LITERARY LANDMARK: Dease Lake
When the going gets tough, the tough get sledding. One of Nellie Cashman's most famous feats was to hike into northern B.C.'s Dease Lake under frigid winter conditions to get to the Cassiar mining area where miners trapped without sufficient food were dying of scurvy. Nellie and six men she hired took 77 days to get to the mining site, each on snowshoes pulling a laden sled because the snow was too soft and deep for dogs. The Canadian army intervened and tried to pursuade her to discontinue the journey but she persisted. She arrived just in time to save most of the miners--as many of 75 of them by some accounts--earning her the nickname Angel of the Cassiar.
Thora Kerr Illing's biography of Nellie Cashman (1845-1925), Gold Rush Queen: The Extraordinary Life of Nellie Cashman (TouchWood $18.95) recalls this unorthodox, rugged and beautiful woman who was also a miner, entrepreneur and philanthropist. She lived and prospered in some of the toughest boomtowns from California and Arizona to Cassiar and Alaska, setting up restaurants, boarding houses and general stores. A lifelong Catholic, she gave away much of her earnings to support the building of hospitals and churches, nursing the sick and feeding the hungry.
Born in 1845 in County Cork, Ireland, Cashman emigrated with her daughters and was reputedly advised to go west, to San Francisco, by General Ulysses S. Grant. Also known as Nellie Pioche and Irish Nellie, she opened a combination saloon and boarding house at Dease Lake in 1874. At 77, she earned the title of champion musher of the North. She died in the St. Joseph's Hospital in Victoria from double pneumonia in 1925. A 29-cent stamp was issued by the U.S. Postal Service in 1994 and Tombstone, Arizona, annual celebrates Nellie Cashman Day on August 23. Her grave can be found in Victoria's Ross Bay Cemetery.
The Victoria Daily Times wrote of Cashman, "Like many pioneer women who have known the meaning of hardship, she was of a most kindly disposition, nursing the sick and feeding the hungry and doing all she could to help the unfortunate and her death will be sincerely mourned by a wide circle."
Former journalist and librarian, Thora Kerr Illing immigrated to Canada as a young woman, fell in love with the space, fjords and forests of the West, and stayed. She has retired to Sidney.
[Photo by Michelle Alger]
BOOKS:
Gold Rush Queen: The Extraordinary Life of Nellie Cashman (TouchWood, 2016) $18.95 978-1-77151-159-9
[BCBW 2016]
When the going gets tough, the tough get sledding. One of Nellie Cashman's most famous feats was to hike into northern B.C.'s Dease Lake under frigid winter conditions to get to the Cassiar mining area where miners trapped without sufficient food were dying of scurvy. Nellie and six men she hired took 77 days to get to the mining site, each on snowshoes pulling a laden sled because the snow was too soft and deep for dogs. The Canadian army intervened and tried to pursuade her to discontinue the journey but she persisted. She arrived just in time to save most of the miners--as many of 75 of them by some accounts--earning her the nickname Angel of the Cassiar.
Thora Kerr Illing's biography of Nellie Cashman (1845-1925), Gold Rush Queen: The Extraordinary Life of Nellie Cashman (TouchWood $18.95) recalls this unorthodox, rugged and beautiful woman who was also a miner, entrepreneur and philanthropist. She lived and prospered in some of the toughest boomtowns from California and Arizona to Cassiar and Alaska, setting up restaurants, boarding houses and general stores. A lifelong Catholic, she gave away much of her earnings to support the building of hospitals and churches, nursing the sick and feeding the hungry.
Born in 1845 in County Cork, Ireland, Cashman emigrated with her daughters and was reputedly advised to go west, to San Francisco, by General Ulysses S. Grant. Also known as Nellie Pioche and Irish Nellie, she opened a combination saloon and boarding house at Dease Lake in 1874. At 77, she earned the title of champion musher of the North. She died in the St. Joseph's Hospital in Victoria from double pneumonia in 1925. A 29-cent stamp was issued by the U.S. Postal Service in 1994 and Tombstone, Arizona, annual celebrates Nellie Cashman Day on August 23. Her grave can be found in Victoria's Ross Bay Cemetery.
The Victoria Daily Times wrote of Cashman, "Like many pioneer women who have known the meaning of hardship, she was of a most kindly disposition, nursing the sick and feeding the hungry and doing all she could to help the unfortunate and her death will be sincerely mourned by a wide circle."
