Frank Stickney (d. 1899) Frank Stickney and Charlie Jackson, of Seattle, were partners camping at Rampart House in 1899. Stickney went out hunting and never returned. Jackson walked 200 miles, with a forty-five-pound pack, down the Porcupine River without a dog or a guide. He was lucky to meet up with some First Nation people. He arrived at the wintering riverboat //John J. Healy// on 13 February 1899. Charlie searched and waited for Stickney for over three months.((Capt. A. E. Le Ballister, Yukon log, 1898-9. James William Keen, Papers MS 152 AHC, Alaska State Library.)) H. S. Anderson, purser of the steamer //John J. Healy,// believed that it was prospector Stickney’s skeleton that was found near Rampart House in the fall of 1902.(("Skeleton mystery is now explained." //The Yukon Sun// (Dawson), 6 August 1903.))