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  • Fwd: EPEISODE 687 REPRINT OF EPISODE 249 YUKON DIARY LIVINGSTONE WERNICKE . ON KENO HILL 1925 TO 1935



    Begin forwarded message:


    From: ALAN SKEOCH <alan.skeoch@rogers.com>
    Subject: Fwd: EPISODE 249 YUKON DIARY LIVINGSTONE WERNICKE . ON KENO HILL 1925 TO 1935
    Date: November 30, 2022 at 2:02:07 PM EST
    To: Alan Skeoch <alan.skeoch@rogers.com>




    Begin forwarded message:



    Subject: EPISODE 687 RERINT OF  EPISODE 249 YUKON DIARY LIVINGSTONE WERNICKE . ON KENO HILL 1925 TO 1935

    Subject: EPISODE  687  REPRINT OF EPISODE 249 YUKON DIARY LIVINGSTONE WERNICKE . ON KENO HILL 1925 TO 1935
     

    NOTE: Early in June 1961 I explored a ghost town and got mine on Keno Hill called Wernecke.  The name was strange

    and had little meaning until I did research on Livinsgston Wernecke.  My Escape from the Yukon in September 1961 
    ended in Juneau, Alaska, across the Channell from the Treadwell Mine where Wernecke worked before moving to the Yukon
    as explained in an earlier episode.  He was a very interesting  man.


    EPISODE 687  REPRINT OF EPISODE 249

    EPISODE 249   YUKON DIARY  LIVINGSTON WERNECKE   ON KENO HILL 1921 TO 1935
     
    alan skeoch
    Feb. 2021
     
    WHAT WAS IT LIKE TO BE IN WERNECKE CAMP, KENO HILL  1925
     
    Mining is dangerous.  So it is not first in line up of desirable careers.  Test yourself.  
    Would you take a job cutting out slabs of rock with explosives five  to 1,000
    feet beneath the ground where the darkness is absolute and arsenic is just
    one of the nasty minerals you will be handling while the air you breathe
    is often  filled with tiny dust particles that are sharp enough to grind  your
    lungs to a cancerous  pulp.
     
    cid:A29E50C4-A6C1-420B-8FA4-0F285F6C6B03
    Arsenic and lead pouring out of mine site…not the Wernecke mine site but the problem was present in the Yukon and remains a problem
     
    Not so nice.   Probably worse than I have noted.  Many miners, even as late
    as the 1920’s could not stand erect in the stopes.   And the water they drank
    had contaminants no one had identified…arsenic for sure.
     
    Livingston Wernecke was well aware of the dangers miners faced.  He tried
    to make the conditions in Keno Hill as pleasant as possible.  His mine was
    not filled with dust.  His drills were water infused to reduce the chances of
    silicosis of the lung;  It was safer to work  in a Wernecke mine than the
    Guggenheim mine at the top of Keno Hill.  Not perfectly safe.  Mining
    can be  dangerous but Wernecke made sure his miners knew the dangers
    and took precautions.  
     
    YES, he seems to have been erasable at times.  Miners that displeased
    him were told to ‘get your time owed and get out’.  When buying claims from
    stakers he gave fair prices as high as $100,000 if the site was tops.  But
    he only made one offer.  Take it or leave it.  He did not talk much…lacked
    the social graces. 
     
     He did not like prostitution or hard liquor.  Attempts to control both of these
    vices failed it seems but were minimized.
     
     
    WHAT WAS IT LIKE TO BE A MINER ON KENO HILL BETWEEN 1925 AND 1935.
     
       Dr. Aaro Aho in his book, ‘Hills of Silver’ shows  the good  side of Livingston Wernecke.
    He referred to his miners as his ‘boys’.  Livingston may not have spent a lot of time
    sharing stories with them over a hot drink but he made the conditions of their
    lives as good as possible.  
     
    Wernecke Camp Mine was not the wreck  that we saw in 1962.   In 1927 “there were two bunkhouses, 
    a cookery, two  shafts and head  frames, a machine shop, a framing shed, mill buildings, Wernecke’s
    and Hargreaves’ (mine manager) houses, three other residences, several outlying log cabins
    and shacks, a recreation hall with a poolroom, bowling alley, library and radio, an outdoor skating
    and curling rink, a warehouse,an office, a mess hall for 200 people,  laundry, the mill,
    power house,  and assay office.” (P. 123, Hills of Silver)
     
    Because of his stomach troubles, Livingston kept a cow for fresh milk.  Often the cow
    did not give  all the milk expected because some teamsters would  milk her at night.
    She eventually died… lead contamination from eating ore sacks. 
     
