Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Basic_C - Canadian Gold Rush
e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 2     21-40 of 102    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | 6  | Next 20
A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

         Canadian Gold Rush:     more books (23)
  1. Gold Rush! by Barry Gough, 1984-01
  2. Barkerville - A gold rush experience by Richard Wright, 1998-07-01
  3. The Nature of Gold: An Environmental History of the Klondike Gold Rush.(Book Review): An article from: American Review of Canadian Studies by Jerry Green, 2004-09-22
  4. Days of Gold: The California Gold Rush and the American Nation. (book reviews): An article from: Canadian Journal of History by Charlene Porsild, 1997-12-01
  5. Good Time Girls: Of the Alaska/ Yukon Gold Rush by Lael Morgan, 2003-06-01
  6. Rooted in Barbarous Soil: People, Culture, and Community in Gold Rush California.(Book Review) (book review): An article from: Canadian Journal of History by David R. Farrell, 2002-12-01
  7. Chilkoot Pass and the Great Gold Rush of 1898/Cat No R64-1-1981-48E (History and Archaeology, No 48) by Richard J Friesen, 1983-12
  8. Tillicums of the Trail; Being Klondike Yarns Told to Canadian Soldiers Overseas By a Sourdough Padre by George C. F. Pringle, 1922
  9. Golden Streams, Dangerous Dreams by Shawn Swanky, 2006-07-06

21. Forty Niners: Videos
Tom Craig, a young physician in the the gold rush days of California, discovers that lode Central City Tabors of Colorado canadian gold rush.
http://www2.lib.udel.edu/subj/hist/resguide/Gold_Rush/video.htm
Videos
Barbary Coast
Originally released as a motion picture in 1935. Director, Howard Hawks ; producer, Samuel Goldwyn ; writers, Ben Hecht, Charles MacArthur ; editor. Walter Brennan, Miriam Hopkins, Edward G. Robinson, Joel McCrea. A story of San Francisco's notorious Barbary Coast during the California Gold Rush days.
California Gold Rush . Classic Act Video.
Recreates author Bret Harte's experiences in mining camps during the California gold rush, which provided him with the wealth of material he used so effectively in his writing. Two of his stories, "The Outcasts of Poker Flat" and "The Luck of Roaring Camp," are dramatized.
The Forty-Niners and the California Gold Rush . Stamford, Conn.: AABC Video Publishing, Inc. 1994. 50 mins. ISBN: 1569490619
Closed-captioned for the hearing impaired. Produced in cooperation with the Gene Autry Western Heritage Museum. "A Brazos production." Narrated by Kris Kristofferson. There is nothing like the power of gold. When hard working carpenter James Marshall spotted "something shiny" in the American River on January 24, 1848, he felt the power. Soon, so did the rest of the country.
The Gold Rush and the 49'ers . New York: BFA Educational Media, 1992. 1 videodisc (ca. 20 min.)

22. Boston Herald: HOCKEY; THE WORLD CUP OF HOCKEY; Canadian Gold Rush; Finland Fall
Full text of the article, HOCKEY; THE WORLD CUP OF HOCKEY; canadian gold rush; Finland falls from Boston Herald, a publication in the field of News
http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qn4154/is_20040915/ai_n12398255
@import url(/css/us/style1.css); @import url(/css/us/searchResult1.css); @import url(/css/us/articles.css); @import url(/css/us/artHome1.css); Home
Advanced Search

IN free articles only all articles this publication Automotive Sports FindArticles Boston Herald Sep 15, 2004
Content provided in partnership with
10,000,000 articles Not found on any other search engine. Featured Titles for
Advocate, The
Air Force Journal of Logistics Air Force Law Review Air Force Speeches ... View all titles in this topic Hot New Articles by Topic Automotive Sports Top Articles Ever by Topic Automotive Sports HOCKEY; THE WORLD CUP OF HOCKEY; Canadian gold rush; Finland falls Boston Herald Sep 15, 2004 by Steve Conroy
Save a personal copy of this article and quickly find it again with Furl.net. It's free! Save it. TORONTO - Today may be a dark day for Canada and its national sport, but the country's favorite sons lit up the night last evening. On the eve of an almost certain National Hockey League lockout that could last months, if not years, Team Canada finally extricated itself from pesky Finland to capture the World Cup of Hockey title with a 3-2 victory in front of 19,370 at the Air Canada Centre. Shane Doan broke a 2-2 tie just 34 seconds into the third and it stood up as the game-winner. Bruin captain Joe Thornton feathered a nice backhand feed to Doan from behind the net and Doan circled the top of the crease before tucking it around Miikka Kiprusoff's left pad for the goal.

23. ‘BRE-X’ PIRATES DISCOVER CANADA
became so excited about the first canadian gold rush, that they sent 15 Ships Gold Rush fever brought together the largest Armada of English ships
http://www3.telus.net/st_simons/cr9811.htm
BRE-X’ PIRATES DISCOVER CANADA ( An Article for the November 1998 Deep Cove Crier) One of the popular myths is that Canadian history is dull and uneventful, that all the real action happens in the United States. All the credible scientists told Frobisher’s financial backer, Michael Lok, that the black rock was worthless ‘fools gold’. But Michael Lok, being an early stock promoter of the less reputable kind, ignored their advice and instead consulted an Italian alchemist, Giovanni Agnello, who used ‘black magic’ to discern that Martin Frobisher’s rock was indeed gold. The English business community, backed by Queen Elizabeth I, became so excited about the first Canadian Gold Rush, that they sent 15 Ships to Frobisher Bay on Baffin Island. The Queen even lent her own 200-ton ship AID. Gold Rush fever brought together the largest Armada of English ships ever assembled until World War II. Frobisher’s public image was rapidly transformed by his stockpromoter, Michael Lok, from that of an uncouth pirate to that of the ‘rare and valiant’ Captain General embarking on a heroic mission. Everyone, including Martin Frobisher himself, believed that he had discovered the Northwest Passage to China, and that Baffin Island contained King Solomon’s hidden mines. In this first English attempt to colonize the New World, Frobisher brought 120 would-be settlers, miners, carpenters, and an Anglican priest named Rev. Robert Wolfall. On their way to Baffin Island, they faced desperate circumstances due to mountainous icebergs that could crush their ships like matchboxes. The hardened sailors knelt down on the decks and prayed for God’s mercy. Two of the sailors’ prayers recorded for posterity by Captain Best were ‘Lord help us now or never’ and ‘Now Lord look down from heaven and save us sinners, or else our safety will come too late’. With no radar or telecommunications to guide them in the fog, they saved the sailors on the sunken ‘Dennis’ by using trumpets, drums, canons and the two passwords: ‘Before the world was God’, to be answered by ‘After God came Christ His Son’. Captain Best recorded that Rev. Wolfall encouraged Frobisher’s men ‘to be thankful for their strange and miraculous deliverance’ at sea. To celebrate their safe arrival on Baffin Island, Rev. Wolfall celebrated the first Anglican Communion service ever held in Canada, just 420 years ago.

24. Canadian Heroes Of The Klondike Gold Rush
The Klondike gold fields drew people from all over the world here are some of the most famous Canadians, listed by home province.
http://www.yukonalaska.com/klondike/byprovince.html
May 8, 1998
Canadian Heroes of the Klondike Gold Rush
Listed by their native Province
Alberta: Jim Wallwork - A cowboy from the foothills, Wallwork's claim to fame was hauling a small steamboat, the Daisy Belle, over the mountains from Edmonton to Dawson City. It was a North Saskatchewan sternwheeler. He dragged it over the summit from Shacktown to the Bell River, aided by thirty Indian sled-dogs. The little craft finally reached the Yukon and there, unable to face the swift current, ended its days. Wallwork transferred the eight horsepower engine and the boiler to a York boat and continued upstream to Dawson. No doubt it was enough for him that he had made it, for those who set out from Edmonton to seek their fortunes counted themselves truly fortunate if they reached their goal. British Columbia: Captain William Moore - During the late 1880s, Moore owned a mansion in Victoria and his fleet of five steamboats had earned him a fortune in the Cassiar stampede. Bankrupt by 1887, his possessions were auctioned off by creditors. Long before George Carmack's strike, he was convinced there would be a gold rush to the Klondike. He became determined to build a boom town at Skagway and in 1888 built a cabin at the foot of the White Pass. When the influx came in 1897, newcomers ordered him off his land to build a thoroughfare. He fought this in the courts for four years, in the meantime building a mile-long wharf that would again earn him a fortune. Finally the courts awarded him 25% of the assessed value of all the lots within the original townsite.

