Poker Creek Gold
The Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA) advises travellers that the Little Gold Creek/Poker Creek port of entry will close for the season at 9 p.m. (Pacific Daylight Time) on Sunday, September 23. The port will re-open in the spring of 2019 as permitted by road and weather conditions. Jewelry in Ketchikan, AK.
Poker Creek–Little Gold Creek Border Crossing | |
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The Canadian side of the joint border inspection station at the Poker Creek–Little Gold Creek Border Crossing | |
Location | |
Country | United States, Canada |
Location |
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Coordinates | 64°05′08″N141°00′05″W / 64.0856°N 141.001317°WCoordinates: 64°05′08″N141°00′05″W / 64.0856°N 141.001317°W |
Details | |
Opened | 1971 |
US Phone | (703) 921-7750/7751 |
Hours | 8:00 AM – 8:00 PM AKT, summers only |
Website http://www.cbp.gov/contact/ports/alcan |
The Poker Creek–Little Gold Creek Border Crossing is located on the Top of the World Highway, which connects the communities of Chicken, Alaska and Dawson, Yukon on the Canada–United States border. This crossing is notable for being the northernmost international border crossing in North America.
History[edit]
The Top of the World Highway was completed around 1955, but the US performed border inspection services about 120 miles away in Tok, Alaska until 1971, when it built a log cabin-style inspection station at the border. In 2001, the US and Canada constructed a joint border inspection station, where inspectors from both countries occupy a single facility. A line painted on the floor in the building marks the US-Canada border. [1]
See also[edit]
References[edit]
- ^'Joint U.S.-Canada border post dedicated'. 2001-08-12. Archived from the original on 2014-09-04. Retrieved 2014-08-31.
Butler’s Forgotten Claim
In the heart of Mother Lode country, Amador County, California was once crawling with prospectors. Near the very place where James Marshall first discovered gold at Sutter Creek, another profitable claim was being worked that may continue to hold large amounts of gold buried close by.
At the foot of a deep gorge coming out of the mountains was a claim that was first owned by a group of African-American miners. The river was soon dammed so that the miners could work the smooth channel. However, there was no holding-place for the gold, so the entire party soon left – except for a man named Butler.
Seeing potential in the claim, Butler soon borrowed $600 from a man known as Uncle Pompey and opened another claim a little lower down in the bend.
Butler’s instincts were right, as after a day’s work, his gold pan would be filled with gold nuggets. Some said that a day’s work with a rocker would produce as much as $50,000 in gold. As word of the rich find got out, a number of men, anxious to have a share, hunted down Butler’s former partners, inducing them to sell their interests in the claim. This soon resulted in lawyers and lawsuits, all wanting a piece of the action.
Butler, a simple prospector, was overwhelmed by all the controversy and soon took sick with a fever and died. Afterward, it was found that Butler had about $80,000 on deposit at Mokelumne Hill and a similar amount at Sacramento. However, his friends said that he was often known to bury his profits close to the site of the claim.
Today, those buried caches are thought to still be hidden in Amador County.
Gold Coins in Clear Creek
Mormon Pioneers
Poker Creek Gold Ketchikan
In the 1850s a group of Mormon wagons were passing through the fertile valley of Redding, California on their way to the tiny settlement of Horsetown. However, in order to get there, they first had to cross Clear Creek, usually a quiet little stream. However, when they arrived, Clear Creek was nothing but quiet; rather, it was a muddy torrent of raging floodwaters running off the nearby mountains. Forced to stop on the banks of the creek, they waited several days for the creek to settle down to its normal easily crossable state.
However, they were impatient to get to their destination and didn’t wait quite long enough. When the flash flood waters had slowed but were not yet calm and shallow, they decided to cross. Most of the wagons made it across the river safely, but one wagon, belonging to a Mr. Bishop, met with disaster. Entering the swollen waters just a little downstream from the others, he quickly found the creek deeper in that particular area.
Soon, one of the wagon wheels fell into a deep hole and without warning, the wagon tipped on its side. Able to unhitch his team of horses, Bishop and the animals made it to safety, but the wagon was carried downstream.
The incident was then forgotten for decades until 1910 when a prospector named William Dreestelhorst found a ten-dollar gold coin in his sluice box. The coin was stamped with the initials “SMV,” dated 1841, and the words “California Gold” were inscribed around the rim. This meant the coin was privately minted by an assayer and was of the very same type the Mormons had lost some 60 years previously.
This began yet another search of Clear Creek, but again, no one found the lost cache of coins. Many believe that the lost Mormon treasure continues to be hidden along the banks of Clear Creek southwest of Redding, California.
Gold Coins at Bloody Springs
As in many places of the American West, the friction between the scores of men entering California during its Gold Rush days and the Indians was often bitter. Weary of the white men continuing to encroach upon their lands, the danger to travelers was very high when entering California from the northeast.
As the California Trail proceeded south into the Sacramento Valley on the Pit River route, wagon trains and travelers were often ambushed by the natives. Bloody Springs, at the lower end of Spring Gulch, was the scene of numerous attacks, hence its name. Smaller groups were often wiped out.
On one such occasion, an entire emigrant train was massacred by the Indians. Only one man survived to tell the story. Finally, he made his way to Fort Crook, telling of how the train was carrying approximately $60,000 in $20 gold coins. Before he made his getaway, the man witnessed the Indians competing to see who could throw the shiny disks across the Pit River Gorge. The “contest” continued until each and every one of the gold coins was either in the river or lodged into the rock walls of the gorge.
Today, an occasional gold piece is still found at Bloody Springs in Lassen County. Bloody Springs is located a few miles southeast of Pittsville above the banks of the Pit River.
Poker Flat Cache
Poker Flat, California
Poker Creek Gold Alaska
From the 1850s to the 1880s Sierra County, California was crawling with prospectors in search of gold. The northernmost region of California’s mother load, dozens of mining camps, with such names as Poverty Hill, Queen City, Port Wine, and Poker Flat, sprouted up as prospectors searched for the glittering rocks in the streams of the area. By the late 1850s hydraulic mining began in the region which continued through the 1880s.
No doubt, during these affluent times, many a prospector and mine owner made their fortunes. But, they were not the only ones. Those storekeepers who catered to the miners’ needs also profited. One such man who gained wealth running his retail establishment was named Jerome Peyron. The storekeeper was known to have made frequent trips into the hills behind his store in Poker Flat where he buried his money. However, when a Mexican Gang heard of Peyron’s hidden money, they converged upon his shop demanding to know its location. When the Peyron refused to tell them, he was murdered by the gang.
To this day, Peyron’s buried cache has not been found.
© Kathy Weiser/Legends of America, updated February 2020.
Poker Creek Gold Ketchikan
Also See