A RIVER OF GOLD
The heading of this chapter is not
suggested by a flight of fancy, but by solid fact,
for there is not a mile along either bank of the Yukon
River, over 2000 miles long from the great lakes to
Bering Sea, where you cannot dip in a pan and get
a colour. Gold may not be found in paying quantities
so near the main stream, but it is there.
From Nome to Dawson City is about
1600 miles, the terminus of the Yukon River steamers
being St. Michael, on Bering Sea. When I was at
this place in 1896, it consisted of two or three small
buildings of the “Alaska Commercial Company,”
a Russian church and ruined stockade, and about a
dozen Eskimo wigwams. During my stay there,
on that occasion, one small cargo-boat arrived from
the South, and a solitary whaler put in for water,
their appearance causing wild excitement amongst the
few white settlers.
Although the civilisation of Nome
City had somewhat prepared me for surprises, I scarcely
expected to find St. Michael converted from a squalid
settlement into a modern city almost as fine as Nome
itself. For here also were a large hotel, good
shops, electric light, and a roadstead alive with
shipping of every description from the Eskimo kayak
to the towering liner from ’Frisco. We arrived
at 6 A.M. after a twelve hours’ journey from
Nome, but even at that early hour the clang of a ship-yard
and shriek of steam syrens were awakening the once
silent and desolate waters of Norton Sound. St.
Michael feeds and clothes the Alaskan miner, despatches
goods and stores into the remotest corner of this
barren land, and has thus rapidly grown from a dreary
little settlement into a centre of mercantile activity.
Seven years ago I journeyed down the Yukon towards
Siberia and a problematical Paris in a small crowded
steamer, built of roughly hewn logs, and propelled
by a fussy little engine of mediaeval construction.
We then slept on planks, dined in our shirt-sleeves,
and scrambled for meals which a respectable dog would
have turned from in disgust. On the present occasion
we embarked on board a floating palace, a huge stern-wheeler,
as large and luxuriously appointed as the most modern
Mississippi flyer. The Hannah’s
airy deck-halls were of dainty white, picked out with
gold, some of the well-furnished state-rooms had baths
attached, and a perfect cuisine partly atoned
for the wearisome monotony of a long river voyage.
A delay here of twenty-four hours
enabled me to re-visit the places I had known only
too well while wearily awaiting the Bear here
for five weeks in 1896. But everything was changed
beyond recognition. Only two landmarks remained
of the old St. Michael: the agency of the “Alaska
Commercial Company,” and the wooden church built
by the Russians during their occupation of the country.
A native hut near the beach, where I was wont to smoke
my evening pipe with an old Eskimo fisherman, was
now a circulating library; the ramshackle rest-house,
once crowded with “Toughs,” a fashionable
hotel with a verandah and five o’clock tea-tables
for the use of the select. And here I may note
that tea is, or was, all that the traveller can get
here, for St. Michael is now a military reservation,
where even the sale of beer or claret is strictly
prohibited. My old friend Mikouline would have
fared badly throughout this part of the journey, for
from here on to Dawson City alcoholic refreshment
of any kind was absolutely unprocurable, and although
the heat was tropical, iced water, not always of the
purest description, was the only cold beverage obtainable
at St. Michael or on the river. I was afterwards
informed that the initiated always carry their own
cellar, and having a rooted antipathy to tea at dinner
(especially when served in conjunction with tinned
soup), regretted that I had not ascertained this fact
before we left Nome.
But although this liquor law was enforced
with severity ashore its infringement afloat was openly
winked at by the authorities. Soldiers were stationed
night and day with loaded rifles on the beach to prevent
the importation of spirits, and yet within half a mile
of them, anchored in the roadstead, were four or five
hulks, floating public-houses, where a man might get
as drunk as he pleased with impunity, and often for
the last time, especially when a return to the shore
had to be made through a nasty sea in a skin kayak.
It was even whispered that “Hootch” (a
fiery poison akin to “Tanglefoot”) was
manufactured at the barracks, and retailed by the
soldiers to the natives, the very class for whose
protection against temptation the prohibitive law was
framed.
