Yukon Sternwheelers and the SS Klondike

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Annual General Conference Assemblée générale annuelle Edmonton, Alberta June 6-9, 2012 / 6 au 9 juin 2012

Yukon Sternwheelers and the SS Klondike Ken Johnson AECOM Abstract: The construction of the White Pass & Yukon Route (WP&YR) railway in 1900 from Skagway Alaska to Whitehorse, Yukon brought the supply centres of Vancouver and Seattle, 1600 kilometres closer to the Klondike region of the Yukon. The previous river supply route to Dawson was 2400 kilometres long and started at St. Michael, Alaska, at the mouth of the Yukon River on the Bering Sea. With the construction of the railway to the head of navigable water on the Yukon River, the river supply route was reduced to an 800 kilometre trip down the Klondike River from Whitehorse to Dawson City. Sternwheelers became a vital part of Yukon transportation, and the Yukon River sternwheelers were designed to carry heavy cargoes downstream on a light draft and make the return trip upstream with lighter loads. The S.S. Klondike was one of these sternwheelers, originally built in Whitehorse, in 1929 by the British Yukon Navigation Company. With a cargo capacity 50 percent greater than other boats on the river at the time, it was the first sternwheeler on the Yukon River large enough to handle a cargo in excess of 272 tonnes (300 tons) without having to push a barge. Carrying general cargo and a few passengers, the S.S. Klondike would make the downstream run from Whitehorse to Dawson City – a distance of some 740 kilometres (460 mi.) in approximately 36 hours with one or two stops for wood. The upstream journey back to Whitehorse, would take four or five days and six wood-stops. The SS Klondike is now a National Historic Site of Canada. 1.

Sternwheelers on the Yukon River

In 1866 the SS Wilder became the first sternwheeler to paddle up the Yukon River. Three years later the Alaska Commercial Company introduced the regular use of sternwheelers on the lower Yukon River within the Territory of Alaska. For the remainder of the 1800's sternwheelers were used to supply the trading posts on the lower Yukon River. Operating from the port of St. Michael, Alaska, near the river's mouth on the Bering Sea, sternwheelers would carry freight and supplies, as well as fur traders and prospectors, during the short May to October navigation season. The Klondike gold rush created a stampede of 30,000 people that overwhelmed the few sternwheelers on the river at the time. During the summer of 1897, 30 new boats were put into service on the Yukon River, and by the end of the 1897 season 60 sternwheelers were in operation on the Yukon River system. Most of these new boats operated on the lower river, below Dawson City from St. Michael, however sternwheelers were also operating on the upper Yukon river carrying people and supplies from the end of the Chilkoot and White Pass Trails to Whitehorse.

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Yukon Sternwheelers and the SS Klondike by Kenneth Johnson - Issuu