W.H.T. Olive (1865-1940) W.H.T. Olive was born and raised in Turo, Cornwall. He apprenticed in woodwork and architecture. He immigrated to Victoria, British Columbia and worked on the Parliament buildings. Olive's employer, Francis Rattenbury, decided to send him to the Yukon in late 1890s to build boats for Rattenbury’s Bennett Lake & Klondyke Navigation Co. Olive's wife, Sarah, followed him to the Yukon and they had their fifth child there. They lived in Atlin until 1904 and then moved to Carbon, Alberta to homestead. Olive built the first school in the area. When they moved to town, Olive owned a garage and became a Justice of the Peace. Sarah moved to Calgary where Olive died in 1940.((Evelyn Johnson, //The Olive Diary.// Surry: Timberholme Books, 1998.))