My wife and I happened on a program on TV on the National Geographic
channel that
interested us. the result are the present blog articles all together you see here at my site.
The Goddard was a small Steamboat that eventually sank on the Yukon river where it became a lake. The owners of the boat carried it in pieces overland to where the river was big enough to put it together and launch it. I believe the pieces were manufactured in San Francisco.
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Steamboats of the Yukon River - Wikipedia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steamboats_of_the_Yukon_River
Steamboats on the Yukon River played a role in the development of Alaska and Yukon. Access to the interior of Alaska and Yukon was hindered by large mountains and distance, but the wide Yukon Riverprovided a feasible route.List of steamboats on the Yukon River - Wikipedia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_steamboats_on_the_Yukon_River
This is a list of steamboats on the Yukon River. Please see Steamboats of the Yukon River for historical context. Contents. [hide]. 1 White Pass & Yukon Route ...Steamboats of the Yukon - Archaeology Magazine Archive
https://archive.archaeology.org/0711/abstract/yukon.html
Steamboats of the Yukon - Archaeology Magazine Archive. In June 1936, the elegant 210-foot stern-wheel steamer Klondike was cruising down the Yukon River.Steamboats of the Yukon River
Steamboats on the Yukon River played a role in the development of Alaska and Yukon. Access to the interior of Alaska and Yukon was hindered by large mountains and distance, but the wide Yukon River provided a feasible route. The first steamers on the lower Yukon River were work boats for the Collins Overland Telegraph in 1866 or 1867, with a small steamer called Wilder. The mouth of the Yukon River is far to the west at St. Michael and a journey from Seattle or San Francisco covered some 4,000 miles (6,400 km).
Contents
[hide]Early history[edit]
There were a series of steamers owned by the Alaska Commercial Company: Yukon (screw propeller) of 1869, and St. Michael (stern wheel) of 1879. Slowly the north was opened up with the help of river steamers. Portus B. Weareworked the river after 1892.
In 1897 there were 7 steamers operating in the Yukon, by 1899 there were 30.[1]
Gold rush[edit]
The discovery of gold on Rabbit Creek at Dawson City prompted Klondike Gold Rush. Thousands of gold seekers headed north. Riverboats from the Pacific Northwest headed north to ply the route. Hundreds of boats were co-opted and others were built. Twelve identical steamboats were built by Moran Bros. (hull Nos. 9–20). Yards in Seattle, Victoria, Portland, and Vancouver all built boats. The CPR Steamer service ordered more vessels: Moyie and Minto, for instance; but they arrived too late for service on the Yukon River.
Boats were either steamed across the Gulf of Alaska and Bering Sea to enter the river mouth, or they were transported in pieces over the White Pass and assembled in Whitehorse. The big revenue route was from Whitehorse several hundred miles north to Dawson.
Almost 300 commercial steamboats worked the Yukon River over the years.
In 1900, the White Pass & Yukon Route completed its railroad line between Skagway, Alaska and Whitehorse, Yukon. In 1901, the company entered the steamboat business to complete the service to points on the Yukon River. Beginning in 1901, the White Pass was almost the exclusive operator on the Upper Yukon River (Whitehorse–Dawson City). The service also included Tagish Lake and Atlin Lake, the headwaters of the Yukon River.[2]
Reorganization[edit]
In 1914, White Pass took over the Northern Navigation Co., which was the biggest operator on the lower Yukon River (Dawson City–Tanana–St. Michael), and the biggest operator on the Tanana/Chena Rivers (Tanana–Nenana–Fairbanks). The Northern Navigation Co. had been formed by earlier mergers including the River Divisions of the Alaska Commercial Co., the Alaska Exploration Co., the Seattle–Yukon Transportation Co., the Empire Transportation Co., and the North American Transportation & Trading Co.
At its zenith, 1914–1921, White Pass served over 2,000 miles (3,200 km) of rivers and lakes by boat and had a near-monopoly on public transportation in the region. Throughout its reign over the Yukon River and tributaries, the White Pass obtained 88 steamboats, some new, most from companies it took over. It inherited most of the boats of the former major operators on the Yukon River.
White Pass boats which operated on the upper Yukon River generally were registered in Canada and were operated by a subsidiary known as the British Yukon Navigation Co. White Pass boats which operated on the Lower Yukon River generally were registered in the U.S.A. and were operated by a subsidiary known as the American Yukon Navigation Co.
