Klondike Gold Rush, Yukon Territory, Canada
1896 CE to 1899 CE
The Klondike Gold Rush, infrequently referred to as the Yukon Gold Rush or Alaska Gold Rush, is a frenzy of gold rush immigration to and for gold prospecting, along the Klondike River near Dawson City, Yukon, after gold had been discovered there in the late 19th century.
In total, about 12.5 million ounces of gold (about 20.12m3) have been taken from the Klondike area in the century since its discovery.
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Americans had rushed to the gold strike in the Yukon Territory’s Klondike region in 1897.
Gold had been discovered there by local miners on August 16, 1896, and, when news reaches Seattle and San Francisco the following year, it triggers a stampede of prospectors.
Some will become wealthy, but the majority will go in vain.
The Klondike Gold Rush will be immortalized in popular culture, e.g., in artifacts, films, games, literature, and photographs.
To reach the gold fields, most prospectors take the route through the ports of Dyea and Skagway, in Southeast Alaska.
Here, the Klondikers can follow either the Chilkoot or the White Pass trails to the Yukon River, and sail down to the Klondike.
The Canadian authorities require each of them to bring a year's supply of food, in order to prevent starvation.
In all, the Klondikers' equipment weighs close to a ton, which most carry themselves, in stages.
Performing this task, and contending with the mountainous terrain and cold climate, means those who persist do not arrive until summer 1898.
Once there, they find few opportunities, and many leave disappointed.
Mining is challenging, as the ore is distributed unevenly, and permafrost makes digging slow.
Consequently, some miners choose to buy and sell claims, build up huge investments, and let others do the work.
To accommodate the prospectors, boom towns spring up along the routes.
At their terminus, Dawson City is founded at the confluence of the Klondike and the Yukon Rivers.
From a population of five hundred in 1896, the town grows to house approximately thirty thousand people by summer 1898.
Built of wood, isolated, and unsanitary, Dawson suffers from fires, high prices, and epidemics.
Canada, in response to the rush of gold-seeking prospectors (mostly American) to the Klondike valley two years earlier, separates the Yukon Territory from the Northwest Territories on June 13, 1898.
Coastal and inland First Nations have extensive trading networks.
European incursions into the area began early in the nineteenth century with the fur trade, followed by missionaries.
By the 1870s and 1880s, gold miners began to arrive.
This drove a population increase that justified the establishment of a police force, just in time for the start of the Klondike Gold Rush in 1897.