Gold Rush Crossroads - Big Delta, Alaska
Posted by: BruceS
N 64° 09.296 W 145° 50.514
6W E 556328 N 7114791
Marker for location now known as Big Delta previously known as McCarty along the Richardson Highway north of Delta, Junction.
Waymark Code: WMB98J
Location: Alaska, United States
Date Posted: 04/21/2011
Views: 1
Text of marker:
Gold Rush Crossroads
The community of Big Delta began during the Gold Rush era as a trading post and roadhouse serving prospectors and travelers.
Known for many years as McCarty, Big Delta was a link in the paths of travel and trade. It was located at the intersection of waterways, trails, and telgraph lines
Opening a Trading Post
Prospectors and traders blazed a trail through here in 1903 to the new town of Fairbanks folling gold discoveries in the interior. Travelers crossed the Tanana River at this point or traveled downriver by boat. In 1904, as prospectors searched the upper Tanana River for gold, E.T. Barnette and Ben Bennett opened a trading post here. This was as far upriver as stern-wheelers could go. Dan McCarty bought the post in 1905 as small gold stampedes to nearby creeks brought more people to the area.
A Stopping Place
As more people traveled between Fairbanks and Valdez, McCarty's post became an overnight stop. In 1907, the U.S. Army started improving the trail. They installed a ferry two years later for safer crossing of the Tanana River. The road, later named the Richardson Highway, was the primary overland route to the interior until 1923 when the Alaska Railroad was completed. The ferry continued to be used until the 1940s when a bridge was built.
McCarty Becomes a Hub
By 1906, fourteen people had settled around the trading post. The same year, the Army moved its telegraph line from the north to the south side of the river. Later it built a station at McCarty. John Hajdukovic bought the trading post in 1909. He added the two-story log roadhouse known as Kika's that stands at the site today. In 1913, hundreds of stampeders from Fairbanks passed through McCarty during the stampede to the Chisana gold fields on the upper Tanana River. McCarty continued to be a small center for trade, transportation, and communication until World War II.