Beginning in 1922, most of the White Pass business on the Lower Yukon River and on the Tanana/Chena Rivers was eliminated by competition from the Alaskan Engineering Commission or “U.S. Government Railroad” (which was reorganized as The Alaska Railroad in 1923). After the U.S. Government Railroad reached Nenana in 1922, the White Pass cut back service on the Lower Yukon to between Dawson City and Tanana only, and on the Tanana River to between Tanana and Nenana only. The Alaska Railroad operated commercial boats on the Tanana River and on the Lower Yukon River from the 1923 reorganization until the end of 1953. On the Tanana River, the A.R.R. operated between Nenana and Tanana. On the Lower Yukon River, the A.R.R. operated between Tanana and Marshall, Alaska. The Alaska Railroad discontinued river passenger service at the end of the 1949 season. Connecting passenger service between Marshall and St. Michael was provided by the Northern Commercial Co., from 1923 to 1949, using the 45-foot 16-gross ton gasoline-powered screw propeller vessel Agulleit (U.S.A. #214487).
The Alaska Railroad ended its river freight operation and leased all of its river equipment to the Yutana Barge Line beginning in 1954. The A.R.R. sold its remaining river equipment to the Yutana Barge Line in 1980. The White Pass discontinued regular service on the Lower Yukon River and Tanana River at the end of the 1941 season. The White Pass was put out of the river business altogether by competition from the North Klondike Highway (Whitehorse–Dawson City) and the Atlin Road, which were completed in the early 1950s. Only one former White Pass boat remains operational, the diesel-powered Yukon Rose. One more is being considered for restoration, the gasoline-powered Loon.
The last steamboat in regular service on the Lower Yukon River was the Nenana, in 1954. The last steamboat in regular service on the Upper Yukon River was Klondike (Klondike II), which made her last run on July 4, 1955. The last commercial steamboat to operate under its own power on the Yukon River was the Keno, from Whitehorse to Dawson City on August 26–29, 1960. It was an equipment run to move the boat for purposes of putting it on display at Dawson City. Keno, the second Klondike, and Nenanasurvive as museums.
List of vessels[edit]
See also[edit]
References[edit]
- ^ Holeski, [ed. by] Carolyn Jean; Holeski, Marlene Conger (1983). In search of gold: the Alaska journals of Horace S. Conger, 1898–1899. Anchorage, Alaska: Alaska Geographic Society. ISBN 0-88240-239-0.
- ^ The generally accepted source of the Yukon River is the Llewellyn Glacier, at the south end of Atlin Lake. Atlin Lake flows into Tagish Lake (via the Atlin River). Tagish Lake flows into Marsh Lake (via the Tagish River). The foot of Marsh Lake is where the Yukon River officially starts. Yukon River#Course, Atlin Provincial Park and Recreation Area#Conservation
General References[edit]
- Adams, Charles W. (2002). A Cheechako Goes to the Klondike. Alaska Heritage Library.
- Affleck, Edward L. (2000). A Century of Paddlewheelers in the Pacific Northwest, the Yukon and Alaska. Alexander Nicolls Press.
- Alig, Joyce L. (2001). Old Gold Rush to Alaska Diaries of 1898–1900. Mercer County Historical Society.
- Anderson, Barry C. (1983). Lifeline to the Yukon: A History of Yukon River Navigation. Superior Publishing Co.
- Bennett, Gordon (1978). Yukon Transportation: A History. Canadian Historic Sites (Occasional Paper No. 19).
- California Digital Newspaper Collection, Center for Bibliographic Studies and Research, University of California, Riverside.
- Downs, Art (1992). British Columbia–Yukon Sternwheel Days. Heritage House Publishing Co.
- Ferrell, Nancy Warren (2008). White Water Skippers of the North: The Barringtons. Hancock House.
- Hedrick, Basil and Susan Savage (1988). Steamboats on the Chena. Epicenter Press.
- Kitchener, Lois D. (1954). Flag Over the North. Superior Publishing Co.
- Knutson, Arthur E. (1990). "Can We Do It?" "Hell, We Gotta!" [Miles Canyon history], available through Alaska State Museum
- Knutson, Arthur E. (1979) Sternwheels on the Yukon, available through Alaska State Museum
- Newell, Gordon (editor) (1966). The H. W. McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific Northwest. Superior Publishing Co.
- Motherwell, John L. (2012). Gold Rush Steamboats: Francis Rattenbury’s Yukon Venture. John L. Motherwell.
- Wright, E. W. (ed.) (1895). Lewis and Dryden’s Marine History of the Pacific Northwest]. Lewis & Dryden Printing Co.
External links[edit]
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Yukon River steamboats. |
Upper Yukon River Steamboats - ExploreNorth.com
www.explorenorth.com/library/ships/carcross-boats.html
Upper Yukon River / Southern Lakes Steamboats. A guide to the sternwheelers and other boats that served the Southern Lakes and the communities of Atlin, ...
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