“All my men are intoxicated,”
the Commandant at St. Michael was said to have exclaimed.
“So I suppose I had better get drunk myself.”
But there was little love lost here
between the civil and military element, and these
were probably libels, for I have seldom seen a better
drilled or disciplined set of men, although the hideous
uniform of the American linesman is less suggestive
of a soldier than of a railway guard.
The heat at St. Michael was even more
oppressive than at Nome, and it was impossible to
stir out of doors at midday with any comfort.
We were therefore not sorry to embark on board the
Hannah, of the “Alaska Commercial Company,”
which contained one hundred state-rooms, of which
barely a dozen were occupied, for at this season of
the year travellers are mostly outward bound.
The White Pass railway has practically killed the
Yukon passenger trade, for people now travel to Dawson
by rail, and to Nome by sea direct. They used
to go by ocean steamer to St. Michael, and thence
ascend the river to Dawson, for in those days the perilous
Chilkoot Pass was the only direct way from the South
into the Klondike region. Our fellow travellers,
therefore, lacked in numbers but not in originality,
for they included a millionaire in fustian, who preferred
to eat with the crew; a young and well-dressed widow
from San Francisco, who owned claims on the Tanana
and worked them herself; a confidence-man with a gambling
outfit, who had struck the wrong crowd; and last, but
not least, Mrs. Z., recently a well-known prima
donna in the United States, who, although in the
zenith of her youthful fame and popularity, had abandoned
a brilliant career to share the fortunes of her husband,
an official of the “Alaska Commercial Company,”
in this inartistic land. I found the conditions
of travel on the Yukon as completely changed as everything
else. Even the technical expressions once used
by the gold-mining fraternity were now replaced by
others. Thus the “Oldtimer”
had become “a Sourdough,” and his antithesis,
the “Tenderfoot,” was now called a “Chechako.”
A word now frequently heard (and unknown in 1896)
was “Musher,” signifying a prospector who
is not afraid to explore the unknown. This word
is of Canadian origin, and probably a corruption of
the French “Marcheur.” Various
passengers on board the Hannah were said to
be returning to their homes with “Cold feet,”
also a new term, defining the disappointed gold-seeker
who is leaving the country in disgust.
But a change which excited both my
admiration and approval was that in the accommodation
provided on board the Hannah and the really
excellent dinner to which we sat down every day, although
enforced teetotalism was somewhat irritating to those
accustomed to wine with their meals. It is no
exaggeration to say that an overland journey may now
be made from Skagway to Nome City with as little discomfort
as a trip across Switzerland, if the tourist keeps
to the beaten track by rail and steamer. But
the slightest deviation on either side will show him
what Alaskan travel really was, and he will then probably
curse the country and all that therein lies.
The tourist may even experience some trying hours
on the river-boat, for although the latter is fitted
with cunning contrivances for their exclusion, mosquitoes
invariably swarm, and the Yukon specimen is so unequalled
for size and ferocity that I once heard an old miner
declare that this virulent insect was “as big
as a rabbit and bit at both ends.” But
this is about the only discomfort that travellers
by the main route through Alaska need now endure.
Otherwise the path of travel has been made almost as
smooth as Cook’s easiest tours.
As the reader may one day summon the
courage to visit this great Northern land, it may
not be out of place to give a brief history of Alaska,
which, only thirty years ago, was peopled solely by
Indians and a few Russian settlers, and was practically
unknown to the civilised world.
It has always seemed strange to me
that Russia, a country with a world-wide reputation
for diplomatic shrewdness, should have made such an
egregious error as to part with Alaska at a merely
nominal price, the more so that when the transfer
took place gold had long been known to exist in this
Arctic province. Vitus Bering discovered traces
of it as far back as the eighteenth century. William
H. Seward, Secretary of State under President Johnson,
was mainly responsible for the purchase of this huge
territory, which covers an area of about 600,000 square
miles, measuring 1000 miles from north to south and
3500 miles from east to west. It is said that
the coast line alone, if straightened out, would girdle
the globe.
