Riding A Bicycle Across Frozen Alaska — A Hundred Years Ago

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By Jill Homer — They were perhaps North America’s first endurance racers — the grizzled men and a few women who set out across wild expanses in a race to reach a land of uncertain but undeniably vast fortunes. The Klondike Gold Rush brought the notion of adventure racing to the forefront of American imaginations, because it was widely accepted that those who got there first got the gold — by any means possible. Klondike gold rushers sailed hundreds of miles on rough seas, hoisted a thousand pounds of gear over the steep and snowbound Chilkoot Pass, and expunged their life savings on dog teams and supplies to travel a thousand miles across the deep-frozen wilderness of Yukon and Alaska. Those who couldn’t afford dog teams used bicycles.

Winter cycling is currently a fast-growing trend, with enthusiasts touting the latest innovations that allow cyclists to ride bikes on snow. It’s a little-known fact that a hundred years before winter endurance races such as the Iditasport Extreme popularized snow biking, Klondike gold rushers were riding significantly more primitive bicycles across Alaska. 

During the Klondike Gold Rush, the White Pass was one of the routes used by prospectors to travel from Skagway to the Yukon gold fields. Here, a man on a bicycle is pulling a sled near summit of White Pass Trail, ca. 1899 Photo by Arthur C. Pillsbury. Courtesy of The Seattle Public Library, spl_ap_00115

In the late nineteenth century, a bicycle craze was sweeping across the nation. People were using bicycles to ride across town, race their friends, and even travel across the country. It made sense that the “wheel” would find a place in the Gold Rush. At the time, most bicycles were built of heavy steel with a fixed-gear drivetrain and solid rubber wheels. 

Miners would use their wheels to travel the trails set by dog teams between mining camps. Others used their wheels to travel farther distances or over Chilkoot Pass with various degrees of success. 

Competition also found its way into frozen north, with bicycle races on the ice. One photograph preserved in the Selid-Bassoc Collection from the Alaska and Polar Regions Archives depicts a young man straddling a fixed-gear bicycle with the caption “White Horse to Dawson in 5 Days Overland Bicycle Record, Winter of 1903.” The man in the photo is not identified. The Dawson Overland Trail travels more than 400 miles between Whitehorse and Dawson, Yukon. It remains in use today, largely unchanged in more than 100 years with the exception that it’s more common to see a snowmobile these days than a team of dogs. A 430-mile race is held on the trail every other year, the Yukon Arctic Ultra. On a modern fat bike, it took U.K. cyclist Alan Sheldon seven and a half days to ride 430 miles from Whitehorse to Dawson during the Yukon Arctic Ultra in 2009. If the photo caption is correct about a five-day ride, it’s likely an unidentified wheelman from 1903 still holds the Dawson Overland Trail record. 

Also attempting to capitalize on the bicycle craze, a Gold Rush-era bicycle company developed a special model called the “Klondike Bicycle” and claimed it was the answer to every miner’s prayer. On this innovate bike, the company claimed, a miner could carry his necessary 1,000 pounds of supplies 500 miles from Chilkoot Pass in Southeastern Alaska to the Klondike goldfields.

A guidebook explained the bicycle was “in reality a four-wheeled vehicle and a bicycle combined. It is built very strongly and weighs about fifty pounds. The tires are of solid rubber, one and a half inches in diameter. The frame is ordinary diamond, or steel tubing, built however more for strength than appearance, and wound with rawhide, shrunk on, to enable the miners to handle it with comfort in low temperatures.” The bicycles had two fourteen-inch retractable wheels on which a miner could load a quarter ton of gear, and “drag it on four-wheels ten miles or so. Then the rider will fold up the side wheels, ride it back as a bicycle, and bring on the rest of his load.”

It’s unclear how many gold rushers actually used the combination cart-bike Klondike Bicycle to travel long distances. But for lighter-weight travelers, a bicycle was thought to have several advantages. Cyclists followed two-inch tracks left by the dogsleds, and they could generally travel faster than dog teams and horses under good conditions. The bicycles were less expensive to purchase and maintain than animals and offered the user a greater margin of independence. After all, you don’t have to feed and water a bicycle. However, Far North cycling was wrought with hazards, as documented by the “wheelmen” of the Klondike. They suffered from snow-blindness and eyestrain, as well as numerous crashes from their efforts to stick to the narrow track. Bicycles also experienced frequent breakdowns because of frozen bearings and stiff tires. 

One of the cyclists who documented his journey was Max Hirschberg, a Yukon roadhouse owner who joined the stampede to Nome in 1900. The night before he planned to leave Dawson, he acquired blood poisoning while responding to a hotel fire. It was March before he recovered, too late to reach Nome by dog team ahead of the spring thaw. However, he reasoned, he was an experienced cyclist, and felt confident in his chances of reaching the goldfields before the Yukon River became unfit for travel. His account of the journey was first published in Alaska Magazine in February 1978. 

