The Klondike Gold Rush
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- Опубліковано 30 вер 2024
- The Klondike Gold Rush (also known as Alaska Gold Rush and Yukon Gold Rush)
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My granddaughter wanted a metal detector for Christmas so she could find gold. I think she saw it on a YT video. Well, I told her that I don't have much gold on the Almosta Ranch but we could detect on the shooting range for bullets. I think she is just as happy finding bullets that get turned into "gold" at the tune of five cents each. Her being with me, pure gold.
Awww, that's cool
That's a memory that'll be with her when she's old and grey. 👍
"Dying Ain't Much Of A Living Boy"
True
Say that to any stunt-man.
"There's gold up in thar hills!" -Yosemite Sam
Yep
A couple of the last gold seekers, i just read died in the early 1960s and worked for Alaskan Statehood
Wow!
A golden opportunity to learn some nuggets of truths.
HA! Hope you found some gold in there.
@@ArizonaGhostridersI give your joke the Gold Seal of approval.
Wyatt Earp and his wife Josephine ventured to Alaska, where they ran the Dexter Saloon in Nome during the summers and spent their winters outside the state.
Like I said, Alaska was rich in this mineral.
In Juneau, there is a saloon that had an old gun that Wyatt Earp left behind when he left town, pretty cool
@@davidsloan3480 I'd love to see it one day.
Alaska: *Gold is discovered*
A lot of dogs: hehe I'm in danger
LOL!
Whhew, close one! For a moment there, I thought Bill was gonna miss his cameo, haha
Thank You!
Yukon showed courage and determination, Rex showed common sense in heading back south!
the railroad built to help get to the goldfields and avoid the treacherous passage hike is still in use for tourist trains with only 40 miles if the original 110 miles closed
Yeah, it was a precarious trip back then.
I rode the train 2006, pretty cool… sure beats walking lol
Fun video. Got to visit the gold rush region when we visited Alaska, but we took the White Pass on a train (in the summer!) incredible what those miners went through. Dawson City was cool to visit and we panned for gold a little too Loved the clip from Paint Your Wagon!
Cool trip! Thank You!
There are strange things done, under the Midnight Sun, but if it weren't for Santee.... They'd be pretty boring!
Aww, thanks.
Santee, Keep picking at it. Thank you very much. You and Mrs. Pew Pew have a beautiful and blessed weekend.
Haha! Thank You!
Just imagine how obscenely rich those first three men could have been.... If they had been smart enough to keep their fool mouths shut!
Right??
LOL Santee,
I never thought I'd see the day when you start off a video "picking your nose". 😂
Great video. Love the new hat too.
Have a great weekend.
JT
😁 LOL! You too.
This truly was a nugget of history. Just a golden review
So, I picked a good topic?
That scene from Pale Rider always cracks me up. Gold is extremely dense. A nugget that size could not be held with one hand, yet he’s just waving it around lol.
Yeah!
Great video, Santee!
I still think they should make a sequel to Tombstone, with Kurt Russell as an older Wyatt Earp, including his time in Alaska, and Sam Elliott as an older Virgil in Goldfield, Nevada!
-Desert Rat Rick
Great idea...
There was an early Gold rush in North Carolina back in the 1700s. Charlotte NC became one of the first Mints. Reed Gold Mine and a 17 pound gold nugget. Interesting read. Thanks again for your videos.
Oooo, I'll look at it.
While we're talking about the East Coast rushes, it's worth mentioning the Georgia Gold Rush of Dahlonega and Villa Rica in the late 1820s-1830s. A lot of the '49ers honed their craft in the foothills of the Appalachians.
@ArizonaGhostriders I'm from Upstate South Carolina near the North Carolina gold rush area . As I understand the huge nugget was originally brushed off as an Iron Pyrite by the discoverer and used as a door stop . The finder sold the property to a new buyer who identified the rock as real AU .
Hey, you forgot to mention angel from North to Alaska.😂😂 Anyway, great video, and I've always enjoyed your interesting historical tidbits.
Thank You!
Excellent and fun video, John! Hope you don't mind me stating that the gold rush of 1896-98 was not an Alaskan gold rush, but Canadian, although Alaska did play a major role in the rush as a destination port. As you mention, Jefferson Randolph "Soapy" Smith (my great-grandfather) play a key part on the Alaskan side. The "Alaskan gold rush" did not come to be until 1899 in Nome.
