Albert and Florence Hartshorn's cabin at Atlin

On verso of image: My home, Atlin, B.C. Hartshorn PH Coll 1354.6 Florence Hartshorn arrived in Skagway July 1, 1898, and went to join her husband, Albert Hartshorn, at Log Cabin in the Yukon, where he had a blacksmith shop. Bert and Florence saw first hand the abused and exhausted horses and pack an...

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Other Authors: University of Washington Libraries, Special Collections
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:unknown
Subjects:
etc
Online Access:http://cdm16786.contentdm.oclc.org:80/cdm/ref/collection/alaskawcanada/id/706
id ftuwashingtonlib:oai:cdm16786.contentdm.oclc.org:alaskawcanada/706
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection University of Washington, Seattle: Digital Collections
op_collection_id ftuwashingtonlib
language unknown
topic Log cabins--British Columbia--Atlin
Dwellings--British Columbia--Atlin
Hartshorn
Albert--Homes and haunts
Florence M.
1869-1943--Homes and haunts
Atlin (B.C.)--Buildings
structures
etc
spellingShingle Log cabins--British Columbia--Atlin
Dwellings--British Columbia--Atlin
Hartshorn
Albert--Homes and haunts
Florence M.
1869-1943--Homes and haunts
Atlin (B.C.)--Buildings
structures
etc
Albert and Florence Hartshorn's cabin at Atlin
topic_facet Log cabins--British Columbia--Atlin
Dwellings--British Columbia--Atlin
Hartshorn
Albert--Homes and haunts
Florence M.
1869-1943--Homes and haunts
Atlin (B.C.)--Buildings
structures
etc
description On verso of image: My home, Atlin, B.C. Hartshorn PH Coll 1354.6 Florence Hartshorn arrived in Skagway July 1, 1898, and went to join her husband, Albert Hartshorn, at Log Cabin in the Yukon, where he had a blacksmith shop. Bert and Florence saw first hand the abused and exhausted horses and pack animals used to transport goods over White Pass. Florence never forgot the approximately 3,000 pack animals that died on that journey, most at a location named Dead Horse Gulch. In July 1928, she began working with the Alaska Division of the Seattle Chamber of Commerce and the Ladies of the Golden North to raise money for a memorial to those animals to be placed at Dead Horse Gulch. On August 24, 1929, the memorial was dedicated. It reads, "The Dead Are Speaking - In memory of us three thousand pack animals that laid our bones on these awful hills during the Gold Rush of 1897-1898. We now thank those listening souls that heard our groans across this stretch of years. We waited but not in vain." Both Florence and Albert Hartshorn were born in Michigan in 1869. They had one daughter, Hazel Hartshorn Goslie. Florence worked as a photographer's assistant to E.J. Hamacher in the Lake Bennett area beginning around 1898. The family appear to have lived in Canada until the 1920s. By 1930, Florence and Albert were divorced. Albert was living in Idaho and Florence was living in Seattle. Florence died in King County in 1943. [Sources: Becker, EA. (1957). Monument at Dead Horse Gulch. The Alaska Sportsman XXIII (5), 12-17, 42-45. U.S. Census, Washington State Death Index 1940-1996] Log Cabin, a day's walk from Bennett, developed as a major settlement in the first winter of the rush. In the fall of 1897, Thomas Tugwell and his son erected the grandly-named "British Hostelry" there. The pair of squat log buildings faced the trail, hugging the rocky ground and providing only minimal head room; patrons were clearly expected to remain seated during meals. The British Hostelry offered rooms and meals to travellers, and office space to a variety of entrepreneurs. A collection of tents sprang up on both sides of Tugwell's buildings. Storage, a general store, several suppliers of feed and outfits, even a bakery, were housed here. By spring, 1898, the community stretched haphazardly across a low ridge and boasted a large number of tent hotels, almost all with restaurants. Accommodation was basic, usually just a rough lumber cot. Log Cabin became a designated customs point that summer. Railway construction further increased the community's already booming businesses. Traffic, like a wide, muddy stream in flood, flowed past the front of these establishments day and night. A well-travelled path meandered across the ridge among the huge stacks of hay bales, outfits awaiting