klondike karen ward and connie naegle tsa, cusd 2001

Post on 31-Mar-2015

216 Views

Category:

Documents

0 Downloads

Preview:

Click to see full reader

TRANSCRIPT

Klondike Klondike

Karen Ward and Karen Ward and Connie NaegleConnie Naegle

TSA, CUSDTSA, CUSD

20012001

Alaska’s Gold Website

http://www.library.state.ak

.us/goldrush/

1. Identify the Yukon Territory

2. In what country is the Yukon located?

3. According to this map what city was the final destination?

What is the What is the Klondike?Klondike?

• Background information on the Klondike– http://school.discovery.com/

homeworkhelp/worldbook/atozgeography/k/302420.html

• Information on the Inuit Indian people http://yukonalaska.com/klondike/beforegold.html

Getting to the “Fields”Getting to the “Fields”

http://www.library.state.ak.us/goldrush/ARCHIVES/PHOTOS/384_81.htm

Preparation Preparation to go to the to go to the “Fields of “Fields of

Gold”Gold”

Chilkoot PassChilkoot Pass

• A 35-degree slope of snow and ice -- four miles long, requiring fifty trips ( six hours each ) to bring a year's worth of supplies per individual, as required by Canadian authorities, to the top. At the height of the rush, 22,000 seekers endured the ordeal.

Primary Resources--Personal experience Crossing http://www.washington.edu/uwired/outreach/cspn/curklon/klondoc088.html

Photos of a human chain of stampeders trudging up the Chilkoot Pass have come to symbolize the Klondike Gold Rush. In 1897-'98, the North West Mounted Police set up a border crossing into Canada at the summit of the Chilkoot. They ordered every stampeder to carry a year's worth of supplies. After all, there was no turning back once they were into the Klondike, and commerce was limited, to say the least.

Resource http://www.gold-rush.org/ghost-04g.htm

Chilkoot PassChilkoot Pass

Chilkoot Trail 1898 Supplies:Chilkoot Trail 1898 Supplies:As a result, many stampeders struggling up the mountain rampart were bent double under the weight of their packs,

which typically contained the following: • McDougall and Secord Klondike Outfit List (clothing & food):

2 suits heavy knit underwear6 pairs wool socks1 pairs heavy moccasins2 pairs german stockings2 heavy flannel overshirts1 heavy woollen sweater1 pair overalls2 pairs 12-lb. blankets1 waterproof blanket1 dozen bandana handkerchiefs1 stiff brim cowboy hat1 pair hip rubber boots1 pair prospectors' high land boots1 mackinaw, coat, pants, shirt1 pair heavy buck mitts, lined1 pair unlined leather gloves1 duck coat, pants, vest6 towels1 pocket matchbox, buttons, needles and thread comb, mirror, toothbrushetc. mosquito netting/1 dunnage bag1 sleeping bag/medicine chestpack saddles, complete horsesflat sleighs

100 lbs. navy beans150 lbs. bacon400 lbs. Flour and 40 lbs. rolled oats20 lbs. corn meal and 10 lbs. rice25 lbs. Sugar and 10 lbs. tea20 lbs. coffee10 lbs. baking powder20 lbs. salt1 lb. pepper2 lbs. baking soda1/2 lb. mustard1/4 lb. vinegar2 doz. condensed milk20 lbs. evaporated potatoes5 lbs. evaporated onions6 tins/4 oz. extract beef75 lbs. evaporated fruits4 pkgs. yeast cakes20 lbs. candles1 pkg. tin matches6 cakes borax6 lbs. laundry soap1/2 lb. ground ginger25 lbs. hard tack1 lb. citric acid2 bottles Jamaican ginger

Chilkoot Trail 1995 Supplies Chilkoot Trail 1995 Supplies

To fit in one backpack:tentsleeping bagsleeping padwarm layered clothingbroken-in hiking bootsrain/snow gearquick-cooking nutritious foodenergy bars/chocolatecoffee/tea & powdered milk

camp stovepots & panscutlerybinocularscamera & filmjournal or noveltrail bookpersonal toiletriesfirst aid kitbug repellent

Requires SuppliesRequires Supplies

Weight Cost

Clothing............................... 112 lbs. $75.00

Groceries............................. 1249 lbs. $75-$90.00

Footwear............................. 35 lbs. $25.00

Hardware............................. 225 lbs. $40.00

http://www.si.edu/postal/gold/trail18.html

35° Angle

Getting across the Chilkoot Trail

Ice creepers, iron with commercially

tanned leather straps. Found on the

Chilkoot Trail Ca. 1898

Alaska Gold http://www.library.state.ak.us

/goldrush/

Trails and PassageTrails and Passage

SkagwaySkagway

Arrival at the “field of gold”Arrival at the “field of gold”

Reaching bedrock at last, Klondikers would hunt for the elusive streak of gold, then dump the rock in heaps beside the mine entrance where it would instantly freeze - until the three short summer months, the only time warm enough for the miners to sluice the heaps.

“Of the one hundred thousand people who set out for the Klondike, thirty to

forty thousand got there, and only fifteen to twenty thousand

prospected. Possibly 4,000 found some gold.”