    Wernicke’s  house was attractive since he expected his wife Mabel and their
    two children to live on the mine site. Livingston liked to sit on his porch and watch moose
    wading in the lakes far down in the McQuesten Valley.  Married miners with children were welcomed
    as  employees .  Mabel and Maud (Hargreaves wife) often had games of bridge with other wives.
     
    The poolroom, barbershop and  store were operated like any  such businesses in towns like
    Dawson City, Whitehorse or even Keno City.
     
    “In the recreation hall Emil Forrest showed silent movies on a small canvas screen for 75 cents  
    admission and the  show  was always crowded  to see  Rudolph Valentino in the Sheik, Douglas
    Fairbanks in The Three Musketeers, Gloria Swanson,  Tulula Bankhead, Pavlova, Tom Mix, Charlie
    Chaplin and other great entertainers of the golden flapper era.”
     
    Dances  were held with music  provided by the miners own “Jackhammer”  band  …a sax, 3 violins, a drum,
    piano, and two banjos.   One prospector and  miner even gave dancing lessons.  When a dance
    was planned Wernecke sent invitations and  provided  transportation from Keno City or even
    as far away as Mayo Landing.
     
    At Christmas time Wernecke threw  a big party for all.  
     
    Drunkenness was unacceptable to Wernecke and one  story is told that he  threatened  to fire any
    Irishman who got drunk on St. Patrick’s day.  None got drunk.  But his Swedish employees] did
    get drunk so he  fired them all.  This sounds a little far fetched but the story does underline  the
    stiff moral code by which Werncke lived.   And his determination to make sure others shared
    his principles whether they liked it or not.
     
    The brothel down in Keno City bothered Wernecke as mentioned earlier.  He visited the place
    intending to have a talk with the Madam…perhaps named Vimy Ridge.  Before  the discussion
    got underway one of his miners noted Livingston and said, “Hello, Mr. Wernecke, I see
    you use this place too.” Seems Livingston said nothing but may have stared  at the miner in disgust.
     Another tale that may or may not be true but underlines his determination
    to protect the  health of his boys.   He paid a doctor to ensure the girls were in good health and not
    likely to infect his boys.   Infections would reduce production  at the mine.
     
    A complicated man.   He looked after his boys well.  Grant that.  But he would fire them on the
    spot for minor transgressions.   He gave terse orders which were sometimes misunderstood
    which kept his miners on pins and needles.  
     
    WHAT HAPPENED TO THE HORSES?
     
    When Bill  Dunn and I visited  the ruins of the Wernecke Camp Mine we found a horse stable with
    two horse collars.  I made a big mistake when I assumed  the Mine was  shipping ore concentrates
    by horse and sleigh or wagon to Mayo Landing where sternwheelers would load the sacks  and 
    beat their way to Whitehorse.  Livingston Wernecke got rid of his horses in 1923…the same year
    that Benjamin  Holt invented  and marketed  the Holt bulldozer…then called  the ‘caterpillar’.
    At least two of these powerful machines were shipped  to Skagway and on up the White Pass
    railway to Whitehorse then driven at crawl speed  all the way to Keno Hill.   Wernecke was criticized
    for this  leap  of technology. “We do not even know how to get the machines off the boat in Skagway let
    alone onto a White Pass railway flatcar.”   But it was done.   The Holt machines hauled multiple
    sieighs of ore all hitched to the Holt caterpillars with a caboose as living space for the drivers
    when at rest. 
     
    What happened to the horses?  The good horses  were sold. “The others were shot.”  A  few were
    kept to haul ore from the mine to the  ‘Holt train’ and others  hauled waste rock to be dumped over
    the cliff into the MvQuesten Valley.
     
    Werencke always tried to make his mine as efficient as possible for Treadwell Yukon directors
    in California.
     
     
     
     
    cid:568A7B77-9D1F-4DF7-81BE-5FA67CE4920F
     
     
     
     
     
     
    cid:DA949E58-6A04-48FA-B01B-280CE8CEF2D6
    Wernecke was quick to see that these huge  Holt Caterpillars could haul many many
    sleigh loads of silver ore from Keno Hill to Mayo Landing cheaper than the teams of horses
    …and cheaper.  
     
     
     
    HAVE YOU EVER HEARD OF THE WERNECKE MOUNTAIN RANGE?
     
    Livingstone Wernecke was a shy man  really.  Efficient, frugal, irascible, generous, …a man who loved the wild places as  much as he loved
    developing mining ventures.   Prospectors were often provided with food, gear and even airborne transportation to the unknown
    part of the Yukon in hopes they would make discoveries. If a prospector found  and staked promising mining sites Wernecke was
    quite willing, as mentioned earlier,  to pay as high as $100,000.   He encouraged discoveries by these free ranging unprofessionals.  He admired  their
    tenacity..their risk taking…their independent spirit.
     
