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Klondike Gold Rush National Historical ParkHiker on rocky summit with clouds and mountains in background Photo credit: J Eve Griffin
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Klondike Gold Rush National Historical Park
Dyea
 
Dyea Today

Before the Taiya River Valley become an active route for the gold stampeders, the Tlingit used the route to trade with the Athabascans in the Interior. After contact, the Tlingit acted as middlemen for a thriving trade in local and Euroamerican goods between the interior and Russian, Boston and Hudson's Bay trading companies. The Tlingit used the Chilkoot Trail as their main trading route in the interior and defended their monopoly, not permitting others to use the passes and even burning Fort Selkirk in the Yukon in 1852 when the Hudson's Bay Company attempted to trade directly with the Interior groups.

In 1879, US Navy Commander L.A. Beardsley reached an agreement with the Tlingit whereby miners would be permitted to reach the Yukon via the passes but would not interfere with their regular trade. Tlingit guides accompanied the first party over in May 1880, and transported the miners' gear for a fee. This trip set the foundation for the Tlingit packing business, which thrived until the Gold Rush.

Located at the head of the Chilkoot trail, Dyea erupted from a small trading post to a major port in 1897 after word of the Klondike gold discovery reached Seattle and San Francisco. Unfortunately, its prosperity proved to be short-lived. The town's poor harbor, the disastrous snowslide of April 3, 1898, and the construction of the White Pass and Yukon Route Railroad out of Skagway all served to doom the town. Fewer than 500 people remained after the summer of 1898, and the 1903 population had fallen to about a half dozen including E.A.Klatt, who farmed the once busy streets, growing vegetables for the Skagway market. Since the rush, nature has proven unkind to Dyea. The Taiya River has shifted several times, washing old buildings into the sea, and the rainforest climate of southeast Alaska has caused many buildings to collapse and rot.

 

Dyea at its "height of prosperity"
October 1897 - May 1898

150 Businessess, population estimate: 5,000-8,000

  • 11 Attorneys
  • 7 Real Estate Agents
  • 5 Bankers
  • 19 Freighting Companies
  • 48 Hotels
  • 47 Restaurants
  • 39 Taverns
  • 2 Telephone Companies
  • 2 Breweries
  • 3 Undertakers
  • 2 Newspapers
  • 5 Photographers
  • 1 Church (Methodist - Episcopal)
  • 1 School (May 1898-June 1900)
  • 1 Fire Department (volunteer, no building)
  • 7 Doctors, 1 Dentist, 2 Hospitals
  • 4 Cemeteries
  • 2 Wharves
Dyea Ranger led tour
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Historic photo of Native Tlingit packer carring a pack of goods on his back, wearing Western gear  

Did You Know?
The Chilkoot Trail was an important trade route connecting the Tlingits with interior First Nation peoples long before the Klondike Gold Rush. Dyea or Deiyaa (Tlingit for "to pack") was a small Native settlement used as a fishing camp and staging area for trade expeditions to and from the interior.

Last Updated: July 24, 2006 at 22:37 EST