Fairbanks County AK Archives History - Letters .....El Dorado, Described By Mark A. Curran 1895 ************************************************ Copyright. All rights reserved. http://www.usgwarchives.net/copyright.htm http://www.usgwarchives.net/ak/akfiles.htm ************************************************ File contributed for use in USGenWeb Archives by: Debra Crosby http://www.genrecords.net/emailregistry/vols/00010.html#0002467 November 1, 2021, 4:06 pm NEWS FROM COOKS INLET A Former Junean Miner Shakes Up The Country (Alaska News, Juneau City, June 20 ) Mark A. Curran sends the following to Samuel Wendel, dated at Turn Again Arm, and from its contents it is easily seen that he is not favorably impresssed with the prospects. Other reports have been sent down diametrically opposed to his version, so that the reader is left in doubt. Mark is well known here, is a good miner and has good judgment, so that his remarkes are worthy of consideration to all those intending to go there. He went upon the first trip of the Dora. TURN AGAIN ARM, Cooks Inlet, May 25, 1895 Dear Wendal:-- As you see by the heading I am here in this new El Dorado--so called--but from what I have seen and learned since my arrival I am inclined to believe it is a wild-cat. I have met many old-timers here, some of them have been for the past five years; with the exception of three or four all are in debt from $300 to $500 each for supplies. This spring the stores have refused further credit, to all. There is a little gold in every gulch. Bear creek is the best found as yet, but the average of Bear creek is about $2.50 per day to the man. The gulches are yet full of snow and the ground frozen it will be the middle of June before work will begin to any extent. The season here is agout the same as in the Yukon country; the working season will not exceed three and one half months. When the wind and tide are favorable we have two mails a year, but the wind is rarely favorable, so one mail is the average. With the exception of two or three light showers of rain the weather has been all smiles since my arrival, about one month. The atmosphere is made up of three component parts, samely, mosquitoes, gnats,a nd devii- flies. All wear masks of wire netting, principally as a protection from the atmosphere. We have four different kinds of timber, water birch, small cotton- wood, elder and devil-slub, the latter greatly predominating. The trip has costs, up to date, about $300; this includes the ummer's [sic] supplies bought from the A. C. company at Kodiak, the only supply depot for this part of the coast. The A. C. company has a branch at Tionic, 250 miles from Kodiak and about 40 miles from Bear creek. The Tionic branch furnishes most of the unfortunate miners here with supplies at the following prices; salt-horse, 20 cent per pound; sugar, 8 pounds for $1; Coffee, 50 cents per-pound; baking powder, 65 cents per pound; apples, poor quality, 25 cents per pound; rice, 8 pounds for $1; smoking tobacco, $1 per pound; everything else in proportion; these are cash prices. The A. C. company is losing money but says it intends to keep right on sacrificing in order to help the miners develop the country, hoping to make up losses later on. If any of the Juneau people contemplate a trip to this part of the coast I would suggest that they buy their supplies at Juneau and save more money than some of the first class claims of Bear creek will produce this season. I shall remain here this summer and hope to find something. My heart turns back to Juneau and old friends. Sincerely your friend. Mark A. Curran Additional Comments: Submitter is not related and has no further information File at: http://files.usgwarchives.net/ak/fairbanks/history/letters/eldorado326gms.txt This file has been created by a form at http://www.genrecords.org/akfiles/ File size: 4.0 Kb