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In 1897, America was suffering through
a grim depression triggered by the Panic of 1893. Money was tight and gold
was scarce when a group of miners walked off the ship Excelsior
in San Francisco harbor on July 15 with almost $200,000 of gold in their
luggage. Two days later, a second ship, the Portland, docked at
Seattle carrying more newly-rich miners and over $1.5 million in gold dust
and nuggets. Word of the strike spread quickly, igniting a gold rush stampede.
Most of the gold brought out in the summer
of 1897 came from the Klondike region of northern Canada, where Skookum
Jim, a Native American of the Dakhl'wedi clan, found a gold nugget in Rabbit
Creek on August 17, 1896. For many years, the credit for the discovery
of the gold at Bonanza Creek had been given to George Carmack, Skookum
Jim's brother-in-law and partner who had made the legal register of the
claim. The pair, working with their partner, Dawson Charlie, and Carmack's
common-law wife, Kate, brought hundreds of thousands of dollars out of
the discovery claim. |