List of communities in Yukon

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Contents

[edit] Main List

Here is a list of cities, towns, villages and unincorporated communities in the Yukon Territory, Canada.

[edit] Uninhabited former trading posts and First Nations communities

[edit] Mining Ghost Towns & Klondike communities

[edit] Spots on the map

More lists of this type for other provinces and territories are linked to from List of cities in Canada.

[edit] Small Yukon places

The following is a list and short description of places in the Yukon that may often be found on various maps, but whose population is too small to warrant their having their own article.

[edit] Dalton Post

Dalton Post or Shäwshe is a former trading post and First Nations community on the Tatshenshini River. It was on the Dalton Trail near the Haines Highway. Today, it is a prime Pacific salmon fishing spot and serves as a base for whitewater rafting expeditions on the Tatshenshini and Alsek Rivers in the Tatshenshini-Alsek Park.

[edit] Jake's Corner

Jake's Corner is a spot on the road, at historical mile 866 of the Alaska Highway, at the junction with connections to the Tagish Road and the Atlin Road. There are a small number of area residents, the junction being best known for a gas station and cafe. The gas station has numerous examples of old machinery.

[edit] Johnson's Crossing

Johnson's Crossing is a spot on the road, at historical mile 836 of the Alaska Highway, at the junction of the Canol Road where the Highway crosses the Teslin River. There are several area residents, and the junction is known for a cafe and gas station owned by a long-time Yukon family. The river below is crowded with Arctic Greyling.

[edit] Klukshu

Klukshu's more recent history is as a seasonal aboriginal fishing community, benefitting from a large Chinook salmon run. Located near the Haines Highway, it has no permanent population. Interpretive information is provided by the Champagne and Aishihik First Nations.

[edit] Little Salmon

Little Salmon is located on the Robert Campbell Highway between Faro and Carmacks, and stretches along the lake of the same name and the Yukon River. The only non-residential establishment is the Yukon government highway maintenance camp at Drury Creek. It was formerly an important settlement of the Little Salmon/Carmacks First Nation.

[edit] Silver City

Silver City, a historic mining town, is today only the residence of a small number of people, one household being a bed and breakfast establishment. It is located at historical mile 1053 of the Alaska Highway.

[edit] Snag

Snag, established as part of the Northwest Staging Route, is located on a small, dry-weather sideroad off of the Alaska Highway a few miles south of Beaver Creek, Yukon, and closed in 1968. An aboriginal village was also located about five miles away. On 3 February 1947, the record-low temperature for North America was recorded in Snag: -81.4° Fahrenheit (-63° Celsius). Staff at the station made note of various phenomena, particularly sound such as voices being heard clearly miles from the source.

[edit] Stewart River

Stewart River is a former settlement at the juncture of the Yukon and Stewart Rivers. A few buildings and cabins remain, as well as private museum, which are threatened by erosion. It was founded as a trading post in the 1880s before the Klondike Gold Rush to serve placer miners working along the Stewart River.

[edit] Stewart Crossing

Stewart Crossing is located on the Klondike Highway at the junction with the Silver Trail. A Yukon government highway maintenance camp and a highway lodge are the most prominent facilities at the location, named for where the Mayo Road, as it was then known, crossed the Stewart River by means of a ferry from 1950 until completion of a bridge in the mid-1950s. There are area residents employed in the local camp and businesses.

[edit] Swift River

Swift River is basically a point on the road, a service stop on the Alaska Highway at historical mile 833. The only permanent population owns and operates, or is employed at, the area's commercial highway establishment. Other residents are transient, working at the Yukon government's highway maintenance camp.

[edit] External links