Herschel Island Detachment

Herschel_Island_RCMP_web

 

 

 

The Yukon’s most northerly detachment was on a windswept island in the Beaufort Sea. The detachment at Herschel Island originally opened to monitor American whalers.

 

 

 

 

 

Photograph of a RCMP member posted to Herschel Island (Source of photo - Ric Hall's Photo Collection).

Photograph of a RCMP member posted to Herschel Island (Source of photo – Ric Hall’s Photo Collection).

Photographs of RCMP members stationed at Herschel Island (Source of photo - Ric Hall's Photo Collection).

Photographs of RCMP members stationed at Herschel Island (Source of photo – Ric Hall’s Photo Collection).

In its final years, the detachment was a dog-breeding station, supplying dogs to various RCMP detachments across the North. The detachment operated from 1903 to 1933 and 1948 to 1964.

Photograph of

Photograph of Inspector Charles Constantine (Reg.#O.79)

Inspector Constantine of the NWMP reported that 12 whalers with 1,000 to 1,200 crewmen had wintered in the area of the mouth of the Mackenzie River and Herschel Island in 1895-96. The crewmen spent several months from September to July with little to do. The annual re-supply vessel brought in a supply of liquor and part of this was traded for carvings and young women. He also reported that some crewmen deserted and made their way down to the Klondike. The NWMP lacked the manpower to patrol Herschel at that time. In 1903, Superintendent Constantine went to the Yukon to examine the threat posed by the Alaskan Order of the Midnight Sun and also to go to San Francisco and Seattle to find out more about the Herschel Island whalers. Constantine found an old friend, Captain M. A. Healy, now the commander of the San Francisco Naval District. He told Constantine that whiskey trading among the northern whalers was largely stamped out but two vessels carried liquor, chiefly on the Siberian coast. Constantine established a post at Fort McPherson under Sergeant Francis Fitzgerald. Fitzgerald was instructed to make a patrol to Herschel Island and establish a police post if necessary. Fitzgerald made the trip in August 1903 with Constable Forbes Sutherland and an interpreter. They established a post at Herschel where the men lived in sod huts. They found 7 whaling vessels at Herschel but only one of them was suspected of bringing in liquor or debauching the Inuit. In 1904, the winter mail run from Dawson to Fort McPherson was extended to Herschel Island.

1930 - Photograph of Inuit schooners moored in Pauline Cove on Herschel Island (Source of photo - Ric Hall's Photo Collection).

1930 – Photograph of Inuit schooners moored in Pauline Cove on Herschel Island (Source of photo – Ric Hall’s Photo Collection).

In 1952, At that time, the island was basically deserted, but the NWMP moved in to assert Canada’s claim of ownership to the Island and the surrounding Arctic Ocean.

Photograph of RCMP members and their dog sled at Herschel Island (Source of photo - Ric Hall's Photo Collection).

Photograph of RCMP members and their dog sled at Herschel Island (Source of photo – Ric Hall’s Photo Collection).

1963 - Photograph of RCMP member at Herschel Island (Source of photo - Ric Hall's Photo Collection).

1963 – Photograph of RCMP member at Herschel Island (Source of photo – Ric Hall’s Photo Collection).

The Herschel Island detachment closed for good in 1964.

image of Ric Hall closing block for his Photo Corner webpage