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THE
HAMLIN GARLAND COLLECTION
The
Trail of Gold Seekers
page 1
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Further
Reading | Itinerary |
Rare
Books & Manuscripts
Garland's
ItineraryHamlin
Garland's route through British Columbia and into the gold country can
be traced on the map from Garland's fictionalized account, The Long
Trail (New York: Macmillan, 1907). The following place names are mentioned
in Trail of the Goldseekers (south to north):
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[May
3]
Ashcroft
Clinton
Hat Creek
159 Mile House
Lake La Hache
Soda Creek
(Fraser River)
Quesnelle
Blackwater
Muddy River
Tchincut Lake
Nechaco River
Old Fort Fraser
Endako (source)
Burns Lake
Bulkley River
[June1]
Chock Lake
Morricetown
Hagellgate
Hazleton (Skeena
River)
Kisgagash Mountains
Kuldo
Nasse River
[July 1]
Stikeen River
Hotailub Mountains
Telegraph Creek
Glenora (Stikeen
River)
Wrangell
White Pass
[September]
Bennett Lake
Tagish Lake
Atlin Lake
Taku City |
A hundred
years later you could cover much of the same ground by following highway
97 north from Kamloops to Prince George, connecting with highway 35 west
to the junction with highway 37, then north to cross the Stikine (Stikeen)
River on roughly the same latitude as Juneau, Alaska. With the summer slipping
away, it was at this point, at Telegraph Creek, that Garland decided to
descend the Stikine southward to Wrangell, in order to follow the coast
north to Skagway and return to the interior at Lake Bennett, reaching Atlin
Lake and Taku before starting the homeward journey. The return trip carried
Garland and "Ladrone" by boat to Seattle and thence by train to Wisconsin.
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