Thanks, Soapy. It was also called the "Klondike Gold Rush" and in my research I found that the "Alaskan" part was due mainly to the fact that Americans were the majority of the Stampeders. It would appear many weren't happy with the Canadian taxation so they went to the Alaskan side and prospected there.
Still, "Alaskan", "Yukon", and "Klondike" all mean the same gold rush.
This did bring a bit of confusion with a couple commenters so I changed the thumbnail and the title to "Klondike Gold Rush."
@@JeffSoapySmith Much success with your book, Jeff. Thanks for writing it.
You forgot to mention, Scrooge McDuck made his fortune in the Klondike (according to the comics I read as a boy) 🤣
Ah yes.
If you like gold stories do one about Samuel Brennan, who ran through the streets of San Francisco yelling "Gold! Gold! Gold on the American River." Then he set up a store selling supplies, at prices that would have shamed the Devil. And instead of living in shame he has a street named after him. It's always the suppliers who got rich no matter what, and they never got wet, tired or dirty. Kinda like today.
Interesting!
I always RUSH to your videos to get every NUGGET of knowledge that I can. Your videos are pure GOLD. I also want that Outlaw Josey Wales poster. I guess I will see you on down the trail.
I guess I PICKED a good topic
Hey Santee,
can you do one on female clothing in the old west?
Cheers,
Scott
PS: Keep up the wonderful content. I absolutely enjoy watching your videos! ❤
Thank You!
I really like the clips from Pale Rider in this, not to mention the fiddle playing Billy in the Low Ground in the beginning.
Good!
Pan for gold opens at...every Saturday at your local place ! Whatever may be guys 🤠
Thank You!
Someone beat me to it, but I was going to comment on your starting the video by "picking" your nose. Cool hat, by the way.
Ha!
And, as always, the people who made the real money were the ones supplying the miners with everything they needed.
Rex had better get himself a pair of good winter boots, er, claw covers, if he expects to run around that country!
Excellent point.
Well done Sourdough
Thank You!
Tough conditions to live now, can't imagine Alaska 1800s.
Too cold for this desert rat
Lot of movies were made along a similar line of the Alaskan gold rush.
Yes.
I can't imagine, waiting the looooonng line, moving sloooowwwlllyy
up Chilkoot! Crazy, what Gold does to peoples minds.
Yes.
That would have been a real eye opener had that pick head slipped down the haft.
One of the remaining treasures of the Klondike gold rush are the poems of Robert Service.
Check out:
The Cremation of Sam McGee
The Shooting of Dan McGrew
These poems are gold!
“The Law of the Yukon”
I always dig that one out when people wanna talk about Chris McCandless or Tim Treadwell. Natural selection still applies up here.
The Klondike Gold Rush was not an American Gold Rush! The Klondike is not in the USA; I should know, I live there - in Canada!! The Klondike Gold Rush was also unlike other gold rushes in that there was no gun violence or claim jumping, or anything like that. It is fortunate that the Mounties were here just before the gold rush began, and they kept pretty close control of things.
Although some of the miner/prospectors did their digging on the American side, it was primarily the Klondike. There were newspapers in America at the time that called it the Alaskan Gold Rush, mainly because folks were leaving from there.
I would prefer Tombstone to Skagway----- And I thought the Chicago winters of my youth were brutal..
Yeah, right??
That was pretty cool talkin' 'bout the Alaskan gold rush. You presented a great range of details in a short period of time. Old rush? No Rex? 🦖🤣
😀Rex is in the video.
Oops! I will watch it again. 😎
Ah, yes! Buurryed eyed this morning I was.
First!Hey Santee how about the cripple Creek Colorado Gold Rush
OK!
You always seem to "pick" the best subjects Santee, and boy when you do you always seem to "pan"
for the best information. That my friend is your "claim" to fame.
OK, I'll stop. LOL.
HAHA! Thanks, Drew.
I wondering about Old West folklore (including superstitions and urban legends).
Got a lot on this channel.
Interesting thanks Santee, it’s amazing amount of people looking still for that get rich stuff they call GOLD!!. Yes even Wyatt Earp sailed there after OK Corral shooting. He left didn’t find anything there went back to California. -Kid Yuma
Yessir
Hi Santee! Hey if you want to go on a Yukon kick here’s one of the great western poems! The cremation of Sam McGee. The best version I’ve heard was by Waddie Mitchell,but I couldn’t find his. So I sent the link for Burgess Meredith’s version ( ua-cam.com/video/p61uzznn0nA/v-deo.html ). Heck even Johnny cash did his version. It’s written by Robert Service. Enjoy. P.s. love the new hat!