25. Barkerville Gold Rush Town - Time Travel In The Cariboo - British Columbia - Can
Barkerville gold rush, stories and pictures from The Cariboo Sentinel and The Ninth canadian National gold Panning Championships Panners from all over
http://www.barkerville.com/
Watch for these upcoming attractions in Barkerville:
For more details call Barkerville at 1-888-994-3332 ext 27 toll free, or email: Barkerville Direct : Call (250) 994-3241 for more details. Billy Barkers Banquet : (Provided by the Friends of Barkerville). Cross Stitch Weekend : September 9-11 Retreat (Call (250) 994-2333 for more information. Cross Stitch Weekend : September 23-25 Retreat (Call (250) 994-2333 for more information. in Barkerville at Haloween

26. Klondike Gold Rush Links - ExploreNorth
canadian Heroes of the Klondike gold rush Short bios, listed by the person s home town. Captain Jack Crawford A poem by the Poet Scout, written to honour
http://www.explorenorth.com/library/ya/bl22y.htm
Klondike Gold Rush
The 1898 Yukon Act
The Klondike Gold Rush was the direct cause of the Yukon becoming a separate Territory. American Heroes of the Klondike Gold Rush
Short bios, listed by the person's home town. Canadian Heroes of the Klondike Gold Rush
Short bios, listed by the person's home town. Captain Jack Crawford
A poem by the "Poet Scout," written to honour Klondike balloonist John Leonard. Children of the Gold Rush
A review of the book by Claire Rudolph Murphy and Jane G. Haigh. . Dan Snure - Klondike Outfit List
The complete list, copied from a letter to his family in Ontario in 1898. Dyea, Alaska
A comprehensive guide to the history and current condition of this ghost town that was the gateway to the Chilkoot Pass. Includes a complete photo-inventory of the cemeteries. Experience the Klondike in Dawson City
Whatever your reason for wanting to see the North, Dawson City should be on your 'must-see' list. George and Martha Louise Black
The couple played important parts in the political history of the Yukon, with Martha becoming the Yukon's federal Member of Parliament. Golden Dreams: The Quest for the Klondike
A beautifully-designed site with 25 photos of the Klondike rush as seen through the lens of Asahel Curtis.

27. ::: The Klondike Gold Rush :::
Essay on the Klondike gold rush. Nor was Dawson the only canadian city to have dramatic growth due to the Klondike gold rush.
http://content.lib.washington.edu/goldrush/
Home Search Special Collections Exhibits ... Exhibit Main Page Related Collections: Asahel Curtis Eric A. Hegg William Hester Frank LaRoche ... H. M. Sarvant
The Klondike Gold Rush
Other Search Options ** Keyword uses implied AND between words. To perform phrase searching select 'Other Search Options' above. On August 16, 1896 Yukon-area Indians Skookum Jim Mason and Tagish Charlie, along with Seattleite George Carmack found gold in Rabbit Creek, near Dawson, in the Yukon region of Canada. The creek was promptly renamed Bonanza Creek, and many of the locals started staking claims. Gold was literally found all over the place, and most of these early stakeholders (who became known as the "Klondike Kings") became wealthy. Since the Yukon was so remote, word of this find spread relatively slowly for almost a year. On July 17, 1897, eleven months after the initial discovery of gold, the steamship Portland arrived in Seattle from Dawson with "more than a ton of gold", according to the Seattle Post-Intelligencer. With that pronouncement, the Klondike Gold Rush was on! Within six months, approximately 100,000 gold-seekers set off for the Yukon. Only 30,000 completed the trip. Many Klondikers died, or lost enthusiasm and either stopped where they were, or turned back along the way. The trip was long, arduous, and cold. Klondikers had to walk most of the way, using either pack animals or sleds to carry hundreds of pounds of supplies. The Northwest Mounted Police in Canada required that all Klondikers bring a year's worth of supplies with them. Even so, starvation and malnutrition were serious problems along the trail. The story of the Klondiker who boiled his boots to drink the broth was widely reported, and may well have been true. Cold was another serious problem along the trail. Winter temperatures in the mountains of northern British Columbia and the Yukon were normally -20 degrees F., and temperatures of -50 degrees F. were not unheard of. Tents were usually the warmest shelter a Klondiker could hope for.

