Personal letters from Alaska were sometimes published in newspapers as articles. This is one from Sunrise City by a gold miner that wintered over.
From the Ludington Appeal newspaper, Michigan July 15, 1897
Sunrise City, Alaska
May 2, 1897
I received your letter of March 14, on April 26. It finds me well and hearty as I have been since you left. I weigh 180 now. The winter was spent very comfortably here. I have been working almost steady since the 1st of February. I lost all my horses early in the winter but two that I sold to Folsom for 50 dollars. Folsoms horses and the two jacks lived through ok.
This has been the finest winter I ever put in anywhere. It was not cold or stormy. About 10 degrees below zero was the coldest weather we had till March, then I think it got down to 18 degrees below zero here in Sunrise and 26 degrees at Mill’s Creek. I am sorry you could not have stayed in with me. We had dances, minstrel shows and a literary society, so you see we had something nearly every night. I had the proud distinction of being called the leader of the “400” of Sunrise, though I never did anything particular to earn me that title.
There has been two boats in already, the mail boat and the Stella Earland with about 30 passengers. There is no rush for Cook’s Inlet this year, only those who are located and a few others will be in. We are to have a mail every two weeks all summer. Calligan still holds the office. The Yukon country is catching the rush this year. They made a big discovery there last summer, and about 8,000 are going into that country this spring. Blackstone, Molique, and Bottcher left here about March 18 to meet the special boat to Prince Williams Sound, and have never been seen since. They are given up as dead. Blackstone left a wife here in Sunrise and two grown children in Seattle. Molique left a wife and child in Seattle.
Sunrise made some preparations for a boom. The brewery boys put up the largest building in the city to be used as a dance hall and saloon. Lots sold at from $50 to %100 and several cabins were built. But we will be all the better off for not having a boom, as there is plenty of people here now for what there is to do. Of sickness, there has been three or four cases of scurvy and one fellow had his hand completely blown off while shooting fish with dynamite, but they are all well now or doing well. No deaths except the three men who never got across the glacier to Prince Williams Sound.
Wages will be about the same as last year, but more work for the few that are here. The snow is nearly all gone around the town, but there is plenty on the hills and up Canyon Creek. Smith on Lynx Creek has been sluicing about three weeks. The others are all sawing timber and getting out wing dam timber. I sawed about 2,700 feet this winter for other parties. I located a claim on Groundhog Creek, a tributary of Bench Creek, heading in near Lynx Creek and about 25 miles from Sunrise. I think it may be good, as the boys below me rocked out $11 in one day. Tell my folks not to worry about me. I hope to see you all this fall.
With best wishes for all, I remain,
Albert Shappe