User Tools

Site Tools


w:f_watson

Differences

This shows you the differences between two versions of the page.

Link to this comparison view

w:f_watson [2024/12/18 20:20] – created sallyrw:f_watson [2025/10/12 22:42] (current) sallyr
Line 1: Line 1:
 Frank Watson (d. 1939) Frank Watson (d. 1939)
   
-Frank Watson was born in Yorkshire, England.  He started for the Klondike in early 1897 from Edmonton, Alberta and arrived on the Upper Liard River in the spring of 1898. He married a Kaska woman, Adela Stone, and they had four children: Arnow, Edna, Bob, and Alice.((“The Town of Watson Lake.” //The Yukoner Magazine,// Issue No. 12, July 1999: 11.)) Bob was born at Lower Post in 1923 and raised in Watson Lake.((Elders Documentation Project, CYFN Cultural Education Society Library.)) +Frank Watson was born in Yorkshire, England.  He started for the Klondike in early 1897 from Edmonton, Alberta and arrived on the Upper Liard River in the spring of 1898. He married a Kaska woman, Adela Stone [Chehdūdī], and they had four children: Arnow, Edna, Bob, and Alice.((“The Town of Watson Lake.” //The Yukoner Magazine,// Issue No. 12, July 1999: 11.)) Bob was born at Lower Post in 1923 and raised in Watson Lake.((Elders Documentation Project, CYFN Cultural Education Society Library.)) Because of the Indian Act, Adela lost her status when she married Frank.((Yansi Elders Circle, //It's Time to Tell Our Story.// Whitehorse Aboriginal Women's Circle, 2025:27.))
  
 The family started trapping in the area of what is now called Watson Lake in 1910.((Yukon Anniversaries Commission. 1992 Elders Interviews: Bob Watson. Yukon Archives YAC collection.)) The Kaska call the lake Tasdagiluge or Lu Chu, meaning Big Whitefish Lake.((“The Town of Watson Lake.” //The Yukoner Magazine,// Issue No. 12, July 1999: 11.)) In 1925, Anton Money and Amos Godfrey met Frank Watson and his family who were living on the Frances River about sixteen kilometres above Middle Canyon. Watson trapped down the Frances and the Liard rivers as far as Watson Lake, at the head of the canyon about twenty-four kilometres above Lower Post.((Anton Money with Ben East, //This was the North.// Toronto: General Publishing Co., 1975: 93-94.)) The family started trapping in the area of what is now called Watson Lake in 1910.((Yukon Anniversaries Commission. 1992 Elders Interviews: Bob Watson. Yukon Archives YAC collection.)) The Kaska call the lake Tasdagiluge or Lu Chu, meaning Big Whitefish Lake.((“The Town of Watson Lake.” //The Yukoner Magazine,// Issue No. 12, July 1999: 11.)) In 1925, Anton Money and Amos Godfrey met Frank Watson and his family who were living on the Frances River about sixteen kilometres above Middle Canyon. Watson trapped down the Frances and the Liard rivers as far as Watson Lake, at the head of the canyon about twenty-four kilometres above Lower Post.((Anton Money with Ben East, //This was the North.// Toronto: General Publishing Co., 1975: 93-94.))
w/f_watson.txt · Last modified: by sallyr