CHAPTER TWO Alaska and the Mail Dog Trail
Dad's other sister Aina, and her husband Gus, had gone to
Flat City, Alaska, from Butte, Montana, when rich placer gold deposits were
discovered in 1913. Dad's brother Oscar and his wife and daughter also went from
Butte. But a few years later they moved to Detroit, after first trying farming
in New York State.
Oscar began making trips to Flat City where he worked as
shoreman on a gold dredge. His wife and daughter stayed in Detroit. Oscar went
each spring to Nenana, Alaska, where he got off the train, and with a packsack
on his back, walked about four hundred miles to Flat, following the winter mail
dog team trail. Each fall, when the dredge had to be shut down due to freezeup,
he walked back to Nenana and returned to Detroit for the winter.
In January 1929, he came to visit us. When he asked me if I
would like to go to Alaska with him, I happily answered, "Yes!" I
sent a telegram to Alex Mathieson, owner of the gold dredge, asking for a job
as oiler on his dredge. An answer came back saying a job was waiting.
The latter part of February I went to Detroit. During my
stay at Oscar's we saw the movie, "The Trail of 98," which showed
people by the hundreds going up Chilkoot Pass on the gold stampede to Dawson.
It looked so rough that I began walking to get in shape for the long hike.
We left Detroit the end of February. On the train a big,
husky young man sat across from us. He told us his name was Frank Dorbandt, and
he was an airplane pilot for Anchorage Air Transport, on his way north.
After spending a few days sightseeing around Seattle, we
boarded the steamship Alaska for the trip to Seward. The fare was eighty-seven
dollars each, which included meals and a stateroom with two berths. The ship
sailed up the Inside Passage all the way except through the Gulf of Alaska,
where it went through open ocean.
The trip to Seward took seven days because of the numerous
stops at coastal towns and fish canneries to take on fish and unload freight. I
was told that the Gulf got extremely rough at times but our passage was smooth.
We walked every day around the deck of the ship to toughen up, and went ashore
in most of the towns. I saw huge whales spouting in the Gulf, a most amazing
sight to me.
The train was waiting for us at Seward so we went straight
from the ship to the train. Before we reached Anchorage, Frank Dorbandt tried
to talk us into getting off there and letting him fly us to Flat City. The
airplane fare was three hundred and fifty dollars per person. We refused because
Oscar said we had plenty of time, that meals and lodging would be only sixty‑five
dollars each over the trail.
The train stopped at Curry for the night where all the
passengers slept at the Government owned Curry Hotel. The next day the train
went to Fairbanks. Oscar and I got off at Nenana to stay overnight at the small
two story Cooney Hotel.
In the morning it was thirty below zero outside but with our
parkas on, and packsacks on our backs, we headed west. The mail dog trail, hard
and well‑packed, was built up about three feet but the sides were soft
and fluffy snow.
Government maintained and manned roadhouses made of logs
were spaced approximately twenty-five miles apart along the mail dog trail. The
charge was four dollars and fifty cents a night, which included supper and
breakfast; also a bunk and blankets. A few relief cabins did not have a
caretaker. We bought food from the previous roadhouse for our overnight stops
at these cabins, and saw to it that we left wood and kindling for the next traveler,
as was the custom.
Our first day out of Nenana we met Bill Burke coming with
his mail team of twenty six dogs. We stepped off the trail to let him pass, but
the dogs began barking and seemed determined to get at us. We waded as fast as
we could to get farther away while Bill kept cracking his long whip to get them
by. That time I was scared‑‑those dogs looked vicious.
At the first relief cabin, nineteen miles from Nenana, we
built a fire in the Yukon stove, ate some of the food that we had brought, cut
wood for the next traveler, then curled up on the wide bunk made of spruce
poles and covered with spruce boughs. We had only our parkas for quilts but big
chunks of wood in the stove kept the cabin warm all night. The next morning the
muscles on our legs were so sore that we had trouble walking, but after a few
miles the pain ceased.
We spent our second night at the east Fork Road House, third
at Knight's, fourth at Roosevelt, fifth at Lake Minchumina, sixth at the Lake
Minchumina relief cabin. That was a rough day because we were on the open lake
most of the day with a howling wind and snow storm facing us the whole distance
of twenty-six miles. The relief cabin sitting there among big trees on the bank
of the lake‑‑boy, were we glad to see that.