The formal transfer of Alaska to the
United States was made on October 18, 1867, and its
acquisition was first regarded with great disfavour
by the majority of the American public. Although
only $7,200,000 was paid for the whole of Russian
America, the general opinion in New York and other
large cities of the Union was that “Seward’s
ice-box,” as it was then derisively termed,
would prove a white elephant, and that the statesman
responsible for its purchase had been, plainly speaking,
sold. It was only when the marvellous riches
of Nome were disclosed that people began to realise
what the annexation of the country really meant, although
even at this period Alaska had already repaid itself
many times over. Klondike had already startled
the civilised world, but this is, of course, in British
territory. Nevertheless, between the years 1870
and 1900 Secretary Seward’s investment had returned
nearly $8,000,000, and within the same period fisheries
and furs had yielded no less than $100,000,000.
Gold and timber had produced $40,000,000 more, making
a clear profit of nearly $200,000,000 in thirty years.
It is sad to think that the once maligned
politician who acquired this priceless treasure did
not live to see his golden dream realised. A few
days before his death the Secretary was asked what
he considered the most important measure of his official
career.
“The purchase of Alaska,”
was the reply, “but it will take the people a
generation to find it out.”
Alaska may be divided into two great
south-east and western districts. Mount St. Elias,
nearly 20,000 ft. high, marks the dividing line at
141 deg. west long., running north from this
point to the Arctic Ocean. The diversity of climate
existing throughout this huge province from its southern
coast to the shores of the Polar Sea is naturally very
great, and the marvellous contrast between an Alaskan
June and December has nowhere been more picturesquely
and graphically described than by General Sir William
Butler in his “Great Lone Land”: “In
summer a land of sound a land echoed with
the voices of birds, the ripple of running water,
the mournful music of the waving pine branch; in winter
a land of silence, its great rivers glimmering in
the moonlight, wrapped in their shrouds of ice, its
still forests rising weird and spectral against the
auroral-lighted horizon, its nights so still that the
moving streamers across the Northern skies seem to
carry to the ear a sense of sound!”
On the North Pacific coast densely
wooded islands are so numerous that from Victoria
in British Columbia to the town of Skagway at the head
of the Lynn Canal there are but a few miles of open
sea. Inland, almost as far as the Arctic Circle,
mountain ranges, some of great altitude, are everywhere
visible. There are also many large lakes, surrounded
by the swamps, and impenetrable forests, that formerly
rendered Alaska so hard a nut for the explorer to
crack. Only a few miles north of the coast range
fertile soil and luxurious vegetation are replaced
by Arctic deserts. Here, for eight months of
the year, plains and rivers are merged into one vast
wilderness of ice, save during the short summer when
dog-roses bloom and the coarse luxurious grass is plentifully
sprinkled with daisies and other wild flowers.
In Central Alaska the ground is perpetually frozen
to a depth of several inches, and in the North wells
have been sunk through forty feet of solid ice.
Alaska is fairly healthy, although
the temperature in the interior ranges from 90 deg.
in the shade to over 60 deg. below zero Fahr.
May, June, and July are the best months for travelling,
for the days are then generally bright and pleasant
and the heat tempered by a cool breeze. On the
coast during the summer rain and fogs prevail, and
the sun is only occasionally visible, for there are
on an average only sixty-six fine days throughout
the year. In 1884, a rainfall of sixty-four inches
was registered at Unalaska. The rain seldom pours
down here, but falls in a steady drizzle from a hopelessly
leaden sky, under which a grey and sodden landscape
presents a picture of dreary desolation. But this
damp cheerlessness has its advantages, for incessant
humidity sheds perpetual verdure over the coast-districts,
where the thermometer rarely falls as low as zero
Fahr. Winter only sets in here about the 1st of
December, and snow has vanished by the end of May,
while in the interior lakes and rivers are still in
the grip of the ice. Near the sea the soil is
rich and root-crops are prolific, while horses and
cattle thrive well, also the ports as far north as
Cook’s Inlet are open to navigation all the
year round, so that, taking all these facts into consideration,
coast settlements are preferable as a permanent residence
to those of the interior, with the exception, perhaps,
of Dawson City.
