Young Alaskans in the Far North

Nonfiction, Religion & Spirituality, New Age, History, Fiction & Literature
Cover of the book Young Alaskans in the Far North by Emerson Hough, Library of Alexandria
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Emerson Hough ISBN: 9781465611802
Publisher: Library of Alexandria Publication: March 8, 2015
Imprint: Language: English
Author: Emerson Hough
ISBN: 9781465611802
Publisher: Library of Alexandria
Publication: March 8, 2015
Imprint:
Language: English
“Well, fellows,” said Jesse Wilcox, the youngest of the three boys who stood now at the ragged railway station of Athabasca Landing, where they had just disembarked, “here we are once more. For my part, I’m ready to start right now.” He spoke somewhat pompously for a youth no more than fifteen years of age. John Hardy and Rob McIntyre, his two companions, somewhat older than himself, laughed at him as he sat now on his pack-bag, which had just been tossed off the baggage-car of the train that had brought them hither. “You might wait for Uncle Dick,” said John. “He’d feel pretty bad if we started off now for the Arctic Circle and didn’t allow him to come along!” Rob, the older of the three, and the one to whom they were all in the habit of looking up in their wilderness journeyings, smiled at them both. He was not apt to talk very much in any case, and he seemed now content in these new surroundings to sit and observe what lay about him. It was a straggling little settlement which they saw, with one long, broken street running through the center. There was a church spire, to be sure, and a square little wooden building in which some business men had started a bank for the sake of the coming settlers now beginning to pass through for the country along the Peace River. There were one or two stores, as the average new-comer would have called them, though each really was the post of one of the fur-trading companies then occupying that country. Most prominent of these, naturally, was the building of the ancient Hudson’s Bay Company. A rude hotel with a dirty bar full of carousing half-breeds and rowdy new-comers lay just beyond the end of the uneven railroad tracks which had been laid within the month. The surface of the low hills running back from the Athabasca River was covered with a stunted growth of aspens, scattered among which here and there stood the cabins or board houses of the men who had moved here following the rush of the last emigration to the North. There were a few tents and lodges of half-breeds also scattered about.
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
“Well, fellows,” said Jesse Wilcox, the youngest of the three boys who stood now at the ragged railway station of Athabasca Landing, where they had just disembarked, “here we are once more. For my part, I’m ready to start right now.” He spoke somewhat pompously for a youth no more than fifteen years of age. John Hardy and Rob McIntyre, his two companions, somewhat older than himself, laughed at him as he sat now on his pack-bag, which had just been tossed off the baggage-car of the train that had brought them hither. “You might wait for Uncle Dick,” said John. “He’d feel pretty bad if we started off now for the Arctic Circle and didn’t allow him to come along!” Rob, the older of the three, and the one to whom they were all in the habit of looking up in their wilderness journeyings, smiled at them both. He was not apt to talk very much in any case, and he seemed now content in these new surroundings to sit and observe what lay about him. It was a straggling little settlement which they saw, with one long, broken street running through the center. There was a church spire, to be sure, and a square little wooden building in which some business men had started a bank for the sake of the coming settlers now beginning to pass through for the country along the Peace River. There were one or two stores, as the average new-comer would have called them, though each really was the post of one of the fur-trading companies then occupying that country. Most prominent of these, naturally, was the building of the ancient Hudson’s Bay Company. A rude hotel with a dirty bar full of carousing half-breeds and rowdy new-comers lay just beyond the end of the uneven railroad tracks which had been laid within the month. The surface of the low hills running back from the Athabasca River was covered with a stunted growth of aspens, scattered among which here and there stood the cabins or board houses of the men who had moved here following the rush of the last emigration to the North. There were a few tents and lodges of half-breeds also scattered about.

More books from Library of Alexandria

Cover of the book Le Notaire De Chantilly by Emerson Hough
Cover of the book Four Plays of Gil Vicente by Emerson Hough
Cover of the book Dry-Farming: A System of Agriculture for Countries under a Low Rainfall by Emerson Hough
Cover of the book Zigzag Journeys in Europe: Vacation Rambles in Historic Lands by Emerson Hough
Cover of the book The Life of Duty: A Year's Plain Sermons on The Gospels or Epistles by Emerson Hough
Cover of the book A Girl of Virginia by Emerson Hough
Cover of the book Hymns from the Morningland: Being Translations, Centos and Suggestions from the Service: Books of the Holy Eastern Church by Emerson Hough
Cover of the book Love by Emerson Hough
Cover of the book Egerton Ryerson and Education in Upper Canada by Emerson Hough
Cover of the book Modern Economic Problems by Emerson Hough
Cover of the book The Legends of Saint Patrick by Emerson Hough
Cover of the book Syd Belton: The Boy Who Would Not Go to Sea by Emerson Hough
Cover of the book Ifugao Law (In American Archaeology and Ethnology) by Emerson Hough
Cover of the book Outdoor Life and Indian Stories by Emerson Hough
Cover of the book Sinners and Saints: A Tour Across the States and Round Them with Three Months Among the Mormons by Emerson Hough
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy