s:a_saint_cyr
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In 1892, Canada and the United States agreed to a joint survey of the contested part of the Alaskan Panhandle. The completed data would allow the boundary to be placed within the spirit and intent of the existing treaties. The United States would survey along the major rivers and the Canadians would survey the intervening areas. Four American and seven Canadian parties were sent out in 1893. Dominion Land Surveyor Arthur Saint Cyr was in a Canadian party in the Unuk River area in the far south. The weather was poor in 1894 and not much was accomplished. In 1894, Saint Cyr was surveying in the Portland Canal-Chickamin River area in the south. The maps drawn by both countries were completed that season.((Lewis Green, //The Boundary Hunters.// Vancouver: University of British Columbia press, 1982: 54-57, 62-63.)) | In 1892, Canada and the United States agreed to a joint survey of the contested part of the Alaskan Panhandle. The completed data would allow the boundary to be placed within the spirit and intent of the existing treaties. The United States would survey along the major rivers and the Canadians would survey the intervening areas. Four American and seven Canadian parties were sent out in 1893. Dominion Land Surveyor Arthur Saint Cyr was in a Canadian party in the Unuk River area in the far south. The weather was poor in 1894 and not much was accomplished. In 1894, Saint Cyr was surveying in the Portland Canal-Chickamin River area in the south. The maps drawn by both countries were completed that season.((Lewis Green, //The Boundary Hunters.// Vancouver: University of British Columbia press, 1982: 54-57, 62-63.)) | ||
- | In the spring of 1897, Saint Cyr was chosen to find and survey an all-Canadian wagon road or railway route from Telegraph Creek in British Columbia to the head (south end) of Teslin Lake for the expected hordes of gold seekers. His assistant was W. Morley Ogilvie, DLS, son of William Ogilvie, DLS. After finishing the survey, Saint Cyr travelled from Teslin to Marsh Lake in November 1897 along the McClintock Lakes to see if a trail was feasible.((R. C. Coutts, //Yukon: Places & Names.// Sidney, B. C.: Gray’s Publishing Ltd., 1980.)) Saint Cyr explored the east side of Teslin Lake in 1897. He continued down the Teslin River to its junction with the Yukon.((Arthur Saint Cyr, // | + | In the spring of 1897, Saint Cyr was chosen to find and survey an all-Canadian wagon road or railway route from Telegraph Creek in British Columbia to the head (south end) of Teslin Lake for the expected hordes of gold seekers. His assistant was W. Morley Ogilvie, DLS, son of William Ogilvie, DLS. After finishing the survey, Saint Cyr travelled from Teslin to Marsh Lake in November 1897 along the McClintock Lakes to see if a trail was feasible.((R. C. Coutts, //Yukon: Places & Names.// Sidney, B. C.: Gray’s Publishing Ltd., 1980.)) Saint Cyr explored the east side of Teslin Lake in 1897. He continued down the Teslin River to its junction with the Yukon.((Arthur Saint Cyr, // |
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+ | Saint Cry explored the Nisutlin and Big Salmon rivers in 1898.((Arthur Saint Cyr, // | ||
s/a_saint_cyr.1734977968.txt.gz · Last modified: 2024/12/23 11:19 by sallyr