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Tour Highlights Starting at White Pass
depot, downtown Whitehorse and then onto the Alaska Highway.
Km 1466 – Utah Siding (next to Pioneer
RV Park) was the site of a camp for 3,000 soldiers during
highway construction. In the 1970s, this is also where lead-zinc
ore was transferred from trucks to trains in the days before
the South Klondike Highway was opened.
Km 1463 – 135th Meridian. You are now
much further west than Vancouver Island or the Queen Charlotte
Islands.
Golden Horn was named by first white men through
the region in 1881. An extinct volcano, it is 5,610 feet
high.
WHITE PASS & YUKON ROUTE RAILWAY:
• Originally 110.7 miles of track from Skagway to Whitehorse
• Narrow gauge – 36 inches (standard gauge is 56 _ inches)
• Construction began May 27, 1898, completed July 27, 1900
• Taken over by US Army during Alaska Highway construction
• Closed October 1982 when Cyprus Anvil Mine at faro closed – 175
people were laid off at WP&YR
• Tourism line opened May 12, 1988
Km 1455 - Turn onto the South Klondike Highway
(Yukon Hwy 2).
Km 157 (from Skagway)
The South Klondike Highway as we see it today has only existed since 1980 (it
officially opened in May 1981). The northern section, from the Alaska Highway
to Carcross, had been a wagon road since at least 1905, and was substantially
upgraded in 1942 as part of the Alaska Highway project.
Km 154 – Kookatsoon Lake is one of the
few lakes that get warm enough for comfortable swimming,
due to the fact that it’s very shallow.
Km 139 – Annie Lake Road leads into
an area that is very popular with hikers and kayakers. There
are also many old mines.
Km 139 – Robinson Roadhouse was built
in 1906 and was the service centre for the mining rush in
the Wheaton Valley.
Km 136.5 – this beautiful little lake
has the not-so-beautiful name Rat Lake.
Km 136 – Lewes Lake. The sign is actually
wrong, as the lake back there was named after a White Pass & Yukon
engineer named Lewis.
Km 117 – Emerald Lake. We are now coming
up to the most photographed lake in the Yukon – you’ll
probably recognize it, as it appears on a lot of posters
and brochures. The colour is due to the white lake bottom – called
marl, it consists of decomposed sea shells and clay, and
is typical of shallow lakes with low oxygen levels. Those
conditions also mean that there are few or no fish in lakes
with marl bottoms.
Km 116 – Spirit Lake on the left. No
public access except for hikers.
Km 115 – Cinnamon Cache Bakery. Notice
the moose sign – "Get Your Buns in Here."
Km 112 – Creation Legend. From here,
you can see four peaks that are very important in local First
Nations culture.
Km 108 – Carcross Dunes, usually known
as "The World’s Smallest Desert." This very
active dune system runs right from Lake Bennett to the base
of Caribou Mountain. Strong winds blow off the lake, and
the fine sand left from the post-glacial lake forms dunes
that reach over 100 feet high.
Brief stop at Historic CARCROSS
POINTS OF INTEREST
• The Mounted Police detachment
• St. Saviour’s Anglican Church built in 1902
• The wreck of the sternwheeler Tutshi
• The Caribou Hotel is the oldest operating hotel in the Yukon
• The Barracks gift shop on the right was the Mounted Police barracks in
the 1920s, and now features the work of local artists.
• The Isabelle Pringle Library has an excellent collection
• Lake Bennett – at the far end of the lake, 26 miles away, thousands
of people spent the winter of 1897-1898 building boats that were launched when
the ice broke in May 1898.
• The little post office has boxes for residents, who get mail 3 times
a week.
• The footbridge was built to replace a wagon bridge that was built in
1905 to access the silver mines.
• The White Pass & Yukon railway bridge was the site of the driving
of the Golden Spike to celebrate completion of the railway on July 29, 1900.
• The railway depot, still owned by the White Pass, is leased to the Yukon
Government as a Visitor Reception Centre.
• Matthew Watson’s Store dates from 1910
• The little locomotive is the Duchess, brought North in 1899 to work on
the 2.25 mile long railway between Atlin Lake
and
Taku
Arm.
Km 106 – Nares River. Over 7,000 boats
passed along this little river on May 29 and 30, 1898 on
the way to the Klondike.
The old Carcross Cemetery, where 4 of the 5 people present when gold was discovered
in the Klondike are buried. Tagish Charlie, Skookum Jim Mason, Patsy Henderson
and Kate Carmack are all here – only George Carmack isn’t.
Frederick Schwatka conducted a survey of the entire Yukon River for the US
Army in 1883, and named hundreds of features
Km 96 – Bove Island. The water flows
off to the northeast, against the Yukon River flow.
The limestone mountain is Lime Mountain, and is part of the White Range.
Windy Arm mining boom: for the next few miles, you’ll see quite a few
remnants of past silver mining, dating from 1899 to 1980.
Km 89 – Tramway. The tower on the left
supported an aerial tramway that went to the top of the ridge
on the right and about a mile beyond, a total of 4.5 miles.
Km 87 – Venus Mine. This was the site
of a mill for the Venus silver mine during 1969-1970.
Km 85 – Pooley Canyon is a tight slot
at the lower end, but about half a mile up, opens up into
a magnificent canyon. It was named for pioneer miner John
Pooley.
Km 84 – Venus Mill. This mill was built
by Colonel Conrad in 1908 in a last-ditch effort to make
his mines profitable by reducing shipping costs.
Km 81 – Yukon – BC border. From
1899-1901, this section of the border was surveyed and monuments
set up, and a 6-foot-wide clearing cut along the line. Imagine
climbing over those peaks 100 years ago.
Km 80.5 – Dail Creek. Note that it is
incorrectly signed as Dall Creek – the peak above and
to the north is Dail Peak, named after early miner George
Dail. Dall sheep and mountain goats are often seen on the
slopes of Dail Peak.
Km 78 – Silverdale. The south end of
Windy Arm – the flats here was the site of another
town-to-be during the Conrad mining rush...
Km 76 – a low pass that separates Windy
Arm from Tutshi Lake ("too-shy").
Km 75 – Venus Mine. This was the final
incarnation of the Venus silver mine. Built by United Keno
Hill Mines, which operated very profitable silver mines in
the central Yukon, this mill only operated for 8 days in
1981 before being shut down.
Km 73-74 - The south side of the pass down
to Tutshi Lake is one of the best places to see black bear
along the highway, particularly in the spring when these
slopes produce grass earlier than other places.
Km 55 – Coast Mountains. Near the south
end of Tutshi Lake, you will notice a dramatic change in
the type of rock that the highway cuts through.
Km 46 – Tutshi River is popular with
whitewater kayakers.
Km 44 – Log Cabin. Just before crossing
the WP&YR tracks, the old town site of Log Cabin is in
the forest to the north. It takes a trained eye to see where
the main street, Customs House and North West Mounted Police
post were. This is the access point for Chilkoot Trail hikers
to get back to the highway. The historic trail is 33 miles
long, takes 4-5 days to hike now.
Km 43 – Tormented Valley. Try to imagine
getting across the granite cliffs and hundreds of lakes and
ponds and you can see where the name came from.
Km 25 – Divide Lake. The falls to the
right fill a small lake that drains in two directions. Some
of the water flows 16 miles to the Pacific Ocean via the
Skagway River, and some flows about 2,300 miles to the Bering
Sea via the Yukon River.
Mile 14.9 (Km 24) – US-Canada Border.
WHITE PASS FRASER RAILWAY STATION.
Train passengers board train – through passengers on to Skagway.
Mile 14.4 – White Pass Summit, 3,292
feet (1003 m.) This is 427 feet higher than the railway goes – it
is in the next pass to the east (also part of the White Pass).