28. 1858 Gold Rush - British Columbia - Canadian Confederation
Marshall, Daniel P. Fraser River gold rush . canadian encyclopedia year 2000 edition. Ed. James H. Marsh. 3rd print ed.
http://www.collectionscanada.ca/confederation/023001-2951-e.html
1858 Gold Rush - British Columbia
There were several gold finds in British Columbia in the 1850s, but the largest and most important discoveries were made in the sand bars along the Fraser River. When the first consignment of Fraser River gold reached San Francisco on April 3, 1858, the Fraser River Gold Rush was on. Tens of thousands of people flocked to the area, increasing the population of Victoria from 500 to more than 5000 people; thousands more moved to the mainland. Almost overnight, gold prospecting eclipsed the fur trade as the major industry in the region. In 1858 Britain formalized its hold on the coast by establishing the colony of British Columbia, sometimes known as the "gold colony". The economic boom lasted into the early 1860s, when British Columbia and Vancouver Island lapsed into a recession.
Sources
British Columbia : a short history Canadian encyclopedia : year 2000 edition British Columbia : a history British Columbia : a history of the province
Created: 2001-12-14
Updated: 2005-05-02 Top of page Important Notices

29. Natural Resources - Canadian Heritage Gallery
canadian Heritage Gallery. bullet.gif (112 bytes) Home Page Cariboo Shack A gold miners shack in the Cariboo during the gold rush of the 1860s.
http://www.canadianheritage.org/galleries/naturalresources0500.htm
Canadian Heritage Gallery Home Page
Galleries

Natural Resources
Previous Page ...
Next Page

Natural Resources Click on the thumbnail to view the image, and for information about ordering reproductions. Gold Mining Cariboo Gold Diggings In 1858 gold was first discovered along the lower Fraser river and later on the slopes of the Cariboo Mountains in British Columbia, as pictured here.
ID #20705 Cariboo Shack A gold miners' shack in the Cariboo during the gold rush of the 1860s.
ID #10017 Yukon Gold Field Map Map showing the routes to the Yukon Gold Fields during the Klondike Gold Rush and indicating the new Yukon Provisional Territory.
ID #20782 Klondike Migrants Pioneer migrants to Dawson City during the Klondike Gold Rush, including two women.
ID #20783 Early Klondikers Early Klondikers arriving via Skagway, Alaska, 1897, during the Klondike Gold Rush.
ID #20784 Gold Bottom Gold Bottom Village, Yukon Territory, 1900, a typical early gold-rush settlement at Hunker Creek.
ID #20785 Early Ontario Mining Two miners examining Northern Ontario quartz for precious metals, probably relating to gold prospecting in the early Porcupine district.

