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In 1896 gold nuggets were found in a small tributary of the Klondike River, itself a tributary of the Yukon River. A gold rush began in 1897 and swelled in 1898 as miners and adventurers poured in, mainly from the United States. The Klondike—the last of the great placer finds—was the most publicized of all the great rushes, exciting a world weary of economic hard times with stories of the long climb up the Chilkoot Pass and of red-coated Northwest Mounted Police keeping law and order on the gold-rush frontier. However, Klondike gold was probably the least important mineral discovery of this period. Far more significant for Canada’s economy were the copper, lead, zinc, and silver deposits in the Kootenay region of southeastern British Columbia; the coal deposits of the Crowsnest Pass (bordering British Columbia and Alberta); and the gold, nickel, and silver beds of northern and northeastern Ontario and northwestern Quebec. These discoveries stimulated railway and town construction and brought thousands of permanent residents. Indeed, many of the mineral discoveries occurred as a result of the construction of the railways through the dense rock. In the decades that followed, prospectors traced the rich mineral deposits of the Canadian Shield westward from Ontario and Quebec, making major discoveries of base metals (as well as of gold and silver) at Flin Flon, Manitoba, in 1915 and finding rich deposits of radium in the north at Great Bear Lake in 1930. By the 1930s Canada had become a major mining country.
The land rush in the west
At the same time, the land rush to the Prairies widened the country’s agricultural base by the settlement of Manitoba and the Northwest Territories. Their population rose rapidly, from 419,512 in 1901 to 1,322,709 in 1911. Manitoba had already been enlarged westward and northward in 1881. The territories, which had been ruled by a governor and appointed council since 1876, were now allowed to elect some members to the council and began the traditional Canadian struggle, first for representative and then for responsible government, which could only come with provincehood. Thus, between Manitoba and the Rockies the demand arose for the creation of a province, and in 1905 not one but two new provinces were formed: Alberta and Saskatchewan. The provinces, roughly equal in area, extended north to latitude 60° N.
As was often the case, the development of the west disturbed the relations of English and French in Canada. A fierce political struggle in the new provinces erupted over Roman Catholic schools, as Laurier tried to extend Catholic rights but met strong resistance. Eventually, a compromise was reached, whereby separate denominational schools were to be created, supported by the taxes of members of a denomination—Roman Catholics in this case.