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Coldfoot
Originally
named Slate Creek, the settlement of Coldfoot began around 1898 when
thousands of green stampeders flooded to the area in search of gold.
The name was changed when a group of prospectors got "cold feet" about
wintering in the district and headed south. At its height, Coldfoot
had one gambling hall, two roadhouses, seven saloons and 10 "working
girls" (many of the local creeks are named for these friendly women).
Within a few years, the town boasted its own post office. Mail was
delivered once a month form Fort Yukon, in the winter arriving by
dogsled.
By 1912 the miners
relocated to the richer ground in what is now known as Wiseman, 12
miles north. Coldfoot was just a memory. Most of the buildings were
used for firewood. Today just a couple of tumble down cabins and the
old graveyard remain.
In the early 1970's,
during the construction of the Trans Alaska pipeline, Coldfoot started
coming back to life when a bustling pipeline camp was established not
far from the original town site. All that is left is a couple of shop
bays still being used by the Department of Transportation at their
Coldfoot camp.
In 1981 Alaskan dog
musher, Dick Mackey, set up an old school bus here and began selling
hamburgers to the truck drivers. The truckers found that Coldfoot was
a convenient halfway place to stop and wanted to help make it a more
comfortable place to relax while having a cup of coffee and something
to eat. They started to drop off the packing crates that had been used
to haul the pipeline insulation, to be used as building materials.
During their stops here, the truckers began to pound nails and helped
to build the Coldfoot truck stop. They helped raise the center pole
(the cash register is beside it now) and you can read their engraved
names on the pole. The pole is used as a communications center with
messages hung for the truckers, miners and other folk in the area. |