March 21 1898: In Ottawa, the Government of Canada authorizes the Yukon Field Force, a 203-man contingent selected from The Royal Canadian Regiment, The Royal Canadian Artillery and The Royal Canadian Dragoons, and commanded by Lieutenant-Colonel T.D.B. Evans of the Dragoons, a former RCR officer. The force will be accompanied by five women-four nurses and reporter Faith Fenton of the Toronto Globe. The mission is to assert Canadian sovereignty and help the North West Mounted Police keep order in the gold fields.
They face a real threat. The Canada-Alaska boundary is still not completely explored, let alone surveyed, mapped or marked. What's more, the territory is full of lawless, gun-toting, gold-fevered "foreigners"-most of them Americans.
The Klondike Gold Rush is going full blast, and people are pouring into the Yukon Territory. Most come by the White and Chilkoot passes from Alaska, but a few take the terrible "all-Canadian" route, by boat up the Stikine River to Glenora and then on foot for 230 km through forest and swamp to Teslin Lake, the headwaters of a Yukon River tributary, where they can get another boat to Dawson. For political reasons, the Yukon Field Force takes the all-Canadian route.
The Yukon Field Force takes two weeks to travel from Ottawa to Glenora, where they prepare for the trek to Teslin Lake. On June 9, the first trail parties head out from Glenora. Each mule carries 200 pounds and each man carries 50 pounds.
The terrain is a wilderness of boulders, huge fallen trees and waist-deep swamps. It's very hot, and everyone is tormented by huge, blood-thirsty mosquitoes. The food is dreadful-hardtack, rancid strong bacon and black tea. The march takes each party about six weeks, and the last soldiers arrive at Fort Selkirk by boat from Teslin Lake on September 11, 1898.
The gold rush is almost over when they arrive. Half the contingent goes home late in the summer of 1899, and the rest follow a year later.