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(YUKON GOLD RUSH ARCHIVE): An unusual grouping of documents relating to the mining activities of...

Currency:USD Category:Everything Else / Other Start Price:NA Estimated At:500.00 - 700.00 USD
(YUKON GOLD RUSH ARCHIVE): An unusual grouping of documents relating to the mining activities of...
(YUKON GOLD RUSH ARCHIVE): An unusual grouping of documents relating to the mining activities of one Edgar G. Beer, a gold prospector and miner in the Yukon Territory during the Second Alaskan Gold Rush from 1902 to 1905. The archive consists of eight items, including: an application for a Placer Mine Claim by Beer, filed in November of 1903, for a one year claim in the White House district, the claim identified as "Creek Claim No. 1...above discovery on Bullion Creek"; a form from the Gold Commissioner's office, White Horse, Yukon Territory, Mar. 21, 1904, noting that Beer has abandoned a claim on Track Creek; a certificate verifying active work being undertaken on a placer mining claim by Beer near Bullion Creek, dated Nov. 23, 1904; a royalty certificate, White Horse, Yukon Territory, June 20, 1905, certifying that Beer had paid the tax on slightly over three ounces of gold he had mined from one of his claims; two large colored maps of the gold-bearing regions of Alaska, both measuring roughly 25"x 30" and prepared by the United States Geological Survey in 1898, and finally an A.L.S. 6pp. 8vo., Livingston Creek, the Yukon, Jan.26, 1902, written by Beer to a friend back home, authorizing him to sell some of his property, evidently to cover his mining expenses, and discussing conditions in the gold fields. In part:"...am playing rather a lame game here this winter but every indication seems to point to the chance for us to make a clean up during the spring and early summer...Poor Fred, he has lost his girl after all...I can sympathize with him as I [?] the marble band myself when I struck out for the Yukon. He has the advantage of me, though, as he may console himself with some other fair damsel, while we have only two of the fair sex in the whole Big Salmon District, and needless to say they are married...the weather has been remarkably mild so far, in fact remarkably mild for the mining industry, causing a great deal of trouble from water...How did you spend Christmas in Nelson?...Some of the boys dressed up on New Years... I don't know where they borrowed the clothes, but they had white collars and were all rigged out. They made the round of the Creek...the first time any of them have had a white collar since they came to the country ...". A fascinating and unusually complete grouping of mining documents, all in very good to fine condition. $500-700