    One  of the rewards, after his death, was the naming of a largely unexplored Yukon mountain range after him.  The Werneke Range.
    Incredibly beautiful.
     
    cid:2CB96AE8-4CB5-4B4F-94C0-688A595C0878
     
     
     
    cid:3F96BE94-577E-4D74-A7C4-EC18A3DCC455
     
    So much more could be said about Livingston Wernecke.   Too little time to do it.
     
    alan skeoch
    Feb.  2021
     
     
     



  • EPISODE 686 LIVINGSTON WERNECKE’S REPORT ON THE TREADWELL MINE DISASTER, APRIL 22, 1917

    NOTE: Sitting in Mitch Lynas’s dental chair while he excavated and filled four teeth was nor he most
    pleasant experience in my life.  Thankfully I was able to escape.  Livingston Wernecke’s description 
    of that last cage being lifted out of the Treadwell Mine in 1917 is riveting.  I was with Livingston
    on that final day in my mind while Dr. Lynas did a different kind of excavating an backfilling.


    episode 685    LIVINGSTON WERNECKE’S REPORT ON THE TREADWELL MINE DISASTER, APRIL 22, 1917

    alan skeoch
    Nov 28,2022

  • EPISODE 682 ESCAPING THE YUKON, PART 6 TREADWELL MINE DISASTER , APRIL 22, 1917


    EPISODE 682    ESCAPING THE YUKON, PART 6    TREADWELL MINE DISASTER , APRIL 22, 1917


    alan skeoch
    Nov. 23, 2022

    NOTE: I COULD not SEE THIS STRANGE BUILDING FROM THE TAXI FERRY TAKING ME TO 
    JUNEAU. It is  ALL THAT REMAINS OF THE TREADWELL MINE DISASTER OF 1917.


    Take a good look at this strange building.  Notice anything?  Look again.  What is a little odd about
    the building?  


    The Treadwell Historic Preservation and Restoration Society restored the shell of the Treadwell pumphouse. Mt. Roberts serves as backdrop. (Katie Bausler)


    Hope you noticed. The stone building is built on top of a tower.  Why?   Because the structure is built 
    in the Gastineau Channel.   A fjord open to the sea.  In other words open to tidal fluctuations.  At high tide
    the building stands alone seemingly on top of the water.  The tidal change in the Channel is immense.

    And on April 22, 1917 there was a remarkably tidal flow heavier than normal.  Unusual.  So What?
    Water is heavy.  Water in a five gallon a tank is almost too heavy to lift.  Now just imagine the incredible 
    weight of the water that flows backend forth through the Channel every day.   Zillians of pounds more than a puny five gallon tank.

    MINING THE TREADWELL MINE


    NOTIEW THAT THE MEN ARE STANDING ON  ON RUBBLE…KNOCKED OFF CEILING, SEPARATED INTO
    ORE AND WASTE….THE ORE WAS HAULED BY HORSES THROUGH MILES OF TUNNELS TO THE 
    SHAFT THEN LIFTED TO THE TOP OF THE MINE AND DELIVERED TO THE STAMPING MACHINES.  WHICH
    BY THE WAY MADE ONE HELL OF A NOISE PULVERISINGTHE ORE INTO FINE SAND.


    FIVE HUNDRED  feet below the Channell, on April 22, 1917 there were 350 miners taking out gold bearing
    ore.  Doing so in a rather odd way to my way of thinking.   They were cutting
    chunks of ore out of the ceiling of the stopes.  Mining above their heads.  Loading the horse drawn
    mine carts with the good stuff and piling the waste rock on he mine floor.  So the stopes of the 
    Mine became high vaulted ‘cathedrals’ in which the miners worked upwards and upwards…standing with
    their tools on the increasing pile of rubble waste.  So what?   So the roof of the cathedral like stopes
    had less and less support.  

     Pillars were left to hold up the ceiling.  These pilars however were often gold bearing…therefore
    valuable as ore, so they were very thin   

    Along with the men there were 13 horses and 1 mule.  These animals had been lowered into
    the mine in slings. Getting them out would be tricky so the horses lived and worked in the  dark most of their lives.
     Most miners loved the horses and the feeling was mutual.  In the darkness
    the horses would whinny with affection as various miners stroked their necks.

    The team, men and horses were sending 5 tons of ore up the shaft
    every day.   

