Tracing Family Roots to the Gold Rush: A Research Guide

Millions of people have ancestors who made the journey north in 1897 and 1898. Here's how to research whether your family was part of the Klondike Gold Rush — and what you might find.

Millions of North Americans have an ancestor who joined the great migration north in 1897 and 1898. If a family story hints at a relative who "went to the Klondike" — or simply vanished for a few years around the turn of the century — there is a real chance the gold rush is the reason. Here's how to find out. ## Why the gold rush is so traceable Family history research in this period is often unusually rewarding, because the rush was one of the best-documented events of its era. The [North-West Mounted Police](/blog/nwmp-making-of-yukon) registered everyone entering the territory; mining claims were filed and recorded; and the rush attracted journalists, photographers, and diarists from around the world who left an enormous written record behind. ## Where to start - **Yukon Archives, Whitehorse.** The territorial archives hold an extraordinary collection from the gold rush era — mining claim records, NWMP files, court and government records, photographs, newspapers, and personal papers. Start at the official [Yukon Archives](https://yukon.ca/en/yukon-archives) page. - **The Yukon Genealogy database.** A free online database, run jointly by the Yukon Archives and the Dawson City Museum, that indexes thousands of names from gold rush–era records — [yukongenealogy.com](https://yukongenealogy.com/) is the single best place to begin a search from home. - **Dawson City Museum.** Holds extensive records of the people who lived and mined in the Klondike, and can help connect a name to a claim or an address. ## Building out the search Once you have a name and an approximate date, widen the net: - **Census records** (the 1901 Canadian census caught the rush at its tail end) place people in the territory. - **Mining claim and water records** can tie an ancestor to a specific creek and year. - **Newspapers** of the era — the *Klondike Nugget* and the *Dawson Daily News* among them — are partly digitized and full of names. - **Ships' passenger lists** from Seattle, San Francisco, and Vancouver document the journey north. - **Church and cemetery records** in Dawson and along the route record those who stayed — and those who died. ## What you might find Not every Klondike ancestor struck it rich — almost none did. But you may find a claim record in their hand, a police register noting the day they crossed the pass, a photograph in the archives, or a newspaper mention of a dance, a court case, or a departure. For the history that frames whatever you find, see [How the Klondike Gold Rush Started](/blog/klondike-gold-rush-how-it-started), and for the books that bring the era alive, [The Best Books About Yukon and the Klondike](/blog/best-books-about-yukon-klondike). A research trip to Whitehorse and Dawson can turn a name into a place you can stand in. The [Dawson City travel guide](/blog/dawson-city-48-hours) will help you plan it. --- ## See Also on TheKlondike.net - [The Klondike Gold Rush: How It Started and Why It Changed Everything](/blog/klondike-gold-rush-how-it-started) — the historical context for your research - [The Best Books About Yukon and the Klondike](/blog/best-books-about-yukon-klondike) — primary and secondary sources worth reading - [The North-West Mounted Police and the Making of the Yukon](/blog/nwmp-making-of-yukon) — whose records documented every arrival - [Dawson City Travel Guide](/blog/dawson-city-48-hours) — visiting the archives and museum in person