VOA标准英语2010年-There Was Gold in Them Thar Hills(在线收听) |
This mining school, complete with sled dogs, was set up in Seattle as a training site for potential Klondike prospectors.
It's in Canada, so we could call this essay Only in Canada. But the Klondike is right next to Alaska, and its moment in the sun is mostly an American story.
It begins 113 years ago in what was then a dusty little river town of Seattle in the relatively new state of Washington. In the dead of night — three o'clock in the morning — one July day, a steamship docked after a trip from Alaska. Later that day, the Seattle newspaper printed a one-sentence item on the arrival that changed the course of history in the American Northwest.
The 68 passengers were miners returning from the Klondike River in Canada's Yukon Territory. They had found nuggets of gold as big as walnuts in a Klondike riverbed. Once the people in Seattle read that story, every seat aboard the steamship's RETURN trip was booked within minutes. A great Klondike Gold Rush was on. Over the next few years, more than 100,000 people would leave Seattle to seek their fortunes in the Klondike gold fields.
Of the 100,000 who left Seattle, only 40,000 reached the gold fields. Some of them, and thousands of pack animals, died in the rugged mountain passes. Only about 4,000 miners found gold, 400 panned enough to be considered wealthy, and only 50 — 50 out of 100,000 — managed to keep their wealth and remain rich the rest of their lives. The story is told at the Klondike Gold Rush National Historical Park in the heart of Seattle, and another branch of the museum up in Skagway — 1,800 kilometers away in Alaska. The Klondike area itself in Yukon Territory is almost deserted.
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原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/voastandard/2010/8/110571.html |