“The day I left Dawson, March 2, 1900, was clear and crisp, 30 degrees below zero,” he wrote in his journal. “I was dressed in a flannel shirt, heavy fleece-lined overalls, a heavy mackinaw coat, a drill parka, two pairs of heavy woolen socks and felt high-top shoes, a fur cap that I pulled down over my ears, a fur nosepiece, plus fur gauntlet gloves. On the handlebars of the bicycle, I strapped a large fur robe. Fastened to the springs, back of the seat, was a canvas sack containing a heavy shirt, socks, underwear, a diary in waterproof covering, pencils and several blocks of sulfur matches. In my pockets I carried a penknife and a watch. My poke held gold dust worth $1,500 and my purse contained silver and gold coins. Next to my skin around my waist I carried a belt with $20 gold pieces that had been stitched into it by my aunt in Youngstown, Ohio, before I left to go to the Klondike.”

Outside of Dawson, the 1,500-foot-wide Yukon River had been through a rough freeze. Slabs of ice the size of houses were littered along the banks, preventing access to the shore. Overflowing river water collected around the slabs, covered by weak layers of ice that broke when Hirschberg crossed them. “By the time I reached Forty Mile, my socks were wet, and ice covered my felt shoes. It took me quite a while to orient myself to my two-inch trail and I had many spills on this early part of my journey.”

About 250 miles downriver, he reached the Yukon Flats, where the river was so wide and the landscape so flat that he could only see a few scatterings of trees on far-away banks. “The most dangerous and difficult parts of the flats were between Circle City and Fort Yukon,” he wrote. “Save for a portage land trail of 18 or 20 miles out of Circle City, the trail was on the river, which split into many channels without landmarks. The current was so swift that I encountered stretches of open water and blow holes. Snowstorms completely obliterated the trail.”

In Tanana, near modern-day Fairbanks, Hirschberg encountered a forty-mile stretch of glare ice where the river had been wind-swept free of snow. After numerous crashes he broke a pedal, returned to town for a quick fix, and continued on to Nulato. The weather was warming, and numerous creeks were flowing with water. On the Shaktoolik River, he broke through the ice and nearly drowned. As he struggled in the water for nearly two hours, he lost his watch and his poke with $1,500 in gold dust but managed to save his bicycle.

Hirschberg encountered open water on the Bering Sea, but started out across Norton Sound anyway. Just as he was nearing the opposite shore, the ice shifted, leaving an eight-foot lead of open water between him and land. “I took a chance and leaped to the shore,” he wrote, “where I picked up a piece of driftwood, jumped back on the ice floe and poled myself and my bicycle back to the shore, and went on my way.”

Just east of Nome, he skidded on glare ice and broke a chain. Unable to pedal any longer, Hirschberg found a stick, strung it through his large fur parka, and constructed a sail to catch the wind, which was blowing in the direction of Nome. “At times the wind was so strong that I was forced to drive into some soft snow to stop my wild flight,” he wrote. “Without my chain I could not control the speed of my bicycle. However, I finally arrived at Nome, May 19, 1900, without further incident. I had had my twentieth birthday on the trip.”

That same year, a man named Ed Jesson was hunting caribou near Dawson City when he decided to join the rush to Nome. Excerpts from his diary have been reprinted in “Wheels on Ice,” an out-of-print book edited by Alaska historian Terrence Cole. Although Jesson owned a dog team, he thought it would be cheaper and maybe even faster to travel under his own means. He purchased a bicycle from a man who had just ridden into Dawson from the coast. After practicing the steady steering needed to keep the front wheel in the narrow tracks of dog-sled runners, he took off down the Yukon River. Early in his trip the temperature plummeted to 48 below zero, and his rubber tires froze stiff. 

He wrote in his diary: “The oil in the bearings was frozen. I could scarcely ride it and my nose was freezing and I had to hold the handlebars with both hands, not being able to ride yet with one hand and rub my nose with the other.”

As he pedaled down the river, most of the people he encountered thought he was crazy for riding a bicycle, especially since he had access to dogs. However, Jesson countered, on good days he could cover as many as a hundred miles, and “it didn’t eat anything, and I didn’t have to cook dog feed for it.” 

Many of the older miners and Natives along the route had never before seen a bicycle, and Jesson often stopped to show others how the machine worked. He arrived in Nome after more than a month of traveling. He wrote that the bicycle “stood the trip in splendid shape and to my great surprise I never had a puncture or broke a spoke the entire trip.” Except for bruises he acquired from continuously falling on the ice, Jesson was in good shape himself after the arduous journey. 

Hirschberg’s and Jesson’s stories would go on to live on in the annals of “And You Thought You Were Tough,” and his survival instinct, unwillingness to quit, and innovation continue to inspire modern adventurers.

Jill Homer is a freelance editor and writer in Boulder, Colorado. She enjoys exploring the world around her on two feet or wheels, and writes about her adventures at jilloutside.com.

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