Everybody's 2 January 1954 p.11 |
"Long, Long Trail of the Eskimo Killers" was written by Roland Wild (in an interview with Constable of the Withers of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police) and we see the half page illustration above with the caption "Slowly they were surrounded by a ring of impassive men and women, who could kill them in an instant". The story is of how the phrase "The Mounties always get their man" came about and is based in 1915-1916.
I found out that Roland Gibson Wild was born in 1903 in Manchester and died in 1989 (aged 86) in North Vancouver, British Columbia where he was a respected newspaperman, wrote 13 books - working on another at his death - and had the dubious distinction of hitting the Prince of Wales with a "surprisingly long drive" while playing at Britain's Sunningdale golf course.
Everybody's 3 April 1954 p.17 |
In Everybody's 3 April 1954 "The last stampeders" we have the second tale by Roland Wild. he tells, over two pages, how the survivors of the Klondike Gold Rush meet up. Writing in 1954 he mentions that the 400 men and women present "are a race apart, living on the memories of fifty-six years ago". He then recounts some of the factual stories but mostly tall tales of the "Stampeders". Sheppard's illustration shows one very great legend, whose stories seem to change over time, that of 'Soapy', the bandit prince of Skagway, as he orders "the guards to jump into the river.
Both guns cracked". We see three men jumping into river near a boat while two
men face each other with rifles. As one Yukonner admits, the tales get "taller and taller".
Everybody's 2 January 1954 p.15 |
on 29 August 1782 whilst anchored off Portsmouth, the ship was intentionally rolled (a 'parliamentary heel') so maintenance could be performed on the hull, but the roll became unstable and out of control; the ship took on water and sank. More than 800 people died, making it one of the most deadly maritime disasters in British territorial waters. ~ Wikipedia
Oliver Warner (1903-1976) is a well-known naval historian and writer and a bibliography of his books is on Wikipedia. If you want to read more about the incident, Roy and Lesley Adkins have written on Lloyd's Register Foundation Heritage and Education Centre's site.
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