customs clearance, piles of cordwood and building materials, and heaps of sacks containing everything from flour to roulette wheels. People on the move, amid yelping and barking dogs, haggled for a good price on new outfits or additional feed, while heavily-loaded sleighs pulled by straining horses crunched through the frozen mud of the trail. The noise, smells, and activities made for a lively scene. As trail conditions deteriorated in the spring thaw, traffic through the White Pass ground to a halt. Freight hauling was limited to nighttime, when frost firmed the trail surface. With supplies cut off from the coast and outfits broken up for transport and storage, anxious stampeders began stealing from each other. Petty theft of flour, pork, and staple groceries in the Log Cabin area reached serious proportions in the early summer of 1898. The spring thaw altered Log Cabin's oasis-like nature. Many people found their previously comfortable camps inundated with murky ice-cold water as the snow melted into an unsanitary swamp. [Source: Neufeld, D. and Norris, F. (1996). Chilkoot Trail: Heritage Route to the Klondike. Whitehorse, Yukon, Canada: Lost Moose Publishing. Excerpts accessed at http://www.yukonweb.com/business/lost_moose/books/chilkoot/boom_towns.html]
author2 University of Washington Libraries, Special Collections
format Other/Unknown Material
title Albert and Florence Hartshorn's cabin at Atlin
title_short Albert and Florence Hartshorn's cabin at Atlin
title_full Albert and Florence Hartshorn's cabin at Atlin
title_fullStr Albert and Florence Hartshorn's cabin at Atlin
title_full_unstemmed Albert and Florence Hartshorn's cabin at Atlin
title_sort albert and florence hartshorn's cabin at atlin
url http://cdm16786.contentdm.oclc.org:80/cdm/ref/collection/alaskawcanada/id/706
op_coverage Canada--British Columbia--Atlin
long_lat ENVELOPE(-125.003,-125.003,54.000,54.000)
ENVELOPE(-135.143,-135.143,59.613,59.613)
ENVELOPE(-67.467,-67.467,-67.583,-67.583)
ENVELOPE(-61.483,-61.483,-63.997,-63.997)
ENVELOPE(-134.954,-134.954,59.766,59.766)
ENVELOPE(-133.689,-133.689,59.578,59.578)
ENVELOPE(-58.132,-58.132,-62.135,-62.135)
geographic Yukon
Canada
British Columbia
White Pass
Petty
Gulch
Log Cabin
Atlin
Muddy Stream
geographic_facet Yukon
Canada
British Columbia
White Pass
Petty
Gulch
Log Cabin
Atlin
Muddy Stream
genre Skagway
Whitehorse
Alaska
Yukon
genre_facet Skagway
Whitehorse
Alaska
Yukon
op_source University of Washington Libraries. Special Collections
Photographs of Florence Hartshorn. PH Coll 1354
op_relation Alaska, Western Canada and United States Collection
AWC0688
http://cdm16786.contentdm.oclc.org:80/cdm/ref/collection/alaskawcanada/id/706
op_rights For information on permissions for use and reproductions please visit UW Libraries Special Collections Use Permissions page: http://www.lib.washington.edu/specialcollections/services/permission-for-use
_version_ 1766197341647273984
spelling ftuwashingtonlib:oai:cdm16786.contentdm.oclc.org:alaskawcanada/706 2023-05-15T18:19:56+02:00 Albert and Florence Hartshorn's cabin at Atlin University of Washington Libraries, Special Collections Canada--British Columbia--Atlin Scanned from a photographic print using a Microtek Scanmaker 9600XL at 100 dpi in JPEG format at compression rate 3 and resized to 768x600 ppi. 2004. http://cdm16786.contentdm.oclc.org:80/cdm/ref/collection/alaskawcanada/id/706 unknown Alaska, Western Canada and United States Collection AWC0688 http://cdm16786.contentdm.oclc.org:80/cdm/ref/collection/alaskawcanada/id/706 For information on permissions for use and reproductions please visit UW Libraries Special Collections Use Permissions page: http://www.lib.washington.edu/specialcollections/services/permission-for-use University of Washington Libraries. Special Collections Photographs of Florence Hartshorn. PH Coll 1354 Log cabins--British Columbia--Atlin Dwellings--British Columbia--Atlin Hartshorn Albert--Homes and haunts Florence M. 1869-1943--Homes and haunts Atlin (B.C.)