Klondike Cattle Drive
Can$12.95
Norman Lee
The latest addition to TouchWood Editions’ Classics West
Collection, this is the colourful tale of a formidable trek undertaken by
legendary Cariboo rancher Norman Lee.
In 1898, Lee set out to drive 200 head of cattle from his home in the Chilcotin
area of B.C. to the Klondike goldfields—a distance of 1,500 miles. He was
gambling both his cattle and his life. This is his story, derived from the
journal he kept, his letters and the loyal men who accompanied him.
Throughout the daunting weeks of coping with mud, cold and sheer bad luck, Lee
kept his sense of humour. When he returned from his Yukon trek, he rewrote the
notes from his journal, illustrating his story with his own cartoons and
sketches. He completed his manuscript around the turn of the century, but it sat
untouched until 1960, when it was published by Howard Mitchell of Mitchell
Press, Vancouver.
Well-known pioneer NORMAN LEE was born in England and arrived in British
Columbia via San Francisco. He worked at a variety of jobs before fulfilling his
dream of having a ranch of his own. He made his home in Hanceville on the
Chilcotin Plateau, where the Lee name remains legendary.