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Archival description
Phil Lind Klondike Gold Rush collection
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Phil Lind Klondike Gold Rush collection

  • RBSC-ARC-1820
  • Collection
  • ca. 1860-2016

The collection consists of archival records, printed materials, photographs, maps, posters, artefacts and paintings all related to the Klondike Gold Rush. Records span the activities of individuals, organizations, companies, and government bodies related to the Klondike Gold Rush, the Yukon, Alaska, and the Northwest Territories from ca. 1860 to 2003. The collection documents the journeys of, and commerce created by individuals and groups of people from around the world who left their homes to join the Gold Rush; it also contains materials documenting the presence of Indigenous peoples throughout the Yukon.

The collection reflects the development of regional infrastructure and transportation in the Yukon and Alaska, including the creation of the White Pass and Yukon Route railway line. Many materials in the fonds originated from the construction and development of specific town sites and communities located in the Yukon, including Dawson City, Carcross, Forty Mile, and White Horse.

Other materials document the creative works of individuals seeking to record and share stories about the Klondike in various forms, including photographs, journals, poetry, music and theatre.

The collection is comprised of the following series: Textual Records, Photographic Materials, Cartographic Materials, Graphic Materials, and Objects. Each series is majorly comprised of the record type described in the title, and materials within each series are described at the item level.

Lind, Philip Bridgman

[Letter from Walter Church and Walter C. Teter to Wilson L. Robinson. Together with The first returns from the Yukon]

Letter from Walter Church, Mining Engineer and Walter C. Teter, Mining Broker, San Francisco dated Jan. 20, 1896 to Wilson L. Robinson of Canton, NY. Mimeographed sheet seeking men for the mining camps in Alaska Gold Fields. Together with: The First Returns From the Yukon, a four page booklet listing the first men to return from the gold fields of the Yukon, their addresses and the approximate amounts brought out by each in gold dust and nuggets. Compiled by Church & Teter, Mining Engineers and Brokers, Mills Building, San Francisco, California and Juneau, Alaska.

Church, Walter

Western British American. Vol. XX, No. 17, April 23, 1898

Includes the article "Routes to the Yukon ... Why all Canadian is best". Provides early information on routes to the Klondike, including details on the overland route, the all-Canadian route (also known as the "poor man's route"), the all-water route, and other aspects of travel and outfitting. The front page has an illustration of the Yukon River at Miles Canyon, described as a "monster water toboggan."

Western British American

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