--Buildings structures etc Photograph; image ftuwashingtonlib 2017-12-31T14:02:59Z On verso of image: My home, Atlin, B.C. Hartshorn PH Coll 1354.6 Florence Hartshorn arrived in Skagway July 1, 1898, and went to join her husband, Albert Hartshorn, at Log Cabin in the Yukon, where he had a blacksmith shop. Bert and Florence saw first hand the abused and exhausted horses and pack animals used to transport goods over White Pass. Florence never forgot the approximately 3,000 pack animals that died on that journey, most at a location named Dead Horse Gulch. In July 1928, she began working with the Alaska Division of the Seattle Chamber of Commerce and the Ladies of the Golden North to raise money for a memorial to those animals to be placed at Dead Horse Gulch. On August 24, 1929, the memorial was dedicated. It reads, "The Dead Are Speaking - In memory of us three thousand pack animals that laid our bones on these awful hills during the Gold Rush of 1897-1898. We now thank those listening souls that heard our groans across this stretch of years. We waited but not in vain." Both Florence and Albert Hartshorn were born in Michigan in 1869. They had one daughter, Hazel Hartshorn Goslie. Florence worked as a photographer's assistant to E.J. Hamacher in the Lake Bennett area beginning around 1898. The family appear to have lived in Canada until the 1920s. By 1930, Florence and Albert were divorced. Albert was living in Idaho and Florence was living in Seattle. Florence died in King County in 1943. [Sources: Becker, EA. (1957). Monument at Dead Horse Gulch. The Alaska Sportsman XXIII (5), 12-17, 42-45. U.S. Census, Washington State Death Index 1940-1996] Log Cabin, a day's walk from Bennett, developed as a major settlement in the first winter of the rush. In the fall of 1897, Thomas Tugwell and his son erected the grandly-named "British Hostelry" there. The pair of squat log buildings faced the trail, hugging the rocky ground and providing only minimal head room; patrons were clearly expected to remain seated during meals. The British Hostelry offered rooms and meals to travellers, and office space to a variety of entrepreneurs. A collection of tents sprang up on both sides of Tugwell's buildings. Storage, a general store, several suppliers of feed and outfits, even a bakery, were housed here. By spring, 1898, the community stretched haphazardly across a low ridge and boasted a large number of tent hotels, almost all with restaurants. Accommodation was basic, usually just a rough lumber cot. Log Cabin became a designated customs point that summer. Railway construction further increased the community's already booming businesses. Traffic, like a wide, muddy stream in flood, flowed past the front of these establishments day and night. A well-travelled path meandered across the ridge among the huge stacks of hay bales, outfits awaiting customs clearance, piles of cordwood and building materials, and heaps of sacks containing everything from flour to roulette wheels. People on the move, amid yelping and barking dogs, haggled for a good price on new outfits or additional feed, while heavily-loaded sleighs pulled by straining horses crunched through the frozen mud of the trail. The noise, smells, and activities made for a lively scene. As trail conditions deteriorated in the spring thaw, traffic through the White Pass ground to a halt. Freight hauling was limited to nighttime, when frost firmed the trail surface. With supplies cut off from the coast and outfits broken up for transport and storage, anxious stampeders began stealing from each other. Petty theft of flour, pork, and staple groceries in the Log Cabin area reached serious proportions in the early summer of 1898. The spring thaw altered Log Cabin's oasis-like nature. Many people found their previously comfortable camps inundated with murky ice-cold water as the snow melted into an unsanitary swamp. [Source: Neufeld, D. and Norris, F. (1996). Chilkoot Trail: Heritage Route to the Klondike. Whitehorse, Yukon, Canada: Lost Moose Publishing. Excerpts accessed at http://www.yukonweb.com/business/lost_moose/books/chilkoot/boom_towns.html] Other/Unknown Material Skagway Whitehorse Alaska Yukon University of Washington, Seattle: Digital Collections Yukon Canada British Columbia ENVELOPE(-125.003,-125.003,54.000,54.000) White Pass ENVELOPE(-135.143,-135.143,59.613,59.613) Petty ENVELOPE(-67.467,-67.467,-67.583,-67.583) Gulch ENVELOPE(-61.483,-61.483,-63.997,-63.997) Log Cabin ENVELOPE(-134.954,-134.954,59.766,59.766) Atlin ENVELOPE(-133.689,-133.689,59.578,59.578) Muddy Stream ENVELOPE(-58.132,-58.132,-62.135,-62.135)