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From:
George Myers <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
HISTORICAL ARCHAEOLOGY <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Wed, 3 Oct 2012 13:44:15 -0700
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Congratulations! What a lot of work that must have been. I thought I heard of Soapy Smith perhaps in the stories of Colorado, of which "Myers Avenue: A Quick History of Cripple Creek's Red Light District" by c) 1967 by Leland Feitz Library of Congress Catalog Card No 68-405 is one he might have been part of before leaving for Skagway, Alaska. 

I enjoyed that summer 1980 out West through the ash of Mt. St. Helens on a Greyhound, a jet and then a twin-engine from Juneau to Skagway to work on Alaska's first RR station and the Captain Moore Cabin. The airport there is better as seen in the recent Microsoft "Flight" a virtual Skagway geography along with the rest of Alaska and Hawaii. 

I found this on Amazon and sent it to my Kindle, a scanned article from "Cassier's Magazine" titled "Across the Chilkoot Pass by wire cable" from the Dyea tide and river side, found on microform in the Provincial Archives of British Columbia circa 1981 c) Canadian Institute for Historical Microreproductions. The funicular, "powered by rope or cable" was planned to go from Sheep Camp to Crater Lake, in contract, then "since" extended to a point known as Canyon Camp connecting with a surface road "running through the Dyea Canyon, and along the Dyea river, to the head of the tidewater thus making an uninterrupted transportation between Dyea and Crater Lake" "Later on" its author states "the cable system will, undoubtedly, be extended to Lake Linderman, the head of lake navigation". (William Hewitt b. 1853 http://archive.org/details/cihm_15214)

It has many diagrams and pictures of its construction and how it developed. It show a similar funicular system was used in New York state on "a wire rope tramway used by the Solvay Process Company at Syracuse, N.Y shows both wooden and iron supports". I had the opportunity to ponder the Solvay location before they took the plant down.  Interestingly the Solvay process of soda ash is named after a French sociologist! Its reported a large amount of dynamite used in WWI was made there in the Split Rock quarries, and if the chemical fire, which ran out of water to control it, had jumped the creek, it would have leveled Syracuse with the disputed force of a small "atomic bomb" if the dynamite stored in small wooden barrels had caught fire. Albert Einstein disputed that in a letter, a researcher of the Solvay Plant had. The line had been "used for carrying lime rock from the Split Rock quarries to the soda ash works, at Geddes." There are some problems with the scan however in getting some of the distances and numbers. 

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