Whitehorse
WHITEHORSE is the likeable capital of the Yukon, home to
two-thirds of its population (around 24,000 people), the centre of
its mining and forestry industries, and a bustling, welcoming
stopoff for thousands of summer visitors. Whilst roads bring in
today's business, the town owes its existence to the Yukon
River , a 3000-kilometre artery that rises in BC's Coast
Mountains and flows through the heart of the Yukon and Alaska to
the Bering Sea. The river's flood plain and strange escarpment
above the present town were long a resting point for Dene peoples,
but the spot burgeoned into a full-blown city with the arrival of
thousands of stampeders in the spring of 1898. Having braved the
Chilkoot Pass
to meet the Yukon's upper reaches, men and supplies then had to
pause on the shores of Lineman or Bennett Lake before navigating
the Mile's Canyon and White Horse rapids southeast of the
present town. After the first few boats through had been reduced to
matchwood, the Mounties laid down rules allowing only experienced
boatmen to take craft through - writer Jack London, one such
boatman, made $3000 in the summer of 1898, when more than seven
thousand boats left the lakes. After a period the prospectors
constructed an eight-kilometre wooden tramway around the rapids,
and in time raised a shantytown settlement at the canyon and
tramway's northern head to catch their breath before the river
journey to Dawson City.
The completion of the White Pass and Yukon Railway (WP&YR)
to Whitehorse (newly named after the rapids) put this tentative
settlement on a firmer footing - almost at the same time as the
gold rush petered out. In the early years of the twentieth century
the town's population dwindled quickly from about 10,000 to about
400; for forty years the place slumbered, barely sustained by
copper mining and the paddle-wheelers that plied the river carrying
freight and the occasional tourist. The town's second boom arrived
with the construction of the Alaska Hwy, a kick-start that swelled
the town's population from 800 to 40,000 almost overnight, and has
stood it in good stead ever since
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