Sally Ann Elizabeth Robinson (b. 1949.) Sally Robinson was born in Orillia, Ontario not knowing it was also where noted North-West Mounted Police officer Sam Steele spent some of his childhood. She received a BA from York University (1972) and an MA in History from the University of Western Ontario (1997). She moved to the Yukon in the 1970s, first Whitehorse, then Dawson for twenty-three years, and then finally back to Whitehorse in 1998. Over the years, she worked as a bartender, carpenter, a museum researcher/exhibit designer/curator, and an interpretive planner for Yukon Historic Sites. Sally’s published work includes “Humble Dreams: An historical perspective on Yukon agriculture since 1846” in //The Northern Review,// No. 32 (2010); “The Home Front: the Yukon response to WWI,” in //The Northern Review,// No. 44 (2017); and editor of Doug Bell, //Sky Road North// (Yukon Transportation Museum (2021). She started keeping notes on people and events when she first moved to the Yukon, and this set of biographies, //Yukon Who Is Who,// is the result. It is, and always will be incomplete. Sally was honoured with the Yukon Historical & Museums Association History Maker award in 2024, the year that Yukon Who Is Who went live on the internet: yukonwhoiswho.ca