I'll check it out!
Good video. I was always interested in the Klondike Gold Rush from the Canadian perspective. If you get a chance look up the Historica Canada vignette for Sam Steele, one of the Mounties in the Yukon during the Rush
I will!
That’s just the beginning of course. Other names/places of interest are Felix Pedro that found gold near what is now Fairbanks (where active gold mining still takes place) and the gold beaches of Nome (they now dredge for it in the water offshore. Also Wyatt Earp operated a saloon in town for a time).
Yeah, I'm sure we'll talk about the other goldfields in Alaska.
Your T Rex would have to change species to Albertasaurus to be on the Alaska/Canada border. I think Albertasaurus was an Allosaurid rather than a Tyranosaurid.😊
No, no, this is not Albertasaurus. Clearly it is Nanuqsaurus, which was discovered in 2006 in Alaska. A little smaller than the T-Rex, like I showed. 😊
I hope in the future you take a look at Bannock, Idaho which changed it's name to
Idaho City so as not to be confused with Bannock, Montana. Huge gold rush area and part of the Boise Basin. It became the largest city at 25 K residents back in it's hay day.
All crammed into a long narrow valley. There were approx 700 Chinese included in that population.
700 Chinese?? Wow. Seems like a lot for that area. I'll look into it.
Hey I was wondering, could you do a video on Air Rifles or Air Guns in the old west? I read that the Lewis and Clark expedition used one and air guns are really old, oldest known one is from around 1580. So I'm wondering if they ever were used by cowboys in the old west over their gunpowder brothers at any time.
Yes I can!
I wish I could say "I was there" - Well, I'm a little old, but not THAT old... 😂
HAHA!
Did they serve food on trains back then? I've been watching videos on food history.
They had dining cars in the late 1860s...so yes.
I been to Alaska it was the most beautiful place I’ve ever seen!
God best work. ❤✝️
Wow!!! I have to go.
Way cool. I love all the mine history here in Idaho. All I can say is that they were a very Hardy people. Hope springs eternal, and those who stuck it out most likely found some success. It's still such a good thing to find evidence of the life they lead back in the day. Thanks Santee
You're welcome.
Comes a Miner 96'er and his daughter inclementine......
Yup!
i first learned about this through the comic biography of scrooge mcduck by don rosa when i was 9 or 10 years old! that book is full of fun details on the time period!
Nice!
Yukon? Have ridden my motorcycle to Dawson
Nice
Gold rushes have always been good for the economy. Sales of prospecting and mining tools go through the roof and a lot of business goes with that. Travel and lodging industries pop up with all those accouterments. It really moves some money. You sometimes even get some real gold out of the deal to boot. Well, somebody does.
Yeah, somebody!
You never cease to amaze me on how awesome topics that you have never covered. HAHAHA. So cool 👍👍👍
Glad you like them!
I'm aware that the majority of prospectors went bust or broke even, but how did the sutlers and store owners that supplied them fare?
Oh they did just fine!
I jumped a claim once. Don't know what the big deal is, I twisted my ankle on landing and it added nothing to my rep as a bad hombre.
Damn...sometimes it's tough.
I wonder if any of the miners ate a boot like Charlie Chaplin did. He did it with a knife and fork, too. Guy had manners.
HA!
Probably more gold in mining prospectors. Then being one. Providing gods and services.
Maybe.
Better to sell the shovel than to dig in the dirt
@@509Gman In some instances!
Awesome video! I couldn't imagine staking for gold back then before our technological advancements.
It was tough
WYATT & JOSEY EARP WENT TO ALASKA AND RAN A CASINO FOR SEVERAL YEARS .. ANOTHER GREAT VIDEO SANTEE ..SO HAVE FUN AND HAVE A GOOD WEEKEND ADIOS SANTEE
Thanks! You too!
Hello santine. Your friend Ted from Texas. Perhaps you can do something on the Alamo. I would love to hear your twist on history and everything how it transpired. Thanks man
Thanks Fred. I appreciate that.
Well by golly i gtta go dig out the VCR and watch North to Alaska, agan
HA!
