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Sternwheelers
D&W Alaskan Trail Rides
The SS Keno, the last steamer to run the Yukon, rests at Dawson City's riverbank.
© Earl L. Brown, staff

During their heyday, there were some 250 stern-wheelers on the Yukon River and other major rivers in the North. Defined as a paddle-wheel steamer having a stern wheel instead of side wheels, these massive wooden vessels plied Northern rivers for almost 100 years, hauling supplies, equipment, ore and passengers.

Stern-wheelers were first introduced to the Yukon River in 1866. Paddle wheels churning, boilers chugging, they moved up and down the river, from after breakup until just before the river froze for the winter.

Yukon stern-wheelers were patterned after the stately Missouri River boats, with flat hulls to keep up speed and "hog posts" on the upper decks to prevent twisting and to haul the ships over shallow points along the river. Because the boats were often lost to snags, rocks, sandbars, ice floes, rapids and other river hazards, they had to be economical to build and repair, so they were constructed from native Douglas fir, cedar and pine.

The typical vessels were about 170 feet long, 35 feet wide and could carry up to 250 tons of cargo. They were run by locomotive-type boiler engines and cost $1 to $2 per mile to operate, burning about 120 cords of wood on a trip from Whitehorse to Dawson. Wood camps sprang up along the river to provide fuel for the stern-wheelers during their journey.
Airplanes and all-weather roads eventually ended the stern-wheeler's supremacy. Bridges built along the highway to Dawson City were too low to accommodate the old river steamers, and by 1955 all steamers had been beached.

Today, only 2 of these grand old riverboats survive in the Yukon and both are Parks Canada National Historic Sites: the SS Klondike in Whitehorse, and the SS Keno in Dawson City. The hundreds of others have been lost. Some were sold and moved out of the North. Others were wrecked on the river. One of the worst steamboat disasters on the Yukon River occurred on Sept. 25, 1906, when the paddle-wheeler Columbia blew up and burned, killing 6 men on board, after a crew member accidentally fired a shot into a cargo of gunpowder. The SS Tutshi (too-shy) survived to become a historic site in Carcross, until she burned to the ground in July 1990.

The SS Keno was the last steamer to run the Yukon River. In 1960, she sailed from Whitehorse to her final resting place on the riverbank in Dawson City. The 130-foot SS Keno was built in Whitehorse in 1922 by the British Yukon Navigation Company (BYNC). She was used to transport silver, lead and zinc ore from the Mayo District to Stewart.


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