30. Parks Canada - Dawson Historic Complex National Historic Site Of Canada - The Go
The gold rush. The gold rush. Few episodes in canadian history captured world imagination in the same way as the fabulous Klondike gold rush of 189798
http://www.pc.gc.ca/lhn-nhs/yt/dawson/natcul/natcul4_e.asp
Français Contact Us Help Search ... Planning Your Visit Search Enter a keyword:
  • Introduction What's New Visitor Information Contact Us Parks Canada
    Box 390
    Dawson City, Y.T.
    Canada
    Tel:
    Fax:
    Email:
    dawson.info @pc.gc.ca
    Dawson Historic Complex National Historic Site of Canada
    The Gold Rush: Few episodes in Canadian history captured world imagination in the same way as the fabulous Klondike Gold Rush of 1897-98. When word of gold reached the outside world, some 250,000 adventurers and fortune seekers-the majority from the U.S.A.- faced the hardships and danger of the Gold Rush Trail to dig for gold along the creeks feeding the Klondike River. And for a brief time Dawson, the hub of the goldfields, became one of the liveliest cities on the continent... In 1898 the spring breakup brought thousands of stampeders downriver, among them hundreds of businessmen intent on making their fortunes, not in the fields, but in Dawson itself. During the boom years of 1898-99, they established almost every type of business imaginable, from saloons and dance halls, grocery and hardware stores, to dress shops and haberdasheries. By the summer of 1899 business had moved from tents into 20 substantial blocks of commercial buildings, giving Dawson an appearance of permanence.

31. Parks Canada - Chilkoot Trail National Historic Site Of Canada - Natural Wonders
It was the Klondike gold rush of 189699 that transformed the Chilkoot Trail as a canadian component of the Klondike gold rush International Historic
http://www.pc.gc.ca/lhn-nhs/yt/chilkoot/natcul/natcul2_e.asp
Français Contact Us Help Search ... Planning Your Visit Search Enter a keyword:
  • Introduction What's New Visitor Information Contact Us Parks Canada - Yukon
    Suite 205 - 300 Main Street
    Whitehorse, Y.T.
    Canada
    Tel (toll free for North America only):
    Tel (local or overseas):
    Fax:
    Email:
    whitehorse.info @pc.gc.ca
    Chilkoot Trail National Historic Site of Canada
    History Cemetary at Lindeman City. The news of the Klondike gold strike in 1896 transformed the intermittent use of the pass from a trickle to a stampede. Stretching from Dyea on the coast to the tent cities of Lindeman and Bennett, an unbroken line of stampeders struggled over the Chilkoot Pass through summer rains and winter blizzards. Hauling large volumes of food, equipment and other goods, the line moved forward slowly and hesitantly. The stampeders consumed the limited forests on both sides of the trail for buildings, boats and fires and gradually churned the trail into quagmire. The men, women and children making the journey over the pass, were a cross section of North American society. Offices, stores and farms were forsaken for the chance to pan the golden sands of the Klondike. Inexperienced, disorganized and unfamiliar with all aspects of wilderness living, the individuals on the trail found themselves a part of a great movement of people heading northward. Each stampeder packed almost a ton of goods into the Yukon. As goods were consumed and as stampeders tired or gave up entirely, material was discarded. Tin cans, sleds, boats, bottles, boots, stoves and hundreds of other items litter the trail. In addition, more permanent reminders of the rush remain; tent sites at Lindeman, graves and the shell of the Presbyterian Church at Bennett. These historic resources help to bring to life the story of the Klondike gold rush for us today.

32. Rivers Of Canada: Yukon River - Route Of The Gold Rush
Rivers of Canada. Articles on canadian rivers Annapolis River, Churchill River, Fraser River, Grand River , Hillsborough River, Mackenzie River, Red River,
http://www.ccge.org/ccge/english/Resources/rivers/tr_rivers_yukonRiver.asp
HOME SITEMAP SEARCH Geography Action! ... Research Grants
Yukon River
Route of the Gold Rush
Original Gwich'in name: Yukon meaning ' great river
Current official name : Yukon, from the Gwich'in original
Source: Coastal Range mountains of northern British Columbia
Mouth: Bering Sea at St. Michael, Alaska
Direction of flow: northwest
Length : 3,185 kilometres
Main Characteristic: aboriginal resource and Gold Rush route
More on the Yukon River: North to Alaska War brings a highway to the Yukon Bonanza - The quest for Klondike gold Staking a Claim A First Nation's right to the land Cold Rush Stampede up the frozen Chilkoot Trail Scaling Fish Salmon spawners get over a dam Heal and Purify A First Nation recovers from cultural suppression Spreading the Word Yukon storytelling tradition welcomes the world Losing Track The White Pass and Yukon Route OF ALL CANADA'S GREAT RIVERS, THE YUKON is the one that has most retained its natural glory, while still being visibly marked by great human events. The Yukon's wide valley descends gently from the mountains of northern British Columbia, through the Yukon Territory and across Alaska to the Bering Sea. Boats can navigate all the way from the Alaskan coast to Whitehorse, the capital of the Yukon Territory.

