KLONDIKE (Canada)

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D. v. Nieuwenhuijzen
Posts: 871
Joined: Fri Sep 24, 2010 7:46 pm

KLONDIKE (Canada)

Post by D. v. Nieuwenhuijzen » Fri May 30, 2014 7:51 pm

Built in 1937 by British Yukon Navigation Co., Whitehorse, Yukon Territory, Canada for own account.
Passenger/cargo sternwheler, Gt:1362, Nt:918, capacity:270 tonnes, Length:71,63m. (235') Beam:12,73m. (41,75') Depth:1,50m. Draught:1,37m. (4,5') 2x compound jet-condenser steam engines:525 hp. (391 kW.) wood burning, crew:23.
Materials: wood troughout.
Original use: passengers and cargo.
Condition: fully restored, present owners: Parks Canada, location: Whitehorse, Yukon Territory, Canada.
History: built to carry passengers and cargo on the rivers of the Yukon Territory, preserved on shore and fitted out by the Canadian National Park service.
(Canada 1993, 43 c. StG.1559)
Historic Ships, Brouwer N.J. + Internet.
Attachments
klondike1.jpg
klondike2.jpg

aukepalmhof
Posts: 7791
Joined: Thu Apr 02, 2009 1:28 am

Re: KLONDIKE (Canada)

Post by aukepalmhof » Sun Sep 30, 2018 8:16 pm

When Europeans first set foot in Canada, they were faced with a wilderness barrier of trackless forests. Fortunately, this new land was also crisscrossed by many grand rivers, and these became the early routes of discovery, settlement and growth. The third set of Canada's River Heritage stamps, released August 10 in commemorative booklet form, features five of Canada's important heritage rivers: the St. John; the St. Lawrence; the Red; the Fraser; and the Yukon. The Yukon River, the 10th longest in the world at 1368 kilometres, starts in Tagish Lake along the British Columbia-Yukon border, just a few kilometres from the Pacific Ocean, then flows north-west into Alaska, enters the Arctic Circle near Fort Yukon, finally turning south-west and emptying into the Bering Sea at Norton Sound. The river has been a route to promised riches - as it was during the famed Klondike Gold Rush - and a channel of migration. It is believed that at least 15,000 years ago, Indians trecked across the land bridge from Asia and moved southward along the Yukon River, as did the Arctic-Mongoloid ancestors of today's Inuit and Aleuts. Ironically, this oldest route of immigration was the last major river of North America to be discovered by Europeans - Russians from Alaska first saw it in 1834. Canada Post Corporation's Yukon River stamp depicts "hoodoos" in bluffs near Hootalingua and in a vignette, shows the sternwheeler, KLONDIKE.
https://www.canadianpostagestamps.ca/st ... and-growth

Canada 1993 43c sg 1559, scott 1486.

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