It is said that the mild climate of
Southern Alaska is due to the Japan Gulf Stream, which
first strikes the North American continent at the
Queen Charlotte Island in latitude 50 deg.
north. At this point the stream divides, one
part going northward and westward along the coast of
Alaska, and the other southward along the coast of
British Columbia, Washington territory, Oregon, and
California. Thus the climate of these states
is made mild and pleasant in precisely the same way
as the shores of Spain, Portugal and France by the
ocean currents of the Atlantic.
Notwithstanding the society of pleasant
fellow travellers, life on board the Hannah
became intolerably tedious after the first few days.
The Lower Yukon is not an attractive river from a
picturesque point of view, and only the upper portion
of its two thousand odd miles possesses any scenic
interest. Grey and monotonous tundra rolling away
to the horizon, and melancholy, grey-green shrubs
lining the stream formed the daily and dismal landscape
during the first week. There is literally nothing
of interest to be seen along the banks of the Yukon
from its mouth to Dawson City, save perhaps the Catholic
mission of the Holy Cross at Koserefski; which is
prettily situated within a stone’s throw of
the river, and consists of several neat wooden buildings
comprising a beautiful little chapel and school for
native children. The Hannah remained here
for some hours, which enabled me to renew my acquaintance
with the good nuns, and to visit the schoolhouse, where
some Indian children of both sexes were at work.
French was the language spoken, and it seemed strange
to hear the crisp, clear accent in this deserted corner
of civilisation. An old acquaintance of my former
voyage, pretty Sister Winifred, showed us around the
garden, with its smooth green lawns, bright flower-beds,
and white statue of Our Lady in a shrine of pine boughs.
All the surroundings wore an air of peace and homeliness
suggestive of some quiet country village in far-away
France, and I could have lingered here for hours had
not large and bloodthirsty mosquitoes swarmed from
the woods around and driven me reluctantly back to
the steamer.
At Koserefski we bade a final farewell
to the “Tundra” and its Eskimo, and from
here onwards encountered only dense forests and the
unsavoury and generally sulky Alaskan Indian.
They are not a pleasing race, for laziness and impudence
seemed to be the chief characteristics of those with
whom we had to deal throughout the former journey.
On this occasion we met with very few natives, who
have apparently been driven out of the principal towns
by the white man. The Alaskan Indian’s once
picturesque costume is now discarded for clothes of
European cut, which render him even more unattractive
than ever. Moccasins and his pretty bark-canoe
are now the only distinctive mark of the Siwash,
who is as fond of strong drink as the Eskimo, and
also resembles the latter in his boundless capacities
for lying and theft. But there are probably not
more than 1500 natives in all inhabiting the Yukon
region, and these are rapidly decreasing. I do
not think I saw more than fifty Indians throughout
the journey from Cape Nome to Skagway, the terminus
of the “White Pass” railway. South
of this, along the coast to Vancouver, they were more
numerous, and apparently less lazy and degraded than
the Indians of the interior.
On board the Hannah the talk
was all of gold, and every one, from captain to cook,
seemed indirectly interested in the capture of the
precious metal. The purser had claims to dispose
of, and even your bedroom steward knew of a likely
ledge of which he would divulge the position for
a consideration. The Koyukuk and Tanana rivers
on this part of the Yukon are new ground, and are
said to be promising, but I could hear of no reliable
discoveries of any extent on either of these streams.
“Cities” on the American
Yukon consist of perhaps a score or more of log huts,
which Yankee push and enterprise have invested with
the dignity of towns. “Rampart City,”
for instance, which the Hannah reached on the
sixth day in from the coast, consisted of only about
thirty one-storied wooden dwellings, the erection
of which had been due to the discovery of gold in
the vicinity, although during the previous year (1901)
the claims around had only produced L40,000. And
yet even this tiny township could boast of two hotels,
five or six saloons, electric light and two newspapers:
the Alaska Forum and Rampart Sun.
