Description of Historic Place:
"The Robert Service Cabin, also known as Building 6, is set amidst the willows and the alders on the lower slopes at the eastern end of Dawson City, in the Dawson Historic Complex National Historic Site of Canada. It is a rustic, two-room, log cabin with a double door entrance, and a front porch that is protected by its gable roof. The designation is confined to the footprint of the building.
Heritage Value:
The Robert Service Cabin is a Classified Federal Heritage Building because of its historical associations, and its architectural and environmental value.
Historical Value:
The Robert Service Cabin is one of the best examples of a building associated with the larger impact of the gold rush on Canada, including the popular imagination, the evolving concept of the North, and the economic result. It is directly associated with Robert Service, whose poetry has greatly contributed to the Canadian and international image of Dawson City and the Klondike gold rush. It is also associated with the development of Dawson as a supply, service, and distribution centre and its development as a one-time territorial capital.
Architectural Value:
The Robert Service Cabin is valued for its good aesthetic design exhibited in its rustic low-lying form. It is a rare example of an early miner’s cabin from the gold rush period. Its log construction demonstrates good functional design using logs chinked with moss to keep out the sub-arctic cold. Good craftsmanship and materials are evident throughout.
Environmental Value:
Robert Service Cabin maintains an unchanged relationship to its site. It reinforces the gold rush character of its historical streetscape setting in Dawson and is a symbol of its region that is known across Canada.
Sources: Joan Mattie, Twenty-two Dawson structures, Dawson, Yukon, Heritage Character Statement, 88-012; Robert Service Cabin, Dawson, Yukon, Heritage Character Statement, 88-012.
Character-Defining-Elements:
The character-defining elements of Robert Service Cabin should be respected.
Its good aesthetic and functional design, and good materials and craftsmanship, for example:
- the one-storey massing which consists of a two-room structure with a gable roof;
- the rustic, low-lying form;
- the log construction with logs chinked with moss to keep out the sub-arctic cold;
- the double door and the arrangement of windows;
- the authentic fabric and design features associated with the gold rush period and
occupancy by Robert Service.
The manner in which Robert Service Cabin maintains an unchanged relationship to its site, reinforces the Gold Rush character of its streetscape setting and is a symbol of the region, as evidenced by:
- its ongoing historic relationship to its site on 8th Avenue at Hansen;
- its overall massing, design and materials all of which contribute to the historic character of its streetscape setting;
- its location as part of the historical complex in Dawson and its role to commemorate
Robert Service, which makes it an important landmark that is known across Canada."
Reference: (
visit link)
The following is from an information panel on site:
Robert Service's Cabin
Within 5 years of Robert Service's departure in 1912,
the local press referred to his rental cabin as a "shrine".
It became Yukon foremosttourist attraction virtually
from the day it was abandonedMaintained, altered and
embellished by local service groups, the Klondike Bard's
cabin has come to symbolize the legacy
of the Klondike
Gold Rush:
"Have you suffered, starved and triumph and grovelled
down; yet graded at glory, Grown bigger in the bigness
of the whole?"
(From the Call of the Wild, Robert Service)
Personal Observations:
Robert Service's cabin is sitting at the edge of the forest with a rack of Moose's antlers resting at the apex of the roof. The cabin was sturdily built in its time and has survived to this day given the care and attention given to it by local enthusiasts. Sitting on his porch and watching wildlife saunter around with full abandon must have given him inspiration to find the words that made him one of the most admired poet of his generation and beyond.