33. Klondike Gold Rush: Information From Answers.com
Klondike gold rush A typical gold mining operation, on Bonanza Creek The Klondike gold rush and some used the allcanadian Ashcroft and Edmonton trails.
http://www.answers.com/topic/klondike-gold-rush
showHide_TellMeAbout2('false'); Business Entertainment Games Health ... More... On this page: Wikipedia Mentioned In Or search: - The Web - Images - News - Blogs - Shopping Klondike Gold Rush Wikipedia Klondike Gold Rush A typical gold mining operation, on Bonanza Creek The Klondike Gold Rush was a frenzy of gold rush immigration to and gold prospecting in the Klondike near Dawson City in the Yukon Territory Canada , after gold was discovered in the late 19th century In August , three people led by Skookum Jim Mason (a member of the Tagish nation whose birth name was Keish ) headed up the Yukon River from the Carcross area looking for his sister Kate and her husband George Carmack . The party included Skookum Jim, Skookum Jim's cousin known as Dawson Charlie (or sometimes Tagish Charlie) and his nephew Patsy Henderson. After meeting up with George and Kate who were fishing for salmon at the mouth of the Klondike River , they ran into Nova Scotian Robert Henderson who had been mining gold on the Indian River, just south of the Klondike. Henderson told George Carmack about where he was mining and that he did not want any "damn Siwashes" (meaning Indians) near him. The group then headed a few miles up the Klondike River to Rabbit Creek, now Bonanza Creek to hunt moose. On August 16 , the party discovered rich placer gold deposits in Bonanza (Rabbit) Creek. It is now generally accepted that Skookum Jim made the actual discovery, but some accounts say that it was Kate Carmack. George Carmack was officially credited for the discovery because the "discovery" claim was staked in his name. The group agreed to this because they felt that other miners would be reluctant to recognise a claim made by an Indian, given the strong racist attitudes of the time. Further evidence of Skookum Jim's discovery is that he was eagerly followed by other miners and caused a mini rush when he later staked some claims in the

34. Alaska Historical Collections: How To Find Your Gold Rush Relative
Presented by The Alaska gold rush Centennial Task Force canadian Genealogy Index, 1600s1900s - Family Archive CD 118 Broderbund Software,
http://www.library.state.ak.us/hist/parham.html
Home Division EED State of Alaska ... Alaska's Gold
a teaching resource Eight Stars of Gold
the story of Alaska's flag
Alaska Historical Library
> Historical Library Publications > Finding Your Gold Rush Relative
How to Find Your Gold Rush Relative: Sources on the Klondike and Alaska gold rushes, 1896-1914
Compiled by R. Bruce Parham, May 1997 (Updated April 2001)
National Archives and Records Administration-Pacific Alaska Region
Anchorage, Alaska Presented by The Alaska Gold Rush Centennial Task Force This guide is intended to provide a basic list of Alaska and Yukon genealogical resources for individuals who were in the north during the Klondike and Alaska Gold Rushes (1896-1914). While not comprehensive, the information includes promising and up-to-date sources with others that may be obscure and un-indexed. This guide includes:
  • major Alaska repositories major Yukon repositories repositories outside Alaska and Yukon genealogical societies ... newspaper indexes and guides

  • Many of the repositories have guides to their archival, manuscript, and photograph collections and specific finding aids to their Gold Rush materials. The list of active genealogical societies includes information on how to hire individuals or groups to do research. The Internet has become a valuable genealogical research tool and, as such, addresses for sites particularly in Alaska and Yukon are included. The sources listed are at the larger Alaska or Yukon libraries; some items may be borrowed on interlibrary loan through your local public library.