The next day about noon my eyes started paining, feeling as
if they were full of sand. I had not worn my sun glasses enough so was
suffering snow blindness. That night after we got to Lone Star Roadhouse the
caretaker suggested that I cover my eyes with a cold wet towel. It did relieve
the pain somewhat, but each day after a few miles they began to pain me again,
although I constantly wore my black glasses.
During the night it had snowed about a foot and was still
snowing. Walking was tough for we carried no snow shoes. Luck was with us
though, because before noon we met Charles O'Halloran with his mail team of
twenty four dogs. Bill Burke went half way from Nenana to Flat City and return,
and O'Halloran had the run from Flat City to the half way point and return.
It quit snowing and we had a good hard trail to the Tolida
Indian Village Roadhouse, run by one of the Indian families. Not a soul was at
the village. The roadhouse was unlocked so we went in, stoking up the fire,
fixing ourselves a good hot meal from their supplies.
Just before dark we hard the Indians coming home with their
dog teams, all making a lot of noise; dogs barking and people laughing and
shouting. The whole area seemed full of dog teams and sleds. The Indians were
dressed in their fancy parkas, many of which had the most beautiful fur work,
with intricate beadwork, insets of different furs, decorations of animal tails,
claws and teeth. They had all been to a neighboring village potlatch, a gift‑giving
celebration. For a greenhorn country boy, it was quite a sight.
The next morning the natives who operated the roadhouse made
a breakfast of hot oatmeal, ham and eggs, and hotcakes made of sourdough. They
had the usual cooked prunes, a dish that I looked forward to morning and night.
The custom at all the roadhouses was to have cooked prunes and other dried
cooked fruits on the table all the time. We could help ourselves any time we
wished. Each morning we rolled up a few of the sourdough hotcakes, sprinkled
with sugar, and took them along for our noonday meal.
About noon we came to an Indian cabin. The man came out to
invite us in for a cup of coffee and a moose meat steak. His wife had been
bedridden for years, paralyzed from the waist down. Their young daughter fried
the steaks and made the coffee, the strongest coffee I ever had, with no milk
or sugar. Oscar ate all of his steak but I could not hack it because it was
scattered with moose hairs and was half raw. I told them I wasn't hungry. We
each gave them two dollars for their trouble and food.
About a quarter of a mile from their cabin we came to a V in
the trail. Both directions were equally well‑packed so we were not sure
which way to go. Oscar thought it was the right hand trail, so we followed that
for what we felt was over a mile. No mile marker appeared so we went back to
the Indian cabin to ask the way. He said the left hand one was his wood hauling
trail and we should go to the right. We were angry because he had not put some
kind of a marker there. Returning to the spot where we turned back, there,
around a bend in the trail, was the mile marker; a few feet more and we would
have seen it. This day was the longest run of all for it was thirty nine miles
counting the turnback to the Indian cabin.
Rhone River Roadhouse was next, then Medfra, a native
village that had a post office and a small store. Big River came before the
much larger village of McGrath. McGrath was as far up the Kuskokwim River as
the river freighting barges could navigate. It had an airplane landing field, a
large Northern Commercial Company general store and another smaller store. We
could have cut off about fifty miles if there had been a trail broken to Flat,
but the mail trail went via Takotna and Ophir.
The village of Takotna was smaller than McGrath but it did
have a landing field and a store. The next day on our way from Takotna we
stopped at Victor and Amelia Hill's house about six miles from Ophir. They
were good friends of Oscar's. They made their living by mining gold with only
water pressure and wheelbarrows.
Mrs. Hill fixed us a lunch of moose meat roast and
vegetables from their root cellar. As I was still suffering with snow
blindness, Vick told me to see Eric Hard when we got to Ophir. He was an
elderly man, one of those jack‑of‑all‑trades people, who
learn a lot through experience and reading. He was the village dentist. That
is, he pulled people's teeth with an ordinary pair of pliers and no anesthetic.
He was the blacksmith and barber too. He put a drop of nitrate of silver in
each of my eyes and I went to bed. The next morning I noticed brown liquid had
run out of my nose, and my troubles were over.
Birches relief cabin was next and then the Shermeyer
Roadhouse. These roadhouses may not be listed in correct order. I cannot
remember that far back.
On the seventeenth day we came to Iditarod. In 1912 when
gold was discovered on Flat Creek eight miles away, the town of Iditarod was
formed because it was as far up the Iditarod River as the river barges were
able to go.