The circulation of these journals was not disclosed
to the writer, who was, however, gravely interviewed
by the editors of both publications. Just before
leaving Rampart City news of the postponement of the
coronation of his Majesty King Edward VII. on account
of serious illness, reached us, and it was gratifying
to note the respectful sympathy for the Queen of England
displayed by the American inhabitants of this remote
Alaskan settlement.
Four days after this the hideous Yukon
flats were reached, a vast desert of swamp and sand
dunes, through which the great river diffuses itself,
like a sky-rocket, into hundreds of lesser streams,
lakes, and aqueous blind alleys, which severely taxed
the skill and patience of our skipper. Here the
outlook was even more depressing than on the dreary
Lena. Before reaching Circle City the Yukon attains
its most northerly point and then descends in a south-easterly
direction for the remainder of its course. At
the bend it is joined by the Porcupine River; and here
is Fort Yukon, once an important trading coast of the
Hudson Bay Company, but now an overgrown clearing
in the forest, of which a few miserable Indians in
grimy tents disputed the possession with dense clouds
of mosquitoes. But even the appearance of Circle
City, once a prosperous mining town and now a
collection of ruined log-huts, was hailed with delight
by the hopelessly bored passengers in the Hannah,
for it meant the end of another stage in this wearisome
journey.
There is nothing exciting or even
picturesque about a modern Alaskan mining camp.
Bowlers and loud checks have superseded the red flannel
shirt and sombrero, and while missions and libraries
abound, Judge Lynch and the crack of a six-shooter
are almost unknown in these townships, the conventional
security of which would certainly have amazed and
disgusted the late Bret Harte. When last I travelled
down the Yukon, Circle City (now called Silent City)
was known as the “Paris of Alaska,” and
there was certainly more gaiety, or rather life, of
a tawdry, disreputable kind here than at Forty Mile,
the only other settlement of any size on the river,
for Klondike was not then in existence. Circle
City could then boast of two theatres, a so-called
music hall, and several gambling and dancing saloons,
which, together with other dens of a worse description,
were now silent heaps of grass-grown timber. In
those days the dancing rooms were crowded nightly,
and I once attended a ball here in a low, stuffy apartment,
festooned with flags, with a drinking bar at one end.
The orchestra consisted of a violin and guitar, the
music being almost drowned by a noisy crowd at the
bar, where a wrangle took place on an average every
five minutes. One dollar was charged by the saloon-keeper
for the privilege of a dance with a gaily painted
lady (of a class with which most mining camps are only
too familiar), who received twenty-five cents as her
share of the transaction. The guests numbered
about sixty, and about a third that number of dogs
which had strayed in through the open doorway.
When an attendant (in shirt-sleeves) proceeded to
walk round and sprinkle the rough boards with resin,
the dancers fairly yelled with delight, for a hungry
cur closely followed him, greedily devouring the stuff
as it fell! But although in those days the Yukon
gold-digger was as tough a customer as ever rocked
a cradle in the wildest days of Colorado, there was
a rough and friendly bonhomie amongst the inhabitants
of Circle City which is now lacking in the Klondike
metropolis.
Between Rampart and Circle Cities
we experienced an annoyance almost as great as that
caused by the mosquitoes, in the shape of clouds of
pungent smoke caused by forest fires. In these
densely wooded regions a smouldering match dropped
by a careless miner often sets hundreds of square
miles of timber ablaze. As the natives are also
constantly clearing and burning the woods for cultivation,
the air was seldom entirely clear, and often so thick
as to cause irritation in the eyes, especially after
suffering, as most of us had, from snow blindness and
incipient ophthalmia. On still, sultry days the
pain resulting from smoke and the glare off the river
was almost as severe as that which I had experienced
in the Arctic. Mosquitoes now attacked us in myriads,
and the heat was insupportable, but the cooler air
of the upper deck was rendered unattainable by showers
of sparks which constantly issued from the funnels
of the hard-driven Hannah.
At Eagle City, consisting of about
thirty log-huts, we reached for the first time the
end of a telegraph wire, and I was able to cable
home the safe arrival in Alaska of the Expedition;
and none too soon, for the total loss of the latter
had already been reported in London. How this
baseless rumour was spread remains a mystery, but fortunately
the wire announcing our safety was published in the
London newspapers only three days after the public
had read of a probable disaster. Eagle City,
although even smaller than Rampart, also boasted of
a newspaper, the enterprising owner of which made
me a tempting offer for the tiny silk banner which
had shared our fortunes all the way from France.
But “the flag which braved a thousand years”
was not for sale, and it now adorns the walls of the
author’s smoking-room, the only Union Jack which,
so far as I know, has safety accomplished the journey
from Paris to New York by land.
Above Eagle City the journey was rendered
even more weary by frequent stoppages. Once we
tugged for twenty-four hours at a stranded steamer,
and finally got her off a sand-bank at considerable
risk to ourselves. Every hundred miles or so
the Hannah would tie up to take in fuel at
some wood-cutter’s shanty, where the cool, green
forest, with its flowers and ferns, looked inviting
from the deck, but to land amongst them was to be
devoured by clouds of ferocious mosquitoes. De
Clinchamp was the happiest being on board, for his
days were passed in developing the hundreds of photographs
taken since our departure from Yakutsk; and Stepan
was perhaps the most forlorn, amongst strangers unacquainted
with his language. The poor fellow had been as
gay as a cricket amidst the dangers of the Arctic,
but here he was as timid as a lost child, gazing hour
by hour into the water, smoking endless cigarettes,
and thinking, perhaps, of his wife and little “Isba”
in now distant Siberia.
On July 15 we passed the boundary
into British North-west territory, and shortly afterwards
hailed the British flag fluttering from the barracks
at Forty Mile City as an old and long-lost friend.
This was the chief town of the Upper Yukon in the
palmy days of the Hudson Bay Company when furs rather
than gold were the attraction to these gloomy regions.
In 1896 this was the highest point reached by the
larger river-boats, and here, on that occasion, we
left the tiny skiff in which we had travelled for
over a month on the great lakes, and boarded the steamer
for St. Michael. Forty Mile then consisted of
eighty or ninety log-huts on a mud bank, where numerous
tree-stumps, wood-shavings, empty tins, and other
rubbish littered the ground amongst the houses, adding
to the general appearance of dirt and neglect.
But now several neat, new buildings have arisen from
the ashes of the old; streets have been laid out with
regularity; and a trim fort is occupied by a khaki-clad
detachment of the North-west Mounted Police.
Forty Mile is more of a military post than anything
else, most of its prospectors having left the place
for the Klondike, although a few years back this was
the chief rendezvous of Yukon pioneers. These,
however, were mostly “grub-stakers,”
quite content if enough gold-dust was forthcoming
to keep the wolf from the door. In those days
a nugget of any size was a rarity, and fortunes were
made here, not by the miner, but by those who fed and
clothed him. For instance, in 1886 Forty Mile
Creek yielded less than L30,000, but at this time
the total number of prospectors in the entire territory
of the Upper Yukon was under 250, and very few of
these who could avoid it wintered in the country.
At last, on the thirteenth day, we
neared our destination. “It seems a month
since we left St. Michael,” says the confidence-man
as for the last time we watch the pine forest darken
and the great river fade into a silvery grey in the
twilight. From the brightly lit saloon come the
tinkle of a piano and the clear notes of Mrs. Z.’s
voice. Her pathetic little melody is familiar
to the wanderer in every lonely land:
“All the world am sad
and dreary
Everywhere I roam!”
But, fortunately for us, the Yukon,
like the Suwanee River, must have an ending, and I
am awakened early next morning to find the Hannah
moored alongside a busy wharf at Dawson City.