"There shall be no light here."
As the Dawson population declined, Dawson ministers began holding midnight church services on the Dome. In 1905, Rev. W.H. Barraclough preached from Revelation 22-5. Miss Harold of the Christian Science Society, Professor Trumpour, a visiting Anglican professor from Vancouver, Archdeacon Shirley of the local Anglican Church, and Rev. Findlay of the United Church of Canada held a Union Service on the Dome in 1925. The ministers may have outnumbered the audience as the preached for half an hour around a small campfire.
Big Changes Over Time
The Midnight Dome is a knob of metamorphic rock, common to the area south of the Tintina Trench fault line. The geology of the two edges on the Trench differs greatly due to a slippage of 450 km. that occurred within the last 65 million years. Generally speaking, gold laden placer gravels occur south of the Trench and hardrock deposits of lead, zinc and coal are found on the north side.
The Tintina Trench, in the Dawson City area, marks the edge of the glaciers as they existed 3 million years ago. This glaciation may have changed the direction of the Yukon River from south flowing to north. The river cut a path through the bedrock instead of making a path in the lower, but ice-filled, Tintina Trench. Later glaciations may have changed the direction of the Yukon River again but today the river flows north.
In September 1925 a road was built from the graveyards to the Dome, to accommodate the steamboat passengers who arrived on a one-day sightseeing tour. White Pass & Yukon Route donated $500 for the project. The labour was done by members of the Yukon Order of Pioneers who borrowed a Caterpillar tractor and a plough from the City.
Fertile Islands in the Stream
Islands in the Yukon River near Dawson have been used to grow produce and animal fodder since the gold rush. The islands grow and shrink each year, depending on the whim of the river, but the soil is good and their location protects them from early frosts. Sister Island, 3 km down river from Dawson, was donated to the Sister's of St. Ann around 1900. It provided grazing for the hospital cattle and was a favorite spot for picnics.
[Photo captions, clockwise from the left:]Captain Jack Crawford (From "The Poet Scout")On the Dawson Dome, June 22, 1901 (YA VPL Collection, #2038.)
Robert McCleery, of the Royal North West Mounted Police, signing a quest register at the base of the flagstaff in September 1919. (YA Tidd Collection, #7606.)
The work crew included Mary Tidd, who rode the tractor to the top (YA Tidd Collection, #7096.)[map of the area]
A midnight picnic on the Dome with Cecil Swanson, Amos Njootlie, John Davies, Reverend Ross and unknown. Mr. Bush and Earl Lee are kneeling in front. (YA Cecil Swanson Collection, #8577.)
HM Number | HMU2V |
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Tags | |
Placed By | Yukon Tourism, Heritage Branch |
Marker Condition | No reports yet |
Date Added | Saturday, September 6th, 2014 at 1:35pm PDT -07:00 |
UTM (WGS84 Datum) | 7W E 578235 N 7105572 |
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Decimal Degrees | 64.06796667, -139.39646667 |
Degrees and Decimal Minutes | N 64° 4.078', W 139° 23.788' |
Degrees, Minutes and Seconds | 64° 4' 4.68" N, 139° 23' 47.28" W |
Driving Directions | Google Maps |
Area Code(s) | 765 |
Closest Postal Address | At or near 111 Dome Rd, Dawson YT 47331, CA |
Alternative Maps | Google Maps, MapQuest, Bing Maps, Yahoo Maps, MSR Maps, OpenCycleMap, MyTopo Maps, OpenStreetMap |
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