v:d_vanbibber
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Daniel Van Bibber (1913 - 2002) | Daniel Van Bibber (1913 - 2002) | ||
- | Dan Van Bibber was born to parents Eliza and Ira Van Bibber. | + | Dan Van Bibber was born in a tent at the west end of Tatlman Lake where Mica Creek flows out to Taata Lake and then on to the Pelly River. His parents |
- | Having volunteered for services in the Pacific, Dan left Whitehorse in early September 1945 to report for duty in Vancouver.((// | + | Dan attended school in Dawson , staying at St. Paul's Hostel. The first time Dan took is younger siblings down the Yukon River, 230 miles to Dawson, He was thirteen. They took a poling boat and sold it in town for spending money. The next year went down in an eight-cord raft of dry wood they sold in town for $12 a cord.((Kathleen Thorpe, "Dan Van Bibber." |
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+ | Ira was unwell in 1928, and Dan quit school after completing grade seven. Dan and Ira went on the trapline and set traps and erected tents at Willow Lake and Willow Hills and then Ira went home and didn't come out again. At age fifteen, Dan ran the trapline alone but he didn't have the skills. He visited Abe's cabin at Grayling Lake and his more experienced brother gave him advice.((Kathleen Thorpe, "Dan Van Bibber." | ||
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+ | Dan's parents and the younger children were settled at Mica Creek on the Pelly River. In [1931?],the winter trail from Minto to Mayo was cut past near the Van Bibber' | ||
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+ | Around 1941, Dan and brothers Archie and JJ built two boats, one moose skin and one canvas, and drifted down the Porcupine River trapping beaver. They expected to catch the steamer //Yukon// from Fort Yukon to Dawson but the boat was redirected to the Kuskokwin that summer and they had to hire a motor boat. Dan then went trapping with Archie and JJ on the Nation River and Charlie Creek.((Kathleen Thorpe, "Dan Van Bibber." | ||
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+ | Dan was the first of the Van Bibber boys to enlist for service in the Second World War. Archie and Alex went east for basic training in the summer. Most of the boys joined the service when the war was almost over. Dan was the only one to see active service.((JJ Van Bibber and Naill Fink, ed., //I was born under a spruce tree.// Vancouver: Talus Publishing Group, 2012: 81, 85, 103, 105.))He took basic training in Wetaskiwin, Alberta and advance training at Currie Barracks, Calgary.((Kathleen Thorpe, "Dan Van Bibber." | ||
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+ | In 1945, Dan had a six-week furlough and snowshoed about two hundred miles from Dawson to the Nation and Charlie creeks area where brothers Pat and JJ were trapping. He did about forty to fifty miles a day, pulling some food and his eiderdown in his little Ice King toboggan. JJ thought he was toughest man in the Yukon.((JJ Van Bibber and Naill Fink, ed., //I was born under a spruce tree.// Vancouver: Talus Publishing Group, 2012: 81, 85, 103, 105.)) | ||
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+ | Dan trapped alone for a few years on Nation River, Charlie Creek, and Back River and then, in 1951, turned over the trap line and all his equipment to Joe Netro for the Old Crow people. Dan went to work as a grader operator on the [Mayo Road] for United Keno Hill. Dan married a girl from Watson Lake and they had two children, Abe and Bobby. In 1953, he became the highway foreman at Stewart Crossing. He transferred | ||
v/d_vanbibber.1729358256.txt.gz · Last modified: 2024/10/19 10:17 by sallyr