    35. History - The Origins Of The RCMP
    A gold strike on this small Yukon tributary, just inside the canadian border, gold rush The increase in population created a need for a more stable
    http://www.rcmp.ca/history/origins10_e.htm
    @import url("../styles/sidebar_navigation.css"); Contact Us Help Search Canada Site ... Careers / Recruiting Provinces- Alberta British Columbia Manitoba New Brunswick Newfoundland and Labrador N.W.T Nova Scotia Nunavut Ontario - NCR-Ottawa P.E.I. Quebec Saskatchewan - Training Academy Yukon
    Origins of the RCMP
    Klondike Gold Rush While the Force in Alberta and Saskatchewan was adjusting to the growing tide of settlers, a new frontier was opening up to the north along the banks of the Yukon River and its tributaries. Little was known of the Yukon prior to 1886. A sudden flurry of activity there focused attention on the Fortymile River. A gold strike on this small Yukon tributary, just inside the Canadian border, set off a chain reaction attracting a sudden modest influx of
    gold seekers. Local traders, conscious of the new market, now turned their attentions to these fresh customers. The increase in population created a need for a more stable regulative authority: major commercial interests looked for some form of order; the Anglican clergy sought to protect the Indian population from indiscriminate liquor traders; and even the miners worried about possible future disorder. The Canadian government's solution to these problems was "something for everyone". There would be no immediate show of force which would risk a violent clash with the miners and traders over government regulations, but the government wished to ensure that the region would remain Canadian.

    36. Canadian History - People Places And Events In The History Of Canada
    Klondike gold rush A great collection of canadian and US information on the Klondike gold rush. From Explore North. Onderdonk s Way
    http://canadaonline.about.com/od/canadianhistory/
    zJs=10 zJs=11 zJs=12 zJs=13 zc(5,'jsc',zJs,9999999,'') About Canada Online History of Canada General Canadian History Canada Online Essentials Federal Government of Canada Prime Ministers of Canada ... Help zau(256,140,140,'el','http://z.about.com/0/ip/417/C.htm','');w(xb+xb+' ');zau(256,140,140,'von','http://z.about.com/0/ip/496/7.htm','');w(xb+xb);
    FREE Newsletter
    Sign Up Now for the Canada Online newsletter!
    See Online Courses
    Search Canada Online
    General Canadian History Resources
    Explore this broad collection of resources on people, places and events in Canadian history, including building the railroad, the Klondike Gold Rush, the Halifax explosion and the discovery of insulin.
    Alphabetical
    Recent Up a category Prime Ministers of Canada Prime Ministers of Canada and their terms of office since 1867. Premiers of Canadian Provinces Historical listings of the premiers of Canada's provinces and territories, with related links. Governors General of Canada Governors General of Canada and their terms of office since Confederation. Halifax Explosion The collision of a relief vessel and a munitions carrier in Halifax Harbour during World War I caused the world's largest man-made explosion before Hiroshima.

    37. Encyclopedia: Klondike Gold Rush
    during the Klondike gold rush, from the canadian National Archives 1 of the Yukon River in Canada and gave its name to the Klondike gold rush.
    http://www.nationmaster.com/encyclopedia/Klondike-Gold-Rush

    Supporter Benefits
    Signup Login Sources ... Pies
    Related Articles People who viewed "Klondike Gold Rush" also viewed:
  • Klondike River
  • Fortymile River
  • Klondike gold rush
  • Gold rush ...
  • Chilkoot Pass What's new?
  • Our next offering Latest newsletter Student area Lesson plans
  • Recent Updates
  • Zuko Zhao Benshan Zhang Rongliang Zebra mussel ...
  • More Recent Articles Top Graphs
  • Richest Most Murderous Most Taxed Most Populous ...
  • More Stats
    Encyclopedia: Klondike Gold Rush
    Updated 38 days 15 hours 22 minutes ago. Other descriptions of Klondike Gold Rush A typical gold mining operation, on Bonanza Creek The Klondike Gold Rush was a frenzy of gold rush immigration to and gold prospecting in the Klondike near Dawson City in the Yukon Territory Canada , after gold was discovered in the late 19th century Image File history File links A mining operation during the Klondike Gold Rush, from the Canadian National Archives [1] File history Legend: (cur) = this is the current file, (del) = delete this old version, (rev) = revert to this old version. ... Image File history File links A mining operation during the Klondike Gold Rush, from the Canadian National Archives [1] File history Legend: (cur) = this is the current file, (del) = delete this old version, (rev) = revert to this old version. ...

