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Frances Backhouse

    Frances Backhouse is a seasoned freelance journalist whose background as a biologist deeply informs her environmental writing. Her work delves into the natural world, often focusing on specific species like owls and woodpeckers. Beyond nature, she harbors a fascination for Klondike gold rush history, which features prominently in her other books. Her writing is characterized by a well-researched approach and an engaging narrative style.

    Women of the Klondike
    • 2011

      Women of the Klondike

      • 240 pages
      • 9 hours of reading

      When the steamship Portland docked in Seattle harbour in 1897, a group of scruffy men and women dressed in rough northern garb walked down the gangplank. There was nothing remarkable about them, except they were dragging sacks stuffed with a half-million dollars` worth of gold. One of these travelers was Ethel Berry, who had helped mine of the richest claims in the Klondike. She was only one of the hundreds of women who joined the hordes of dreamers risking their lives in search of Yukon gold. Never before have the stories of these adventurous women been brought together. Women of the Klondike explores the critical roles women played during the gold rush. Frances Backhouse delves into the lives of these diverse individuals - entrepreneurs, miners, teachers, doctors, nurses, and journalists. Through diaries, letters, memoirs, newspaper accounts, and archival photographs, Backhouse presents an intimate look at women in the Klondike. " This lively work is an essential addition to the growing bookshelf of Klondike history. I read it with enormous interest. " - Pierre Berton

      Women of the Klondike