Klondike

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by Pierre Berton


  Pike, Warburton Through the Subarctic Forest, New York, 1967.

  Pocock, Roger A Frontiersman, London, 1904.

  Price, Julius M. From Euston to the Klondike, London, 1898.

  Pringle, Rev. George F. Tillicums of the Trail, Toronto, 1922.

  Adventures in the Service, Toronto, 1929.

  Quieti, Glenn Chesney Pay Dirt, New York, 1936.

  Rickard, T. A. Through the Yukon and Alaska, San Francisco, 1909.

  “The Klondike Rush,” British Columbia Historical Quarterly, July, 1942.

  The Romance of Mining, Toronto, 1944.

  Robertson, William Norris Yukon Memories, Toronto, 1930.

  Robins, Elizabeth Raymond and I, London, 1956.

  Rockwell, Kate “I Was Queen of the Klondike,” Alaska Sportsman, August, 1944.

  Romig, Elsie Craig A Pioneer Woman in Alaska, Caldwell, Idaho, 1948.

  Ross, Victor A History of the Canadian Bank of Commerce, Vol. II, Toronto, 1922.

  Ryan, Gerald “Little Known Facts about the Life and Death of Skagway’s Soapy Smith,” Alaska Life, April, 1942.

  Sage, W. N., ed. “Record of a Trip to Dawson, 1898” [Diary of John Smith], British Columbia Historical Quarterly, Jan./April, 1952.

  Samuels, Charles The Magnificent Rube: The Life and Times of Tex Rickard, New York, 1957.

  Scearce, Stanley Northern Lights to Fields of Gold, Caldwell, Idaho, 1939.

  Schwatka, Frederick A Summer in Alaska, Philadelphia, 1891.

  Scott, Thomas S. “Some experiences in the Chilkoot Pass,” Canadian Magazine, February, 1898.

  Scudder, John Alaska and the Klondike, New York, 1905.

  Secretan, J. H. E. To Klondyke and Back, London, 1898.

  Service, Robert W. Ploughman of the Moon, New York, 1945.

  Sharp, Paul Frederick Whoop Up Country: The Canadian-American West, 1865–1885, Minneapolis, 1955.

  Sherwood, Morgan B. Explorations of Alaska, 1868–1900, New Haven, 1965.

  Sladen, Douglas On the Cars and Off, London, 1898. (Additional material on the Klondike by P. A. Hurd.)

  Snowdon, C. A. “The Klondike Mining-Camp, Another Account,” Harper’s Illustrated Weekly, August 7, 1897.

  Sola, A. E. Ironmonger Klondyke: Truth and Facts of the New Eldorado, London, 1897.

  Spurr, Josiah Edward “From the Coast to the Golden Klondike,” Outing, September, 1897.

  Through the Yukon Gold Diggings, Boston, 1900.

  Stanley, William M. A Mile of Gold, Chicago, 1898.

  Stansbury, Charles Frederick Klondike, The Land of Gold, New York, 1897 (pamphlet).

  Steele, Harwood Policing the Arctic, Toronto, 1936.

  Steele, Colonel S. B. Forty Years in Canada, Toronto, 1918.

  Stefans, Lincoln “Life in the Klondike Goldfields,” McClure’s Magazine, September, 1897.

  Stone, Irving Jack London: Sailor on Horseback, New York, 1947.

  Styles, Bill “The Reindeer Project that Failed,” Alaska-Yukon Magazine, July, 1907.

  Sullivan, Edward Dean The Fabulous Wilson Mizner, New York, 1935.

  Sullivan, Mark The Turn of the Century, Vol. 1, Our Times: The United States 1900–25, New York, 1926.

  Sullivan, May Kellogg A Woman Who Went to Alaska, Boston, 1912.

  Suydam, Harry L. “The Reign of ‘Soapy’ Smith,” Frank Leslie’s Popular Monthly, January, 1901.

  “The Klondikers,” Alaska Weekly, eight weeks from February, 1942.

  Taylor, H. West see Hayne, M. H. E.

  Thompson, Norman see Edgar, Major J. H.

  Tollemache, Hon. Stratford Reminiscences of the Yukon, Toronto, 1912.

  Treadgold, A. N. C. Report on the Gold Fields of the Klondike, London, 1899.

  Trelawney-Ansell, E. C. / Followed Gold, London, 1938.

  Trimble, William J. The Mining Advance into the Inland Empire (Bulletin of the University of Wisconsin), Madison, Wis., 1914.

  Tuttle, C. R. The Golden North, Chicago, 1897.

  Walden, Arthur Treadwell A Dog Puncher on the Yukon, Montreal, 1928.

  Webb, John Sidney “The River Trip to the Klondike,” Century Magazine, March, 1898.

  Westrate, Edwin V. see Collier, William R.

  Whiting, Dr. F. B. Grit, Grief and Gold, Seattle, 1933.

  Wickersham, Hon. James Old Yukon, Washington, D.C., 1938.

  Wiedemann, Thomas Cheechako into Sourdough, Portland, Oreg., 1942.

  Wilkes, L.C. “Packers on the Dyea Trail,” Alaska Sportsman, June, 1948.

  Williams, Ernest T. “Klondike – A Study in Booms,” National Review, March, 1899.

  Williamson, Thames Far North Country, New York, 1944.

  Wilson, Robert “Steel Creek,” Alaska Sportsman, May, 1951.

  Wilson, V. Guide to the Yukon Goldfields, Seattle, 1895.

  Winn, Bess “Alaska’s First Lady of the Stage,” Alaska Life, October, 1942.

  Winslow, Kathryn Big Pan-Out, New York, 1951.

  Wood, Major Z. T. “Early Law and Order in the Yukon,” Alaska-Yukon Magazine Summary, 1908.

  Woods, Anne “Gold Rush Bad Town,” Alaska Sportsman, August, 1939.

  Woods, Henry F. see Morgan, Edward E. P.

  Wrong, George M., ed. see Dawson, George M.

  Young, Rev. S. Hall The Klondike Clan, New York, 1916.

  Acknowledgements

  Apart from forty or fifty personal interviews, the research for Klondike was done at the public and reference libraries in Seattle, San Francisco, New York, and Toronto; at the University of Washington library in Seattle; at the Pacific Northwest Library in Victoria; at the Public Archives of Canada, and, most especially, at the library of the University of Toronto.

  I wish again to thank Helen Parker for permission to read and quote from the manuscript memoir of her husband, Bert Parker, “Kid on the Trail” (parts of it published in Maclean’s Magazine), and also to record my gratitude to the late Mrs. J. A. Sinclair for her kindness in allowing me to use her husband’s papers. I should also like to thank James Medill of Vancouver for making the papers of his father, Robert Medill, available to me for the Revised Edition, and Edward C. Bearss for lending me his microfilmed copies of the Dyea Trail and Dyea Press. Mr. Bearss’s historic resource study for the United States section of the proposed Gold Rush Historic Park was also extremely useful to me in revising the text. The complicated business of providing source notes for a book that did not originally contain any was handled by Ennis Halliday Armstrong with great efficiency. Again I must record my gratitude to Mrs. Betty Johnstone for her very useful comments on two earlier drafts of the manuscript and to my wife, who was indefatigable and persistent over a period of five years in tracking down obscure books, periodicals, and people. Without her assistance I could not have completed my researches.

 

 

 


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