Only one vag in the night cried. There is a swing of four ends in the shadow of my hut,
I signed and sealed nature. This is a fact. When a beard falls, this is my payday.
Leroy Napoleon "Jack" McQuesten (1836-1909) is a pioneer of Alaska and Yukon, explorers, traders, explorers and is known as the "father of the Yukon". Other nicknames include "Yukon Jack", "Captain Jack", "Golden Rule McQuesten", "Father of Alaska". He founded Fort Reliance with partner Arthur Harper and Captain Alfred Mayo and founded Yukon with an extensive network of trade networks. Explorants are offering grubstake. He was the most successful of the three, became a billionaire in 1898, and when he moved to Berkeley, California, bought a big Victorian mansion for his family.
An American who lived in Yukon since 1882, Joseph Radu runs a trading place on the Yukon River, 70 km away from Klondike. When others requested money, Ladue soon used gold discovery at Bonanza Creek. He sold 65 hectares of wetlands and elk pasture on the mouth of the Klondike River called Dawson City (named after the famous Canadian geologist George Mercer Dawson) based on this. Many trees and trees. A great failure is a magnificent journey, where many challenges must be met in order to overcome many obstacles. First, coastal cities such as Victoria, Seattle, Portland, San Francisco, moved north to the north along the Pacific coast and reached Haines, Skagway, Deer along the coast of Alaska.
By 1899, Telegraph extended from Alaska 's Skagway to Dukes City of Yukon, and immediate international communication became possible. In 1898, the White Pass and the Yukon Route Railroad began construction between Skagway and the Yukon Voyage Inspector. When it was completed in 1900, Chilkoot Trail and its tram were obsolete. Despite these transportation and transportation improvements from 1898, there was a hurry to stagnate. It began in the summer of 1898, when we discovered that many explorers who arrived in Dawson City can make a living by themselves and can not leave home. For those who stayed, the wages of temporary work dropped to $ 100 per month ($ 2,700) per month in 1899 due to a decrease in the number of males. Newspapers all over the world are also beginning to oppose Klondike's gold rush. In the spring of 1898, the Spanish - American War eliminated Klondike from the headline. "Let's go to Klondike!" Let's be a popular phrase expressing aversion to ideas. Unsold Klondike brand products need to be treated at a special price in Seattle