    WHAT IS A STAMP MILL?
    Architectural  drawing of the workings of a stamp mill.   .  Raw ore dumped  in
    stamp mill then pulverized into tiny pieces by power driven  hammer.  The noise
    from the Treadwell stamp mills was terrible.





     The stamping mills allowed mine managers to recover 50% of the gold.
    Arsenic was used to get the remaining gold.  


    The ceiling in mine got higher and higher…and weaker and weaker.



    April 22, 1917   The sudden 
    disappearance of the company swimming pool into this hole was
    the first hint that the whole mine was about to cave in.  An alarm was 
    sounded….men scrambled to get out.  Horses were left behind.


    THE TREADMILL MINE DISASTER


    1.15 A.M.  ARIL 22, 1917  

    “ground around the natatorium (workers swimming pool) and fire hall slipped sideways, then with ‘cracks, groans, and noises of shattering boards’ dropped straight down into the innards of the mine.”


    2.15 a.m.  april 22, 1917

    “another eruption at the cave-in site, a two-hundred-foot geyser of saltwater shot out of the top of the central shaft. The spouting display went on for a full five minutes before it stopped, like fireworks announcing a finale. “ *

    *Sheila Kelly, TREADWELL GOLD


    6.45 a,m.  April 22, 1917  By the time the sun lit the Treadwell Mine buildings the

    vast workings of the Mine were filled with water from the deepest spot 500 feet
    below the Channell to ground level.  Three million tons of seawater ended
    the mines life.  Ten million tons of gold bearing ore had been removed.  In doing so
    45 miles of mine shafts and drift were hollowed out.

    Seventy million dollars worth of gold was produced but it took over 8 tones
    of ore to produced 1 once of gold. (*Is this correct? Seems odd)


    WHY DID THE TREADWELL MINE IMPLODE?

    No one really knows why this happened.  There had been several ground tremors
    in the months prior to the total collapse.  strong hints that something was wrong..
    But little note was taken. 

     And when the cave in happened there were several explanations.

    1)  An extraordinary tidal surge had swept up the Gilford Channell that increased the
    weight of rock, oberburden and water on the stopes.
    2) The  managers of the mine had allowed the internal pillars to be thin and therefore
    incapable of supporting the ceiling.
    3) The mining system of working upwards created huge cathedral like stopes…open
    spaces in these stopes got larger and larger with each working day.  
    4) There was a major fault in the geology of the mine…a weakness.

    WHO WAS SAVED AND WHO WAS LOST

    Water had been pouring into the mine at an accelerating rate but the mine had so many miles of tunnels
    and stopes that there was enough time….barely…to get the miners up the shafts and out.  Luckily the
    collapse happened between shifts and there were not as many men deep down as there would
    have been normally.  350 men got out.  Only one man was not accounted for and
    his disappearance was a mystery.  Mine officials believed he had escaped and just
    took the opportunity to pretend he was lost so his wife could collect insurance
    money which she did after a court case.

    Sadly only 1 horse was brought to the surface.  The other 12 or 13 horses were about to drown
    as the miners emerged from the shaft cage.  The men were distraught as they loved the horses and some of them
    volunteered to go back down the shaft to rescue the horses.  By then, however, it was  too
    late.  They drowned.

    alan

    Post Script    Escaping the Yukon    1) Who was Livingston Wernicke?   2) Who are the Tlingits?


  • EPISODE 684 NEW DOORWAY FOR SKEOCH/FREEMAN FARMHOUSE CIRCA 1870 (AND DOORWAY 2022)


    EPISODE 684   NEW DOORWAY FOR SKEOCH/FREEMAN FARMHOUSE CIRCA 1870 (AND DOORWAY 2022)

    alan skeoch
    Nov. 24, 2022

    Mice!  Lots of them squeeze through the old frame doorway of our farm house.  This is a bad year for them.
    Marjorie has caught 28 so far.   All dead except one she caught by the tail and let it go down by the pond.
    Where  did it go?   I bet it hightailed it back to this loose brick in the old farm house.  If so, it is doomed.
    Snap traps get them. 

    But that freeway for mice may not be as bad in future years.  We ordered a new fancy doorway with sidelights and
    transom…just like the old doorway but made of metal shielded lumber  It took all summer to construct.
    Old farm houses are not constructed using  tape measures.  Ours has an inch or so difference one side to the 
    other.  Takes a skilled carpenter to overcome rule of thumb measurements.Thanks to Fossil Landscapes
    we were able to find carpenters who are artists as well as tradesmen.

    I think the cost of this doorway will be far more than the cost of a dozen mousetraps.




















