Close X
Wednesday, December 4, 2024
ADVT 
National

Yukon Woman's Role In Klondike Gold Rush To Be Honoured At Toronto Ceremony

The Canadian Press, 10 Jan, 2019 08:29 PM

    WHITEHORSE — An Indigenous woman is being inducted into the Canadian Mining Hall of Fame for the first time.


    Kate Carmack of Yukon will be recognized as one of the handful of prospectors whose discovery of placer gold set off what the hall of fame describes as "one of the world's greatest gold rushes" in the Klondike more than a century ago.


    In 1999, the organization recognized four men who were known as the Klondike Discoverers by inducting them into the hall of fame for locating the site where the gold was found on Rabbit River in 1896.


    But the president of Yukon Women in Mining says many stories also say Carmack may actually have found the first gold nugget while fishing with her family.


    Anne Turner said Carmack was "missed" in the first round of recognition but it's "really exciting" that she is finally being honoured.


    Carmack is the third woman to be inducted into the hall, joining 1991 inductee Viola MacMillan, a mine finder and financier, and early 1900s Manitoba prospector Kathleen Rice, who was inducted in 2014.


    The Klondike Discovers who were previously inducted are Carmack's husband, George Carmack, Skookum Jim Mason and Dawson Charlie of the Tagish First Nation, and Nova Scotia prospector Robert Henderson.


    The hall of fame description of Carmack's contribution says her traditional knowledge and skills supported her husband, Mason and Charlie during years of less productive prospecting.


    "Specifically, (Carmack's) ability to sew and market her mukluks and mittens to fellow prospectors provided the means to support their work," the hall writes.


    "Oral histories shared among local Indigenous communities suggest that (Carmack) herself found the first nugget of gold."


    When the first four Klondike Discoverers were inducted in 1999, the hall said Henderson had tipped off the other three.


    Turner said Carmack's induction underlines the importance of women and Indigenous prospectors in the Klondike gold rush.


    "I think it demonstrates that the foundation of Yukon's mining industry came with women and with Yukon First Nations at the table right out of the gate," she said.


    Yukon Women in Mining has also named an award in Carmack's honour. Tara Christie, president and CEO of Banyan Gold, was the first recipient of the Kate Carmack Women in Mining Award in November.


    The rush brought 30,000 prospectors to the Klondike gold fields in just two years as prospectors flooded north, hungry to repeat the bonanza of the 1849 California gold rush.


    "The Klondike rush opened up the North, as well as Canadians' eyes to its possibilities," the hall of fame says.


    "An active placer mining industry continues in the Yukon today and some of its miners are the descendants of the men and women who joined the Klondike rush a century ago."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Case Of Toronto Van Attack Suspect Alek Minassian Heading Straight To Trial

    Case Of Toronto Van Attack Suspect Alek Minassian Heading Straight To Trial
    TORONTO — The case of a man accused of killing 10 people in a van attack in north Toronto will skip a preliminary hearing and head straight to trial.

    Case Of Toronto Van Attack Suspect Alek Minassian Heading Straight To Trial

    Bail Granted To Teen Charged In Shooting Of German Tourist On Alberta Highway

    Bail Granted To Teen Charged In Shooting Of German Tourist On Alberta Highway
    CALGARY — A judge has granted bail to a teenager charged in the August shooting of a German tourist west of Calgary.

    Bail Granted To Teen Charged In Shooting Of German Tourist On Alberta Highway

    Deadly Crash At Toronto's Highway 407 May Have Involved Mechanical Failure: Police

    A deadly crash on a busy toll highway north of Toronto may have been caused by a mechanical failure in one of the vehicles involved, Ontario Provincial Police said Thursday.

    Deadly Crash At Toronto's Highway 407 May Have Involved Mechanical Failure: Police

    Taxi Drivers Seek Up To $1B From Quebec For Allowing Uber To Operate

    Taxi Drivers Seek Up To $1B From Quebec For Allowing Uber To Operate
    MONTREAL — Quebec cab drivers have been given the green light to sue the provincial government, alleging it stood by as Uber moved into their market.

    Taxi Drivers Seek Up To $1B From Quebec For Allowing Uber To Operate

    Environment Canada Warnings For Inner South Coast, Part Of Northwestern B.C.

    VANCOUVER — Residents of British Columbia's Bulkley Valley are greeting winter-like conditions while those in parts of the inner south coast are splashing through a deluge as Environment Canada posts weather warnings for those regions. 

    Environment Canada Warnings For Inner South Coast, Part Of Northwestern B.C.

    UVic Study Finds Homeless, Vulnerable, Finally Get Care When At Death's Door

    UVic Study Finds Homeless, Vulnerable, Finally Get Care When At Death's Door
    VICTORIA — The lives of 25 homeless or marginally housed people in Victoria only started to get better when they were close to death, says a University of Victoria study released Thursday.

    UVic Study Finds Homeless, Vulnerable, Finally Get Care When At Death's Door