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Yukon Telegraph Trail

near Telegraph Creek, British Columbia, Canada

Formally Recognized: 2010/01/22

Remains of collapsed Yukon Telegraph cabin, Echo Lake; Regional District of Kitimat-Stikine, 2009
Remains of cabin at Echo Lake
Wire splice from Yukon Telegraph line, found near Bell Cabin 2; Regional District of Kitimat-Stikine, 2009
Wire splice from Yukon Telegraph line
Yukon Telegraph lineman Fred Appleyard at Echo Lake Cabin, 1935; Yukon Archives, John Sutherland fonds, 82/200 #240
Yukon Telegraph lineman at Echo Lake cabin

Other Name(s)

Dominion Telegraph Line
Yukon Telegraph Trail
Yukon Telegraph Line
Telegraph Trail
Yukon Telegraph Division of the Dominion Government Telegraph Service

Links and documents

Construction Date(s)

1898/01/01 to 1901/01/01

Listed on the Canadian Register: 2010/11/23

Statement of Significance

Description of Historic Place

The Yukon Telegraph Trail extends through British Columbia from Ashcroft in the south to Atlin in the north. The portion of the trail located in the Regional District of Kitimat-Stikine is approximately 500 kilometres long, extending from Moricetown near Hazelton to the village of Telegraph Creek. The trail, overgrown in places, contains the remains of telegraph cabins, wire, and other artifacts related to the construction of the Dominion Telegraph Line. The historic place consists of the length and width of the trail route from Moricetown to Telegraph Creek.

Heritage Value

Almost 3,000 kilometres in length, the Yukon Telegraph line linked Dawson City to southern Canada. The line branched north from the Canadian Pacific Railway telegraph line at Ashcroft; along much of its length was a trail used for servicing the line. Within the Kitimat-Stikine region, the Yukon Telegraph Trail is valued for its historical association with the Collins Overland and Yukon Telegraph lines, its role in communications and transportation, its scientific association with the changes in communications technology, its cultural association with First Nations, telegraph operators and others, its current use by guide outfitters, its potential as a recreational resource, and its location within the pristine natural environment of the Kitimat-Stikine region.

The 500 kilometre portion of the Yukon Telegraph Trail that extends from Moricetown to Telegraph Creek is valued as a physical reminder of the history of the Yukon Telegraph line. Begun during the Yukon Gold Rush and constructed between 1897 and 1901 by the Dominion Government Telegraph Service, this trail, along with the Teslin trail, was promoted as an All-Canadian Route to the Yukon gold fields. The trail is also valued for the critical role it played in maintaining communications and opening up settlement in the remote Kitimat-Stikine region. The trail highlights the transportation challenges in the region, as pack trains were the only possible means for transporting goods along the line.

There are cultural, social and architectural values associated with the Yukon Telegraph Trail through the lives of the men who patrolled the trail and maintained the line. Along the line each main log cabin housed two men. North of Hazelton the main cabins were numbered 1 to 9, followed by two or three named cabins leading to Telegraph Creek. Smaller 'refuge' cabins were located between these for use as emergency shelters. These log cabins are an integral, physical part of the trail's heritage value. Their presence represents the technical system of the telegraph that relied on human labour to keep it functioning, and the dedication of the workers, whose lives were both pragmatic and storied. While enduring extreme weather and harsh living conditions, the men played music, tended wilderness vegetable gardens and maintained traplines.

Cultural value is also found where the trail passes through First Nations traditional territory, where it was used as part of a network of trails for travel, trapping and the transport of goods such as oolichan grease from the coast. Also important is the trail's relationship to the village of Telegraph Creek, named for the Collins Overland Telegraph, an earlier attempt to construct a telegraph line through the region in 1866. The use of the trail by many diverse people over time including First Nations, prospectors, trappers, packers and outlaws, adds to its social and cultural significance. All of these people left their traces and their stories along the trail.

The Yukon Telegraph Trail is valued for its direct association with the telegraph line and its scientific and engineering feats, which included the physical construction of the trail and telegraph line through difficult terrain, developments in communications technology of the time, and the physical presence of a continuous wire through the wilderness.

Although the telegraph line was abandoned in 1936 with the advent of radio communication, the historical value of the line and trail is reflected in many place names associated with the telegraph survey, construction and operation, including Telegraph Creek, Bob Quinn Lake, Durham Creek and Burrage Creek. The trail is significant as a historic recreational trail, for its pristine and aesthetic environment, as the subject of ongoing historical research, and for its power to evoke a sense of nostalgia for the pioneering construction of early telegraph routes in British Columbia.

Source: Regional District of Kitimat-Stikine

Character-Defining Elements

Key elements that define the heritage character of the Telegraph Trail include its:

- remote location
- extent of the trail from Moricetown to Telegraph Creek
- extent and variety of wilderness (mountains, rivers, lakes, ecosystems, wildlife) through which the trail passes
- the remote communities through which the trail passes
- the overgrown but continuous nature of the trail
- the rugged trail surface
- views to and from the trail
- collection of log-constructed telegraph cabins in various states of repair, located at regular intervals along the trail
- memories and stories associated with the trail
- artifacts including wire, insulators, posts, signs, markers, culturally modified trees, blazes, fences, walls, bridges and other elements related to the trail and to the operation of the telegraph line

Recognition

Jurisdiction

British Columbia

Recognition Authority

Local Governments (BC)

Recognition Statute

Local Government Act, s.954

Recognition Type

Community Heritage Register

Recognition Date

2010/01/22

Historical Information

Significant Date(s)

n/a

Theme - Category and Type

Developing Economies
Technology and Engineering
Developing Economies
Communications and Transportation

Function - Category and Type

Current

Historic

Transport-Land
Traditional Trail or Trading Route
Industry
Communications Facility

Architect / Designer

Collins Overland Telegraph

Builder

Dominion Government

Additional Information

Location of Supporting Documentation

Regional District of Kitimat-Stikine

Cross-Reference to Collection

Fed/Prov/Terr Identifier

HlTs-64

Status

Published

Related Places

n/a

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