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Top 10 Alaskans
To celebrate the 50th birthday of "The Last Frontier," TIME examines the state's most memorable residents
Jim Mason
In August 1896, Mason better known among fellow members of the Tagish tribe as "Keish" was traveling with his family along a small tributary of the Yukon River when he found several gold nuggets (Given the racism of the time, though, credit for the discovery went to Mason's white brother-in-law George Tarmack). Misleading attribution aside, when the news reached the United States, thousands of hopeful prospectors flocked to the region, including Jack London, whose experience there inspired him to write The Call of the Wild and White Fang.
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