    On cold winter nights when icicles hung from the window frames and frost deadened all the farm house
    rooms but one.  That room was the old kitchen where a big wood stove was kept as hot as a poker
    Louisa and Ed Freeman spent the winters in that little kitchen while the rest of the 
    farm house was given over to frost and icicles.   The big front doorway was full of holes for winter wind 
    to creep through.  Nothing could be done.  The old doorway was built in the 1870-s and we thought it could
    not be replicated until now.

    Mice?  No problem.  In the past The house was so damn cold even the mice looked for better homes
    in the barn.   The mice haven was our fault when we gutted the house and modernized it.

    How smart are mice?  Will they find holes in the field stone foundation … places where ancient cement
    can be pushed side?   I think Marjorie better hold onto the traps she purchased.  If she catches a 
    mouse with a dent in its tail I will know that the mice are smarter than we are.  They can find a way!

    alan skeoch
    2022



  • EPISODE 682 ESCAPE FROM THE YUKON PART 5: THE TREADWELL MINE DISASTER — KILLS 12 HORSES, 1 MULE, MAYBE 1 MAN 1917

    EPISODE 682    ESCAPE FROM THE YUKON  PART 5:  THE TREADWELL MINE DISASTER — KILLS 12 HORSES, 1 MULE, MAYBE 1 MAN   1917


    alan skeoch
    Nov. 20, 2-22


    The Treadwell Historic Preservation and Restoration Society restored the shell of the Treadwell pumphouse. Mt. Roberts serves as backdrop. (Katie Bausler)


    My water taxi was getting ready to dock in Juneau…the land- locked capital of Alaska was a city 
    stacked like cordwood.  Ascending in tiers up a mountain on the east side of the Gatineau Channel.   
    Juneau was obvious to the naked eye. If so, then The Treadwell Mine must be equally obvious.
    I turned and looked westward across the Channel.  Douglas Island was there even though it had
    moved and reshaped itself back in 1917.  But there was no sign that this Island had once housed
    the largest gold mine in the world.  Here were the ruins of the Treadwell Mine?

    Nothing there except one measly little nondescript tiny tower poking out of raw slurry of sand and bits of rubble
    I was disappointed.  The reason for my ‘ Escaping the Yukon’ plan was to see the fabled ruins of the Treadwell Mine.
    There was….there is….nothing to see.

    Just getting here had been exciting.  Travelling down on the Yukon and White Pass Railway.  Imagining the
    3,000 bodies of inhumanely  treated horses at Dead Horse Gulch,  recreating the wild days in Skagway when
    bunco artist Soapy Smith ruled the roost, taking a tiny 10 person water taxi down the Gatineau Channel.
    All very exciting.  But the culminating event, the Treadwell Mine…was not worth the  effort.   Or so it seemed
    at first glance.
     
    “Somewhere under this channel, over 2,000 feet below us are the skeletons of 12 horses and 1 mule and maybe 1 man”
    “How do you know that?’
    “The largest gold mine in the world in 1917 was here…the Treadwell Mine”
    “Tunelled under the Gatineau Channel…5,000 tons of ore a day taken from under the  ocean?”
    “Miners excavated 65 miles of tunnels.”
    “Then it all came to a crashing end in just two hours, April, 1917….”
    “And all that remains is this peculiar building.  Looks like a tiny Greek Parthenon”
    “When Treadwell was in full flower there were buildings stretching for miles.”
    “And Douglas Island was a fulll fledged town”
    “Now there is just this one building”
    “Built on a massive pile of mine tailings that has made the Douglas Island beach where no beach was before.”

    The main event….THE TREADWELL MINE DISASTER…Is coming in the next episode.

    alan skeoch
    Nov. 21,2022

    Post script:  The Treadwell Mine was really four mines all carved out
    of a fault in the skin of our mother earth.  A crack that allowed gold
    bearing magma to ooze up.  

    Take a close look at the small cross section map of the Treadwell Mine…top right hand side, small…NOTICE ANYTHING?


    www.juneauempire.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/08/image2099306_web1_Treadwell_workers_outside_mine_building_ca_1918-300×185.jpg 300w, www.juneauempire.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/08/image2099306_web1_Treadwell_workers_outside_mine_building_ca_1918-640×396.jpg 640w” sizes=”(max-width: 1199px) 98vw, 720px” apple-inline=”yes” id=”68288B38-9943-49CE-99F7-E38E1D99DD54″ style=”box-sizing: inherit; border: 1px solid rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.15); display: inline-block; vertical-align: middle; max-width: 640px; margin: 0px 0px 0.25rem;” src=”https://alanskeoch.ca/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/image2099306_web1_Treadwell_workers_outside_mine_building_ca_1918.jpg”>

    Treadwell workers outside mine building, circa 1918. (Alaska State Library)