Background
Carmack"s mother died when he was 8 years old and his father when he was 11.
Carmack"s mother died when he was 8 years old and his father when he was 11.
He was originally credited with registering Discovery Claim, the discovery of gold that set off the Klondike Gold Rush on August 16, 1896. His great-grandfather was Abraham Blystone. Carmack returned to Alaska in 1885 to engage in trading, fishing and trapping.
In 1887 he made a common-law marriage to a Tagish First Nation woman who went by the name of Kate.
Carmack was not popular with other miners, who nicknamed him "Squaw Manitoba" for his association with native people and "Lyin" George" for his exaggerated claims. Nevertheless, he did find a coal deposit near what is today the village of Carmacks, Yukon which was named after him.
Robert Henderson who had been mining gold on the Indian River, just south of the Klondike, suggested that he should try out Rabbit Creek, now Bonanza Creek, where the gold discovery was made. The finding of gold made him wealthy and the Carmacks moved to a ranch near Modesto, California and lived with Carmack"s sister, Rose Watson (Rose Curtis).
They settled into a twelve room white frame house in Seattle with a garage in the back.
Marguerite was a good business woman, and she directed her husband"s money into real estate. He owned office buildings, apartment houses, and hotels. He grew fat - to well over two hundred pounds.
With the passing years, his fortune multiplied as well.
Yet throughout his life George could not stop looking for gold. He worked several claims in California, on the western slope of the Sierra Nevadas, and in the Cascade Mountains east of Seattle.
George was determined to find another mother lode and re-create the exciting moment of discovery he had experienced as a young man on Bonanza Creek. George died at age sixty-two, in 1922, while he was working a new claim.
He is interred at Evergreen Washelli Memorial Park.
Graphie married Marguerite"s brother. Together with Rose, Graphie challenged and settled out of court the appointment of Marguerite as administratrix of Carmack"s estate.