    38. IEEE July 2005 GOLD-RUSH Newsletter
    With Volume 3 of our canadian gold newsletter Aurum, we have expanded our team The gold rush is a quarterly electronic newsletter published by the IEEE
    http://www.ieee.org/organizations/rab/gold/july05.html
    Archive Issues In the News! Message from GOLD Committee Chair Region 7 GOLD Expands Volunteer Network IEEE Vancouver Section GOLD Visits EA Canada IEEE Spectrum hosts online forum in September 2005 ... Time Saver: Submitting GOLD Activity Reports Electronically JULY 2005 GOLD-RUSH NEWSLETTER Message from GOLD Committee Chair Gerald Anleitner Dear member of IEEE GOLD, GOLD is around the world, we have groups in many countries on our planet! When you are traveling, why not visit local GOLD groups on the way? It is a great opportunity to meet people and get to know the country you are visiting in a different way (be it a business or leisure trip). You might even do a talk for the local GOLD group and they can file that meeting as part of their annual activity reporting. I’d like to remind all GOLD Affinity Group Chairs about their reporting duty, do not forget to report any of your events, and note the text below regarding electronic reporting on the IEEE web site. To find out where local IEEE GOLD Affinity Groups are, visit the GOLD web site at

    39. Barkerville, British Columbia, Canada
    During the height of the gold rush it was thought that Barkerville would become one The Great canadian Hill Climb attracts over 1000 snowmobilers to its
    http://www.britishcolumbia.com/regions/towns/?townID=3530

    40. CTV.ca | May 2, 2005 | For Immediate Release
    gold rush canadian Idol Audition Tour Ends with Record Number of gold Tickets as 187 Advance to Toronto. Toronto, ON (May 2, 2005) –It s the biggest gold
    http://www.ctv.ca/servlet/ArticleNews/show/CTVShows/1115054628994_110462502
    @import "http://www.ctv.ca/mar/css/ctv.css"; @import "http://www.ctv.ca/mar/css/programStory.css"; The Web  CTV.ca  Programs A-Z All Programs Page 8 Simple Rules According To Jim (HD) Alias (HD) The Amazing Race American Idol Balance: Television for Living Well Beauty and the Geek The Bold and the Beautiful Brat Camp Canada AM Canadian Idol Close to Home Cold Case (HD) Cold Squad Comedy Inc. Comedy Now! Commander In Chief Corner Gas (HD) CSI (HD) CSI: Miami (HD) CSI: NY(HD) CTV News Daily Planet The Daily Show with Jon Stewart Dancing With The Stars: Dance-Off Degrassi: The Next Generation (HD) The Degrassi Story Desperate Housewives CTV Movie: DIE ANOTHER DAY Dr. Phil Emmy Awards ER (HD) eTalk Daily Feature Presentations General Hospital Ghost Whisperer Good Morning Canada Grey's Anatomy Inconceivable Instant Star (HD) Invasion Jeopardy! Joan of Arcadia (HD) Less Than Perfect Live With Regis and Kelly Lost Medium My Kind of Town Nip/Tuck The O.C. The Oprah Winfrey Show The Osbournes Pimp My Ride punk'd Question Period Robson Arms The Scholar Scrubs Shelter From The Storm Simple Life: Interns The Sopranos (HD) So You Think You Can Dance Sue Thomas: F.B. Eye

    A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

    Page 2     21-40 of 102    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | 6  | Next 20

    free hit counter