You've done beef and bacon, how about an episode on chicken in the west
Sure!
After years of digging, two gold rush enthusiasts finally found a small amount of the precious metal
It was a miner success
Oh, no. That's a dad joke.
You picked’ a good joke
North to Alaska. He’s going north, the rush is on.
Yes!
Hey Santee, you should consider doing a video on the Chinese community in Tombstone or even in the American Frontier if there is information on the topic!
Absolutely.
Could you do a piece on the gold rush near denver.
Yes
Hey great subject matter this week!🤠
Thank You!
Very intrestingly awsome and intrestingly informative video, I really liked and enjoyed it, i learned alit about the alaskan goldrush and that is my favorite time period to write about and my favorite artifacts abd furniture ro look at for story inspiration as well as the 1920s to 1970s retro eras too.
I got a ton of story inspiration for my old west frontier, yukon goldrush, retrofuturism and retro eras inspired as well as mythology,folklore, occult, demonology, angelology, esoteric and mysticism inspired writing projects.
Great job and keep up the great work.
I,m definitely going to be including a goldrush in my writing projects and writing ptojects world.
Glad the Gold Rush made it into your story.
@@ArizonaGhostriders thanks.
Right now im getting further inspiration from videos on the paranormal research and cryptid research and true encounter stories with black eyed people, ufos, aliens(most likely demons and angels or something else) and other paranormal entities and creatures for my writing projects.
They didn't have 401k's, they had 24k 's
Ha!!
maybe do a episode about early revolvers, like the paterson colt or Colt walker
I think I have.
YOU SHOULD PIC YOUR FRIENDS BETTER LOL
HAH!
Your awesome be safe out there big fan
I appreciate it
UA-cam is full of channels still searching for gold
Yes, it is. Glad I found mine.
North to Alaska we go north the rush is on. Big Sam left Seattle in the year of ninty-two, with George Pratt his partner and brother Billy too....
Gotta love Johnny Horton!
Hmmm...
My Dad's ancestor George Washington Carmack found gold in the Klondike back in 1800s he is talked about in a book by Perrie Benton.
Very cool!
@@ArizonaGhostriders Pierre Berton, maybe, remember him from an old tv program, front page challenge
@@davidsloan3480 Hmm!
oh yh love the call of the wild cuts
Not a bad film.
It was said if there looking for gold sell them the pick& shovel thanks to the gold rush we have blue 💙 Jean 👖 💙 today
Thank You!
@@ArizonaGhostriders your welcome ☺
Keep up the good work !!!!!
Thanks, will do!
also nice info btw good job
Thanks.
Thanks again Santee & Co.
You're welcome, Victor.
How often do you post new content?
Every Saturday
Would be kinda cool if there could be a modern day Gold rush
In a sense there is.
Everything is already claimed and the more successful spots are operated by corporations, but “gold miner” is a valid occupation in Alaska to this day.
@@509GmanRight.
@@509Gman Not in the Klondike. There were two to 300 mines in the Klondike mining district and they are virtually all very small operations often with just a couple of guys. The biggest that I know of is one of the TV miners with about a dozen employees.
That was great. Thanks!
You're welcome!
Would you do one on the US marshals of Oklahoma okie native here
Okee
Thankkssss Santee Any podcasts we could see you on
Pick of the litter?
Yes!
Where did you get that prop foam pick?
We have a bunch of props at the movie studio I work at.
Great little nugget of information,Santee.
Thank You!
nice trick with pick
Thank you. I balance things on my nose. It's a thing.
Curious : this video was about the Klondike. Why title it “Alaskan Goldrush”?
It was known by a few names. Klondike, Yukon, Alaska, because so many of the prospectors were American. In fact, many weren't happy with the taxation they were getting in Canada, so they prospected on the American side.
However, due to the confusion I changed the title and also the description to show the different names of this gold rush.
@@ArizonaGhostriders hey thanks much appreciated! Certainly a fascinating topic!
What would you do for a Klondike bar? Apparently anything?!! Sorry I’m late to the party… Work has been a bit crazy… 🖖👍
HA! No problem. Life does stuff like that to us.
@@ArizonaGhostriders Yeah… That’s true! Hope you have a good one! 😎
I live in the Klondike. if I want a Klondike bar, I just walk into one!
@@klondikechris HAHA!
@@klondikechris Nice!!! Just don’t stub your toes! 😎
Great video Santee
Thank You!
