The True Life Story of Swiftwater Bill Gates

Copyrighted 1908, by Mrs. Iola Beebe.



IT may seem odd to Alaskans, and by that I mean, the men and women who really live in the remote, yet near, northern gold country, that “Swiftwater Bill”—known to both the old Sour Doughs and the Cheechacos—should have asked me to write the real story of his life, yet this is really the fact.
Bill Gates is in some ways, and indeed in many, one of the most remarkable men that the lust for gold ever produced in any clime or latitude.
Remarkable?
Yes—that’s the word—and possibly nothing more remarkable than that he, in a confiding moment said to me as he held his first born child in his arms in the little cabin on Quartz Creek, in the Klondike, where he had amassed and spent a fortune of $500,000:
“I’d like somebody to write my life story. Will you do it?”
I can only believe that the romantic element in Swift Water Bill’s character—a character as changeful and variegated as the kaleidoscope—led Swiftwater Bill to ask me to do him this service. I was then the mother of his wife—the grandmother of his child. The sacredness of the relation must be apparent.

Iola Beebe
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Год издания

2015-01-15

Темы

Klondike River Valley (Yukon) -- Gold discoveries; Gates, Swiftwater Bill, -1935

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