The pass was named for Thomas White Canadian Minister of
the Interior in 1887. The highway now drops steeply for 11.5
miles.
Mile 11.1 – Captain William Moore Bridge.
This 110-foot-long cantilever bridge was built to cross an
active earthquake fault – only the far end is anchored
securely so that when the ground shifts (as it does several
times a year) the bridge isn’t torn apart. This is
the only bridge of its type in North America.
Mile 7.7 – Pitchfork Falls. Once a popular
photo stop, the falls have been pretty much ruined by the
construction of a hydro-electric power generation plant in
1999. The falls are often called "Pipeline Falls" now.
Mile 6.8 – US Customs.
Mile 2.9 – Liarsville. A tent camp here
is reported to have been as far as many reporters sent to
the Klondike goldfields went.
Mile 2.3 – Dyea Road leads to the site
of the town that served the Chilkoot Trail during the gold
rush. The Slide Cemetery at Dyea is the final resting place
of many of the people killed in a huge avalanche in the pass
on Palm Sunday (April 3), 1898.
Mile 1.6 – Skagway River. To the left
is a good view of the Klondike Gold Dredge, a historic dredge
from the Sixtymile gold district in the Yukon. The WP&YR
shops are on the left – everything from building new
passenger cars to rebuilding steam engines goes on in there.
Behind the shops about .5 mile is the large Skagway Pioneer
Cemetery. You don’t have to walk very far in the cemetery
to realize how hard the community was hit by an outbreak
of spinal meningitis in 1898.
Mile 0 - SKAGWAY: (approx 11:10 AM
AK Time)
• Skagway is Tlingit for "home of the North Wind."
• Winter population is 890
• Dry in comparison with the rest of SE Alaska – only 29 inches of
precipitation a year, less than half that of Haines, only 15 miles away.
• Located on Lynn Canal, named by Captain Vancouver in 1790 for his home
port, King’s Lynn.
• Captain William Moore homesteaded 160 acres here in 1887, when he was
65 years old. A famous riverboat captain on the Fraser River during the Cariboo
Gold Rush in BC, he was the first white man to know about the White Pass route
through the Coastal Mountains, and he and Skookum Jim from Carcross helped the
Canadian government conduct the first survey of the route.
• SS Portland reached Seattle with Klondike gold on July 17, 1897, and
12 days later the first stampeders arrived at Skagway. A town site was surveyed,
and Moore forced off his property. The population peaked at 10-15,000 over the
winter of 1897-1998.
Return to Whitehorse by highway coach departing 3:30 PM. ( AK Time)
Some Info About Yukon and Whitehorse:
YUKON:
• Population: 30,418 (Dec. 2001) – was 33,519 in 1997
• Area: 483, 450 sq. km (slightly larger than Oregon and Idaho combined,
or Germany, Switzerland and Austria combined).WHITEHORSE
• Population: 22,545 (Dec. 2001) – was 24,018 in 1997
• Elevation: 2,305 feet (703 m.)
• Main employment is in government service.
• Weather (from Environment Canada records)
- July is warmest month, with average daily high of 20.3C (70F)
- January is coldest month, with average daily low of –23.2C (-10F)
- Record high was 34.4C (94F) in 1969
- Record low was –52.2C (-51F) in 1947
- Very dry – only 6.3 inches of rain and 57 inches of snow. Only precipitation
of any kind on 122 days.
• Maximum daylight (June 21): 19 hours 11 minutes
- Minimum daylight (Dec. 21): 5 hours 40 minutes.
ALASKA HIGHWAY:
• Mile 0 in Dawson Creek, Mile 1422 in Delta Junction, Alaska
• Built March – November 1942 by 50,000 soldiers and civilian contractors
with 11,000 pieces of equipment.
• Cost about $135,000,000 (just over $56,000 per mile)
• The US built the highway and maintained it for 6 months after the war,
then turned it over to Canada.
• The construction of the highway resulted in huge social changes in formerly
remote Yukon and Alaska communities.
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