Source---http://www.calliope.org/gold/gold4.html

Dreams of Gold—Skagway 1898Dreams of Gold—Skagway 1898

Who went to Skagway?Who went to Skagway?

Nome, AlaskaNome, Alaska

Growth and OverpopulationGrowth and OverpopulationYear: City

1880 1890 1900 1910 1920

Boise 1,899 2,311 5,957 17,358 21,393

Portland 17,577 46,385 90,426 207,214 258,288

Seattle 3,553 42,837 80,871 237,174 315,312

Spokane 350 19,922 36,848 104,402 104,437

Tacoma 1,098 36,006 37,714 83,743 96,965

Growth of citiesGrowth of cities• Dawson was a gold rush

city, a familiar pattern of accelerated growth. During a few weeks in 1898, the population grew to the size of Seattle - 28,000 people. The choicest corner lots on Front Street sold for $40,000, and two sawmills worked 24 hours a day turning out building materials.

Everyday life during the “rush”Everyday life during the “rush”

Some Klondikers took jobs in the mills or worked as watchmen. Others did as their Comstock forebears had done and signed on as pick-and-shovel laborers in the mines. But very quickly the rush ended - the large mining companies moved in with big dredges - and took out the Klondike's holdings - about $300 million.

Cabin luxury – home sweet home!Cabin luxury – home sweet home!

Danger was an Danger was an everyday part of life.everyday part of life.

Only about half of those who fought their way over the passes to the Klondike actually looked for gold. Those who did have a claim mined the earth in the most grueling method imaginable. The gold lay in bedrock under ten to fifty feet of permafrost, so they mined Russian fashion - spending the winter months softening the permafrost with fires, digging through it at a maximum of one foot a day.

                                                                       

Jack London in Alaska

The monumental efforts of the Klondike hopefuls inspired Jack London, Robert

Service and lesser talents to spin romantic narratives of the mining life. But history, just as in California, tells a

grimmer story.

http://www.calliope.org/gold/gold4.html

Martha Louise Black

• Abandoned by her first husband en route to the Klondike in 1898, she hiked over the Chilkoot Pass, sailed pregnant down the Yukon River in a homemade boat to Dawson, bore her child in a log cabin, raised money, bought a sawmill, bossed 16 men on a mining claim, married George Black who became Yukon's Member of Parliament and upon his illness ran for, and won, his seat. Martha Black became Yukon's first, and Canada's second, woman Member of Parliament.

The Bishop Who Ate His Boots

• This story was the inspiration for the famous scene in Charlie Chaplin's movie "The Gold Rush." Lost in an ice fog at 40 below with no more provisions, Bishop Stringer hit on the idea of boiling his and his companion's sealskin and walrus sole boots for seven hours, then drinking the broth. According to the Bishop, it was "tough and stringy, but palatable and fairly satisfying." The Bishop lost 50 pounds, but eventually found his way to a Native village near where Eagle Plains on the Dempster Highway is today and he was nursed back to health.

Diamond Tooth Gertie

• Now the name of the gambling hall in Dawson City, Diamond Tooth Gertie (Gertie Lovejoy) was a bona fide Yukon dance hall queen. Her nickname came from the sparkling diamond she had wedged between her two front teeth. She made a fortune unloading the miners of their gold nuggets.

Belinda Mulroney

On arriving in the Klondike, she threw her last 50 cents into the Yukon River, swearing she would never need such small change again. She began her quest for riches by selling rubber boots, cotton goods and hot water bottles at a 600% profit. She built a roadhouse at Bonanza Creek, owned six mining properties by the end of the year, and eventually built the Fairview Hotel, one of the swankiest establishments in Dawson City.

Science Connections

• Real time-Weather In the Yukonhttp://www.weatheroffice.com/scripts/citygen.pl?

cclient=ECCDN&city=YDA

• Auroras Northern Lightshttp://climate.gi.alaska.edu/Curtis/curtis.html

• Science Snapshots http://explorezone.com/snapshots/1999/09_09_aurora.htm

• The Aurora: Information and Images http://dac3.gi.alaska.edu/~pfrr/AURORA/INDEX.HTM

Midnight in AlaskaMidnight in Alaska

Image © Jan Curtis

Textual Reading SitesAuroras Northern Lights

http://climate.gi.alaska.edu/Curtis/curtis.html

Science Snapshotshttp://explorezone.com/snapshots/

1999/09_09_aurora.htm

The Aurora: Information and Images

http://dac3.gi.alaska.edu/~pfrr/AURORA/INDEX.HTM

"And the skies of night were alive with light, with a throbbing, thrilling flame; Amber and rose and violet, opal and gold it came."  - Robert W. Service

Welcome to The Aurora Page

http://www.geo.mtu.edu/weather/aurora/

Teacher Sites

• Alaska’s Gold-outstanding site!– http://www.library.state.ak.us/goldrush/

• California Gold Rush– http://www.notfrisco.com/calmem/goldrush/

• The Klondike Gold Rush:– http://www.washington.edu/uwired/outreach/

cspn/curklon/main.html#introduction

top related