Good ol days
🤠
Never really regarded Alaska as part of the Wild Wild West. *shrugs*
Parts of it are still very wild today. Glad you learned something.
We’ve had some overlap with characters famous for exploits in warmer climes. There is a saloon in Juneau that has a revolver Wyatt Earp surrendered to have a drink and never came back for. Earp operated his own saloon in Nome for a time.
@@509Gman Yep, a few of those opportunists
Dawson City in the Yukon still looks like the Wild West downtown!
@@klondikechris From the photos I saw, I would agree!
Thanks
Welcome
Q: If the king sits on gold, then who sits on silver?
A: The Loan Ranger
HAAH!
dope
Appreciated.
Cool!
Thank You!
I've been watching quite a few of your videos now. And I've been trying to keep the old West. Alive as much as I can living here in New Hampshire.
I am 25 years old and I keep as much as the old West. Alive as I can and thankfully, you're history, videos and stuff like this. It's helping me very much. Hopefully, sometime I can go and visit my mother as she's down in hurricane Utah. Hope way to make it today. Arizona is well warmed down there some day she got remarried and she moved out that way. But I'm still up here in New Hampshire. Living my cowboy way, hopefully someday I could get down in Come down in the West and see some Historical Landmarks of the tombstone and other things and that particular area someday I dress with the cowboy clothing and all and I don't not wear any modern day clothing at all. I buy all my clothes from a circle cowboy reenactment sites. I wear them and I wear them, and I wear them until they rot off of me. Not a word I wore him until there was nothing left of them. I take a bath once a year at most as the old cowboy's dead. I'm always dirty and grimy. And I aint afraid to get dirty either. I wear my clothes until they park your rod off. That's when I take a bath. Basically I wear nothing but button suspenders. And bedfront churn cowboy pants, even sometimes leather chaps. And I stuff like that. I always wear my bandana too, and my cowboy hat. I do hot making tube but never really went on a big process a bit. I shape my own wool hats bombing hat blanks
And oh, by the way, I make sure all my boots are leather soul or leather heal or wooden heal with no rubber mallet. As rubber wasn't around yet on shoes, therefore I for another or wooden heels. With leather shoals, and I always make sure I could try where my spurs as well. I have a cobbler up here. That, that's a very good job at helping me make my shoes the way I like 'Em. And if I need fixing them
Thanks for watching and learning!
@ArizonaGhostriders Of course. My great-grandfather didn't work hard for nothing. They worked hard foh what they hadn't what they had. Everyone always tells me in the Western movies that they see with me. As they say ohh $,12 on $30, it aint a whole lot. A lot of money, but guns could cost more than that. Or what would they say? It cost well back then. The money was great. Pay with lore and things were different back then. And like I said, you can't be afraid to be rough and tough, as I've run out of my genealogy, I'm related to John Wayne. He's like I forget what cousin there. He is to me, but I found out that he's related to me on my mom's side. I'm also related to John Browning on my mom's side as well. Tell interesting. I love buying the old captain ball. Or guns, and not to buying original antique and reproduction ones. And take on man. Text. And if I can't find time that confix and get it no longer make the parts. I rather been making my own gun part as I've been learning from a gun. Smith as well, but he says I think they have a natural talent for it. There's a gun Smith right here in town. I always keep the old West alive as much as I can. I never live a day in the mar day life. I love my old old ways everyday and everyday gotta keep those old flashing volures now. There was a lot of life lessons in them that we have forgotten about today. And about time, that's someone like my age. Try to remember that and show it every day. I am only 25 going on 26th this July 23rd, but I am very much every way a cowboy. I know how to open lasso, if I need to. I know how to make a rope. I know how to make a whip. I know how to make something for nothing. I low cooking in my cast. Iron every day, I especially love you when I go camping and cook over the open flame and brewed a strong Coffee pot. I'm coffee pretty shack. I have died taken. Get rough beans and Shrum up. And then I take a destroy in the bottom of the pot. Tied up and brew a strong batch. And I need a strong belt. Some end of the morning could jack daniels call last night
PS my uncle, Jim and my uncle Bob with his passed on from uncle. Jim is not doing as much as is not too much going on up here. Any more it's all down South now. He used to do cowboy acting shooting with sass And there's not too many bands up here anymore, but they still haven't. I would still be going up there. As some people call me dirty dealing back, screwing cowboy al