Over three thousand people had lived there for several
years, with stores, bars, cards and gambling halls. A short distance from town
was the line of prostitutes' cabins. Several of the old buildings were still
standing but were sunken and leaning from thawing and heaving of the permafrost
on which they were built. A small railroad called the Tramway, with rails made
from wooden two by fours, had run from Iditarod to Flat Creek. It had a few
flat cars equipped with seats, on which the miners rode to and from work. A
gasoline engine was used for power.
When Flat city came into being, the government‑operated
Alaska Road Commission built a gravel road from Iditarod to Flat, and the
Tramway was abandoned.
Iditarod became just a riverboat landing. A few people still
lived there, including Tootsie, a black woman, who had come to Dawson during
the big gold rush in 1898 and finally ended up in Iditarod, where she operated
a small cafe. We stopped to visit with her and had coffee and apple pie made
from canned apples. She, too, later moved to Flat City, continuing with her
cafe until about 1968; then moved to Fairbanks to the Pioneer's Home, where she
died a few years later.
Tootsie often said, "I was the first white woman who
ever went to Dawson!"
In Iditarod a big warm storage building had been built, into
which all the perishables were unloaded each time the river boats came. A
caretaker lived in this building to keep the wood fires going in winter in the
big stoves, made out of two one‑hundred‑gallon oil drums riveted
end to end. They were long enough so four foot chunks of wood could be shoved
into them. In summer the caretaker helped move the supplies into storage when
boats came in.
Many cases of eggs were stored through the long winters and
became pretty rancid. In 1929 when fresh eggs were brought in by
airplane, one
of the old timers told me that he didn't like those airplane
eggs‑‑"There's
no taste to them. They taste so flat." After visiting the caretaker for
awhile, Oscar and I headed for
Flat.
Gus had a contract with the store owners and miners to haul
their goods. He had four big black horses, each weighing a ton. We had walked
only a couple of miles when we met him coming with two sets of sleds hooked in
tandem. The team on the tongue was called the heelers, the pair on the end of
the tongue were the leaders.
Gus insisted that we ride back to Iditarod with him but we
refused because we wanted to have a much needed bath at the sauna operated by
the Miscovich family in Flat.
Oscar mentioned again that just as soon as we get to Flat we
will go and see the black bear. I was pretty anxious to see it, never having
seen one, and supposing they had one in captivity.
Just before we got to Aunt Aina's we walked past the school
house, a fairly large building with the teacher's quarters in the back. I saw
the two general stores, large old log buildings which had leaned and sunk into
the soft summer tundra. A restaurant and a post office made up the rest of the
business establishments. One and two‑room cabins were scattered here and
there and some were partly sunk into the ground. Each cabin had an outhouse in
the back. In the middle of town was the Moose Hall, in which meetings, and
occasional dances with a phonograph for music, were held.
I noticed about ten cabins a short distance below town with
a board sidewalk connecting them. Oscar told me they belonged to the
prostitutes or line girls as they were called. The rest of the town had to
suffer narrow muddy foot paths.
Soon several of the miner's wives arrived at Aina's. After
coffee and cake, I said, "Oscar, let's go see the black bear now."
The women all gave me strange looks. After they left Aina
started bawling me out for embarrassing her. She told me "Black Bear"
was a nickname given to one of the line girls. Then she turned on Oscar who
couldn't stop laughing at the hilarious ending to his joke.
The line girls all had nicknames. There were the Oregon
Mare, Panama Hattie, Finn Annie, Frisco Kate, and many others. We never did
hear their real names.
One of the old timers told me that a few years ago one of
the line girls fell for one man very hard. She heard he was seeing one of the
other girls too. She got jealous and fired a pistol shot intending to put him
out of business, but aimed a little too low and hit him in the leg. I guess he
had had enough of women, because he left town.
Oscar and I went to the store. We met John Ogriz there, who
said he had a twelve by fourteen log cabin that he would sell me for one
hundred and fifty dollars. After buying it, I moved right in. It had a small
bed, a Yukon stove, a homemade table and a couple of chairs, I bought a Wood's
eiderdown sleeping bag, a pillow and sheets, and asked Gus to bring me a few
cords of wood. I did not need any groceries because I began eating three meals
a day at Henry Durand's restaurant. He charged a dollar a meal. Oscar had a
room in the end of Gus's garage and did his own cooking. During the winter
months Gus and Aina used to live at their wood cutting camp several miles from
Flat. The place there was a big building with a wall between them and the
horses. The wood cutters stayed in a separate log building.
