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NOME , a See also: mining See also: town about 12 M
.
W. of Cape Nome, on the S. See also: shore of Seward Peninsula, See also: Alaska, in 1900 the largest See also: settlement in the See also: district
.
Pop
.
(190o) 12,488; (1910) 2600
.
Gulch gold was found near Nome on Anvil Creek in See also: September 1898, and diggings in the ocean See also: beach were first worked in See also: July 1899
.
The rush to Nome in 'goo was one of the most remarkable stampedes in See also: American mining See also: history; the town soon had hotels, See also: banks, stores, several See also: newspapers and weekly mails from the States, and for See also: part of the See also: year there were, it was estimated, 20,000 inhabitants
.
This rapidity of growth and the See also: isolation of the settlement raised prices to extraordinary heights, and in other respects created economic conditions remarkable even among Alaskan mining camps
.
By 1903 the population had greatly decreased, and in subsequent years the winter population averaged about 3500, the summer population from 7000 to 8000
.
In 1905 the gold output of the Nome region amounted to about $2,500,000, nearly all from placers, though some See also: quartz mining was done
.
A municipal See also: government and See also: local police force were early organized after the fashion of American mining communities, and See also: United States soldiers from the St Michael reservation aided in the preservation of See also: order
.
The greatest See also: drawback to the town's prosperity is the lack of any See also: good harbour nearer than Point See also: Clarence, 8o m
.
W
.
The winter ice-floes, sometimes 30 ft. high on the beach, render harbour improvements at Nome almost impossible . There is connexion withSee also: Seattle by steamer (since 1904) in about 82 days
.
In 1901 the town was incorporated under the See also: laws of the United States
.
It is the See also: north-western See also: terminus of the United States military telegraph. k was first called Anvil City; the name " Nome " is derived from Cape Nome, first so called on a chart dated 1849, and said to have been a draughtsman's See also: mistake for the query "
?
Name " on the See also: original chart
.
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