The Locator -- [(subject = "Klondike River Valley Yukon--Gold discoveries")]

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Author:
Knowles, Josephine, 1864-1936, author.
Title:
Gold rush in the Klondike : a woman's journey in 1898-99 / Josephine Knowles.
Publisher:
Quill Driver Books,
Copyright Date:
2016
Description:
pages cm
Subject:
Knowles, Josephine,--1864-1936.
Klondike River Valley (Yukon)--Gold discoveries--Ancedotes.
Women pioneers--Klondike River Valley--Klondike River Valley--Biography.
Women adventurers--Klondike River Valley--Klondike River Valley--Biography.
Gold miners--Klondike River Valley--Klondike River Valley--Biography.
Klondike River Valley (Yukon)--Social life and customs.
Knowles family.
London, Jack,--1876-1916--Friends and associates.
Dawson (Yukon)--Biography.
San Francisco Bay Area (Calif.)--Biography.
Notes:
Includes index.
Contents:
Our search for gold begins -- Off to the Yukon -- Almost a disaster -- The ways of a brute -- Rapids on the way to Louse Town -- Dawson -- Disease -- Slumming in Dawson -- Hardships at the mines -- Spring drives away the darkness -- The hazardous voyage home -- Appendix -- Biography of Josephine Knowles.
Summary:
"When Josephine Knowles left for the Klondike gold fields with her husband in 1898, she didn't know she would be facing a constant battle with cold, disease, malnutrition, and the ever-present possibility of death. With quiet determination, she resolved to survive, to endure each fresh hardship without complaint, and to be of service to the community around her. "Gold Rush in the Klondike" is Knowles's true story of her year in the Yukon territory, a revealing, never-before-published personal memoir of day-to-day life at the height of the Klondike Gold Rush. Written in a clear, forthright, nineteenth-century style, "Gold Rush in the Klondike" presents terrifying struggles against a hostile environment, picturesque descriptions of an untouched Arctic wilderness, and Knowles's keen observations of men and women on the frontier. A Victorian gentlewoman of refinement, Knowles found herself among swearing, whoring, sometimes violent miners, whom she won over with her grit and compassion. Deciding to never moralize or condemn, Knowles writes frankly of the intense hardships that drove miners into lives of drink and dissipation and the frontier women who were forced to make stark choices between prostitution and starvation."--Provided by publisher.
ISBN:
161035270X
9781610352703 (hardcover : alk. paper)
LCCN:
2016021323
Locations:
DIPB173 -- Ventura Public Library (Ventura)

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