Francis Edmund “Frank” Harbottle. (d. 1943) Frank Harbottle was a North-West Mounted Police officer from Hamilton who was sent to the Boer War shortly after his recruitment. He was posted to the White Pass Summitt in 1900 and in 1901 married Lillian Bigger in Whitehorse. Lillian had travelled from Kansas City to Dyea with her family in 1898. Her father opened a store in Dyea and then moved the family to Whitehorse after the railway was completed in 1900. Frank and Lillian lived at the Summit after their marriage.((Shirley Culpin, “Generations Worked Here, There, Everywhere to Make Good Life.” //The Whitehorse Star// (Whitehorse), 18 June 1975.)) Frank resigned from the police in 1905.(("Pioneer pilot helped to open the Yukon." //The Yukon News// (Whitehorse), 18 January 1991.)) He ran a series of small businesses including a candy store and a second-hand furniture store.((Shirley Culpin, “Generations Worked Here, There, Everywhere to Make Good Life.” //The Whitehorse Star// (Whitehorse), 18 June 1975.)) Harbottle also ran a jitney service, running passengers and freight to and from Jo-Jo, Champagne, Bear Creek, Christmas Bay, and Silver City in the Kluane region, and along the Overland Trail to Dawson.((“Pioneer pilot helped to open the Yukon.” //The Yukon News// (Whitehorse), 18 January 1991.)) Frank Harbottle is remembered by the naming of a mountain in the Ogilvie Range and a street in Wolf Creek.((“Pioneer pilot helped to open the Yukon.” //The Yukon News// (Whitehorse), 18 January 1991.))