Dawson City Museum in Dawson City, Yukon

Dawson City Museum

Nestled along the banks of the Yukon River Dawson City stands as if frozen in time, preserving for the world the colorful legacy of the Klondike Gold Rush of the late 19th-century.

This history is chronicled in the Dawson City Museum, a testament to life in Dawson and the rush to strike it big in the adjacent goldfields. The museum also doubles as the local courthouse, signage inside politely asks all those awaiting trial to not stray into the museum galleries.

Inside are various dioramas and displays of life in the north during this period. While perusing displays on card dealers, miners, and the legendary dogsled mail carrier Percy DeWolfe, the realistic design and uniqueness of the hands of the mannequins stands out. Expertly crafted, the lifelike realism of the mannequin hands are not just a creative addition, they are modeled from the actual hands of Dawson City residents—from nurses to retired teachers. 

While only a small part of the larger Dawson City Museum experience, the level of detail and associated stories of the local hand models adds an extra layer of texture and warmth to the overall experience. 

Similar Posts

  • Found: Emperor Hadrian’s Palatial Breakfast Chamber

    After two decades spent leading archaeological digs among the 1,900-year-old ruins of the former Roman emperor Hadrian’s sprawling Villa Adriana, Rafael Hidalgo Prieto thought he’d seen it all. Then the Spanish professor and his team discovered an imperial breakfast room unlike anything in the world. The palazzo area once featured a royal four-bedroom complex centered…

  • Talk Hard With Our Home Video Pick of the Week

    Streaming might be the future, but physical media is still the present. It’s also awesome, depending on the title, the label, and the release, so each week we take a look at the new Blu-rays and DVDs making their way into the world. Welcome to this week in Home Video for February 23rd, 2021! This week’s…

  • ‘Memento’ and the Unreliable Image

    Christopher Nolan is hailed as one of modern cinema’s most successful puzzle-makers. In the perplexing Inception (2010), he broke cinematic grounds by considering the murky relationship between dreams and reality. Similarly, in his recent blockbuster, Tenet (2020), Nolan rejects ideas of linear time entirely in a manner that most viewers aren’t able to fully grasp…

  • Indie Memphis Film Festival 2020: I BLAME SOCIETY

    Have you ever thought about how you would commit the perfect murder? Hashed out the mechanisms of execution and the evasion of being caught? It seems like it is a conversation we have all had with others or ourselves at some point. How would you do it? And could you get away with it? This…