Former journalist and librarian, Thora Kerr Illing immigrated to Canada as a young woman, fell in love with the space, fjords and forests of the West, and stayed. She has retired to Sidney.
[Photo by Michelle Alger]
BOOKS:
Gold Rush Queen: The Extraordinary Life of Nellie Cashman (TouchWood, 2016) $18.95 978-1-77151-159-9
[BCBW 2016]
Articles: 1 Article for this author
Gold Rush Queen: The Extraordinary Life of Nellie Cashman
Review (2017)
Reviewed by Charlene Porsild
*
Thora Illing's Gold Rush Queen presents the life and times of Nellie Cashman, an Irish-American businesswoman and entrepreneur with strong links to British Columbia.
Cashman first visited B.C. in 1873 and 1874, during the Cassiar gold rush, and a year later helped raise funds to start St. Joseph's Hospital in Victoria.
Reviewer Charlene Porsild places Cashman in the context of the mining booms and communities of the western Cordillera between the 1850s and the first decade of the twentieth century, from California to the Klondike and many places in between. - Ed.
*
This new biography of Ellen (Nellie) Cashman is an attractive volume that offers the casual reader a well-written and engaging overview of the story of Cashman's life and career. It begins with Cashman's immigration from Ireland to Boston with her mother and sister in 1852 and follows her coming-of-age in California.
The author chronicles Cashman's working class background, and follows her as she helps her mother operate a San Francisco boarding house.
When the California mining boom waned, Nellie packed up her mother and her belongings and began a life-long pattern of following the gold and silver booms around the West.
The story is familiar: from San Francisco she journeyed to Virginia City in Nevada, the Cassiar district of British Columbia, then back south to Tucson, Tombstone, and Nogales in Arizona.
In 1898 she headed to the Klondike and spent the rest of her life in the Yukon, Alaska, and finally Victoria.
In these mining camps, Cashman established boarding houses and/or restaurants and invested in her customers' mining ventures.
She never married; in fact, she seems to have been that exception to the standard of nineteenth century life: she remained the lone spinster with impeccable morals and no male protector.
Cashman lived a long and unusual spinster's life, earning her own living by operating boarding houses and restaurants. In this line of work she met and befriended mining men and became a shrewd investor. Though she didn't often work her own claims, she purchased many in her life, and she was a partial owner of many more.
Many are the stories of miners who owed Nellie a portion of the gold they produced in exchange for her up-front cash or grubstake for their claims.
Cashman was by turns highly successful and dismally broke. Such was the mining camp life, and Nellie seemed to thrive on it.
As Illing shows us, the gamble of whether "the next big strike"; would bring a fortune or prove a hoax was exactly what kept Nellie investing and wandering from 1854 until her death in Victoria in 1925.
While Illing offers us little information about Cashman's life (her sources are largely secondary and the story is familiar), the volume is perfect for its market: summer travellers to British Columbia, the Pacific Northwest, Alaska, and the Yukon.
Gold Rush Queen is short, lively, and highly readable. The author offers good insight into the life and work of a fascinating working class, single, Irish immigrant woman who chose a life of adventure and business under harsh and unusual conditions.
Her tombstone at Victoria's Ross Bay Cemetery reads in part:
"Nellie Cashman 1844-1925. Friend of the sick and the hungry and to all men. Heroic apostolate of service along the western and northern frontier miners. Miners' angel, 1872-1924. In Nevada. In the Cassiar. In Arizona. In the Yukon. In California. In Alaska. Born in Ireland. Died with the sisters of Saint Ann at St. Joseph's Hospital, Victoria, B.C. January 4, 1925. Requiescat in pace."
This is a book that, like Cashman herself, will find a welcome home on both sides of the international border and in half a dozen provinces and states.
*
Born in the Yukon and raised in northern Alberta, Charlene Porsild received her Ph.D. in history from Carleton University in 1994. Her dissertation was published in 1998 by UBC Press as Gamblers and Dreamers: Women, Men, and Community in the Klondike. A granddaughter of the Danish-Canadian botanist Erling Porsild (see Wendy Dathan, The Reindeer Botanist: Alf Erling Porsild, 1901-1977), Charlene taught Canadian and American history at the University of Nebraska and is now President and C.E.O. of the Montana History Foundation.
*
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[BCBW 2017]