Gus paid them fourteen dollars a cord. Aina did the cooking
for the men while Gus made a trip to Flat every day with his two teams of
horses, pulling big loads of wood on two sets of sleds.
After a few winters they quit going to live at the wood
camp, with only the men staying there. Gus later ordered a new Cletrac track‑type
tractor from Seattle with which he hauled wood, but he soon ruined the engine
by running it too low on oil. He later ordered two new Ford flatbed trucks and
did all his freight hauling from Iditarod with them.
Large amounts of wood were needed to heat all the building
and homes, and hundreds of cords were used by the owners of the two gold
dredges to fire the big steam boilers. These were used each spring to provide
steam for pipes, called steam points, driven into the ground a few inches at a
time in front of the dredges, to thaw the permafrost so digging could start.
Steam was also used each fall to keep things thawed on the dredges so digging
could continue as late as possible.
As soon as water began to run and after the dredge started,
a gang of men drove hundreds of pipes about ten feet apart into the ground.
Cold water under pressure through a pipeline from a ditch up on the hillside
was forced down through. Several men, moving stepladders from pipe to pipe,
gave each pipe a couple of taps with a heavy short‑handled hammer and a
twist with a handle attached to the pipe, then moved on to the next one. This
method was called "cold‑water thawing."
I went to work in a few days, digging a trench all the way
around a big warehouse, which was to be jacked up and moved because rich gold
deposits were in the ground under it. It had sunk about a foot into the soft
boggy ground during summers, but now the muck was frozen as hard as cement.
Alex Mathieson, my boss, popped around the corner every little while to see if
I was loafing, I suppose. I was determined to build a good reputation for myself
so worked hard and steadily without stopping.
The bucketline that did the digging on the dredge had
seventy buckets. Each bucket had a manganese steel cutting lip attached to the
bucket with twelve three‑quarter inch rivets. My second job was to beat
with a heavy sledge hammer on a rivet‑cutting chisel with a wooden handle
that was held by one of the men. After cutting off the rivet I beat on a wooden‑handled
punch to punch out the rivets. I had to swing the sledge again to flatten down
the hot rivets which held the new lips in place. I swung the sledge for ten
hours a day and no one spelled me off. But after the long walk I was in such
good shape that I was not very tired evenings.
About the middle of May we finished overhauling the dredge.
The big diesel engine started the wheels, gears, belts and bucketline turning
for twenty four hours a day with a stop each day for ten minutes to allow us
oilers to pump heavy waterproof grease into the bearing hubs of the lower
tumbler, which was the big lug wheel on the bottom of the digging ladder around
which the bucketline revolved. The oiling job was easy. All I had to do was
make a round every four hours and give each grease cup a little turn. Once each
day I heated heavy black gear grease on the forge and poured some on all the
open gear teeth. There were all kinds of gears, shafts, belts and pulleys.
Each time when the big trommel screen made a metallic
clanking sound, I knew that the bucketline had brought up a hammer, pick, axe,
wrench or something else people had lost. I would run down or up to the center
deck to catch whatever it was as it came out onto the conveyer belt. I cleaned
it on the emery wheel wire brush, made new handles and painted them, thus
keeping the dredge well supplied with tools.
Salmon came up Otter Creek by the hundreds on their way to
spawn. As the creek ran through the dredge pond, the bucketline brought up
salmon, dumping them into the trommel screen. When they came out onto the
conveyer belt they were dead and pretty well mashed up.
One bearing had a grease cup so high that I had to reach up
to get hold of it. The endplay washer next to the bearing was held to the shaft
with a long square head set screw. Once when I reached up to turn the grease
cup the screw caught the sleeve of my coveralls and began to wind my arm around
the shaft. I gave a mighty jerk and tore my sleeve but saved my arm. It was a
slow‑turning shaft, thank goodness.
My wages were ten dollars a day so I got a check at the end
of each month for three hundred ten dollars. I cashed the checks at the Miner's
. and Merchant's Bank, and was paid in five, ten and twenty dollar gold pieces.
One side of my trousers was quite heavily loaded as I walked to the restaurant
to pay the board bill and to the post office, where each month I bought a money
order and mailed most of my earnings to mother and dad. Farming was very bad
during those depression years and they could not make ends meet.
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Tom Keturi