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Birthday Buck

UP HERE - MAY/JUN 2025

Yellowknife celebrated the NWT’s centennial with an idea that was so money

By Up Here

Photo by Bill Braden

Photo by Bill Braden

Breadcrumb

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IN 1870, the Dominion of Canada grew dramatically with the addition of the North-Western Territory and Rupert’s Land. The region, originally called the North-West Territories, included area that became the Yukon as well of parts of Nunavut and several provinces. In 1970, the Yellowknife Board of Trade produced a brass $1 coin, spendable at cooperating businesses during the year, to celebrate the centennial.

LOCAL PRIDE
The front of the coin shows Yellowknife's coat of arms—featuring a maple leaf, northern lights and shovel—and motto Multum in parvo, Latin for "many things in a small place."

WHAT'S THE BIG DEAL?
The NWT government also produced bronze and silver medallions and handed them out to school children. Others could purchase the souvenirs for $2 and $15, respectively. But Dene resident Georgina Blondin questioned the anniversary: “Why is 1970 significant? One hundred years isn’t much when we’ve been here for thousands of years.”

NORTHERN TRIO
On the back, three people in parkas represented the NWT’s three population groups—Inuit (35 per cent in 1970), First Nations (30 per cent) and “others” (35 per cent)—and the territory’s three main regions at the time: Franklin, Keewatin and Mackenzie.

 

UP HERE - MAY/JUN 2025

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A Gentleman and a Scholar

How a Cambridge Bay man helps keep Wikipedia informative, grammatical and civil

By Amy Kenny

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July 8th, 2025 July 8th, 2025

UP HERE - MAY/JUN 2025

Photos by Page Burt

In Cold Bloom...

See Arctic adaptation in six plants, from poppies to prickly saxifrage

By Page Burt

Photos by Page Burt

July 8th, 2025 July 8th, 2025

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Gates of Pioneer Cemetery

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A milestone of Whitehorse’s history was once ignored by officials, and reviled by locals. 

July 8th, 2025 July 8th, 2025

May/June - Up Here 2023

Nunavut Mace

The Art of the Mace

For northern maces, the artistic story is as compelling as the symbolic story.  

 

July 8th, 2025 July 8th, 2025

January/February 2023

Maurice Haycock and A.Y. Jackson

Making the Artist of the Arctic

A year in the Arctic—and a chance meeting on the way home—forever shaped the direction of Maurice Haycock’s life.

July 8th, 2025 July 8th, 2025
Boris Dotsenko, left, with Olga Jenkins in 1970.

Inside the mind of Boris Dotsenko

Unconventional and prescient views from a top Soviet nuclear scientist, who taught junior high science in Yellowknife for two years.

July 8th, 2025 July 8th, 2025
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Up Here Publishing
P.O Box 1343
Yellowknife, NT
X1A 2N9  Canada
Email: info@uphere.ca

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