Tiscali Quicklinks. Please visit our Accessibility Page for a list of the Access Keys you can use to find your way around the site, skip directly to the main navigation, to the page content, or to more links within travel.
Whitehorse, capital of the Yukon and Canada's most westerly city, offers all the amenities of a major city but retains a small-town personality. Situated on the banks of the Yukon River, it was established as a handy trans-shipment point during the Klondike gold rush in 1898, when gold prospectors arriving from Skagway would board riverboats bound for the goldfields. Today its central position halfway between Dawson Creek, BC and Fairbanks in Alaska, on the historic Alaskan Highway, is also convenient for visitors exploring the region.
The Yukon Visitor Reception Centre is a good place to start exploring the province: an information film, As the Crow Flies,is screened here every half hour, and maps and suggestions for tours and activities are available. Main attraction in Whitehorse is the restored river steamer, SS Klondike, moored on the bank of the Yukon River, which ferried passengers north to Dawson City. Tours of the steamer inform about the history of the gold rush, the Yukon River and the First Nations people. The MacBride Museum houses exhibits on a range of local topics, including a Klondike gold exhibition, in a complex of log buildings. Other attractions include the four-storey log skyscraper, one of the most photographed buildings in Whitehorse, and Miles Canyon from where the city's name originated - its rapids were likened to the manes of charging white horses.
Another popular Whitehorse attraction is the lively vaudeville show, the Frantic Follies, which takes to the stage every night in summer with music, can-can, skits and songs reminiscent of the Klondike days.