific, Bering Sea, and this
was chiefly on account of unseaworthy ships patched
up for passenger-traffic by unscrupulous owners in
San Francisco. Nome City can now be reached by
the fine steamships of the “Alaska Commercial
Company” as safely and comfortably as New York
in an Atlantic liner, but these boats are unfortunately
in the minority, and even while we were at Nome, passengers
were arriving there almost daily on board veritable
coffin-ships, in which I would not willingly navigate
the Serpentine. Shipping disasters have been
frequent not only at sea, but also while landing here,
for Nome has no harbour, but merely an open, shallow
roadstead, fully exposed to the billows of the ocean.
There is therefore frequently a heavy surf along the
beach, and here many a poor miner has been drowned
within a few yards of the Eldorado he has risked his
all to reach.
Intending prospectors should know
that nearly every available mile of country from Norton
Sound to the Arctic Ocean has now been staked out,
and before claims are now obtained they must be paid
for. American missionaries have not been behind-hand
in the race for wealth, and in connection with this
subject, the following lines by a disappointed Klondiker
are not without humour:
“Then we climbed the
cold creeks near a mission
That is run by
the agents of God,
Who trade Bibles and Prayer-books
to heathen
For ivory, sealskins
and cod.
At last we were sure we had
struck it,
But alas! for
our hope of reward,
The landscape from sea-beach
to sky-line
Was staked in
the name of the Lord!"
That these lines, however, do not
apply to all Alaskan missionaries I can testify
from a personal knowledge of our good friend Mr. Lopp’s
comfortless, primitive life, and unselfish devotion
to the cause of Christianity.