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Southern
view of Dempster HIghway
Photo: Jay Armitage
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When the Conservatives came to power in 1957 under
the leadership of then-prime minister John Diefenbaker,
his northern affairs minister Alvin Hamilton was
the man most responsible for the decision to build
the
Dempster. Hamilton had a personal interest in the
North. One of his relatives had staked claims in
the Keno
Hill area during the Klondike Gold Rush of 1898.
Other relatives had lived and worked in the Great
Bear Lake
area and on Melville Island in the NWT. Hamilton
and other Conservatives devised a strategy for resource
development, which included making an inventory of
natural resources. The road program would promote
exploration
work and help to determine the extent of Canadian
resources. The roads would be instrumental in developing
those
resources once they were located. The Whitehorse
Star of Sept. 5, 1957, quoted Hamilton: "I visualize
making every corner of the Yukon accessible. We can’t
develop without access. I see a network of trunk
roads branching out from Dawson City. The great development
possibilities in the northeast corner certainly justify
road investments into the Mackenzie River Delta area.
A trunk road from Dawson City area through the Peel
Plateau and on to Aklavik is under active consideration."
The Department of Public Works (DPW) in Ottawa
was asked to estimate the cost of surveys, and to
estimate
the cost per mile for the road from Dawson City
to Eagle Plain. Very little was known about the area
that
the proposed road was to cross. Large portions
of the Yukon hadn’t even been mapped yet. There was
another problem: DPW didn’t have any staff
in the Yukon. They soon did. On Nov. 8, 1957, the
highways
division of DPW reported that aerial photos had
been taken of three possible routes: From Mayo
via McQuesten
River to the Hart River and the Peel Plateau; From
Dawson City to the Hart River via the Klondike
River; From Dawson City via the North Klondike
River and
the Blackstone River to the Ogilvie River and the
Peel
Plateau (the route ultimately selected).
DPW estimated
the total cost at about $30 million for a road
from Keno or Flat Creek to Aklavik, with
bridges and access roads to the Eagle Plain and Fort
McPherson. The estimated cost per mile was $30,000
to $35,000. The total cost was cut to $22.7 million
after it was discovered that operating ferries would
be cheaper than building major bridges. The right-of-way
was to be 100 feet. The roadway itself was to be
24 feet wide, the minimum allowed for two-way traffic.
These and other plans were well underway when a federal
election was called on Feb. 1, 1958.
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Road
to Dempster HIghway
Photo: Jay Armitage
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Northern resource development was a vital plank
in the Conservative election platform. It was the
focus
of Diefenbaker’s opening campaign speech in
Winnipeg on Feb. 12th. Speaking to an overflow crowd, ‘Dief
the Chief’ outlined his party’s national
development strategy. Item number one was the roads
program: "We intend to start a vast roads program
for the Yukon and the Northwest Territories which
will open up for exploration vast new oil and mineral
areas—30 million acres! "We will launch
a $75 million federal-provincial program to build
access roads. THIS IS THE VISION!
The Liberals under
Lester Pearson attacked it as the building of roads "from igloo to igloo".
Diefenbaker pounced. He ridiculed Pearson’s
criticism and said it clearly demonstrated the Liberals’ lack
of vision. Voters bought it. The Conservatives won
an overwhelming majority. They elected 212 members
in the 265-seat House of Commons. Hamilton was given
$100 million for a Northern Roads Program. A companion ‘Roads
to Resources’ program got another $75 million
for joint federal-provincial access roads. Diefenbaker
coined the famous ‘Roads to Resources’ phrase.
But because of delays, cost overruns and other
problems associated with it, Opposition politicians
and the
national press had a field day. Among other things
they called it the Road to Remorses. Isolated construction
workers referred to it as the Road to Divorces.
The highway’s original name was Yukon Territorial
Road No. 11. When it reached Flat Creek it was
called Flat Creek Road. As work progressed it became
Eagle
Plain Road, and after that it was called the Aklavik
Road. It got its final name in 1963. The first
48 kilometres were cut through the spruce forest
along
the banks of the North Fork of the Klondike River.
Only 12 miles, from 60 to 72, were built in 1961
however. Construction first slowed, then came to
an abrupt halt after it was learned that the promising
oil discovery at Eagle Plain was a dud. Of all
the wells drilled, none had commercial potential.
Diefenbaker
suddenly had other priorities. The government decided
to cut its losses and it put the highway project
on hold. For the next 10 years the 72 miles of
road just sat there, but not without earning yet
another
nickname: The Road to Nowhere.
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Tombstone
Range on Dempster HIghway
Photo: Jay Armitage
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Government funding was renewed in the early 1970s
amid speculation of an oil pipeline being built
down the Mackenzie River Valley. Environmental
issues
plagued the project in the 1970s. Concerns were
first raised in 1975 by Eleanor Millard, the MLA
for Old
Crow, and by the Yukon Conservation Society. The
society expressed its concern about the effect
the highway would have on the Porcupine caribou
herd.
It recommended control of traffic in areas where
the caribou crossed the highway. There are about
120,000 animals in the Porcupine herd, but only
about 70,000 animals cross the Dempster during
the spring
and fall migrations. As far back as written records
go, the Porcupine herd is recognized as an international
resource for native people in Alaska, the Yukon
and NWT. Their concern, however, fell on deaf government
ears. The government’s hearing was suddenly
restored when first nations and other environmental
groups endorsed the society’s concerns. Early
in 1976 the Yukon government voted to delay the Dempster
project in favour of completing the Skagway road
instead. Concerns about the possible negative effects
of hunting on the Porcupine caribou herd also prompted
the territorial government to impose the first-ever
hunting ban along the Dempster in October of 1977—two
years before the road actually opened.
The Dempster Highway was completed in 1978, but
the official opening and dedication ceremony was
held
the following year. Since then it’s become
general knowledge that the highway itself is no threat
to the caribou. In the late 1970s, environmentalists
warned that the animals would change their migration
route to avoid the road. They were wrong. Following
a three-year study, the Canadian Wildlife Service
reported in 1982 that the caribou would cross the
road, even where the banks are steep. It also noted
that they had started using the road themselves to
travel, and even loafed around on it sometimes. The
former Yukon Wildlife Branch (now Renewable Resources)
identified human hunters as the greatest threat to
the caribou. For this reason the Yukon government
has not aggressively marketed the Dempster Highway
in its tourism promotions.
D-Day in Dawson
City…