Richard Harris is most famous for co-founding, with
Joe Juneau, the city of
Juneau, Alaska. The first major
gold discovery in Juneau or
Douglas Island (across from Juneau) was around 1880. The settlement that grew from this discovery later became the political capital of Alaska in 1906. In 1879, Harris traveled to
Sitka, Alaska, where he was employed by mining engineer and entrepreneur
George Pilz, who was seeking high-grade ore to supply a stamp mill he was establishing there. That same year, the
Tlingit leader
Chief Kowee brought gold-bearing ore samples from the interior basin along
Gastineau Channel to Pilz, helping convince him that the area warranted further exploration. In the summer of 1880, Pilz sent Harris and Joe Juneau to prospect in southeastern Alaska. They departed
Sitka on July 19, 1880, accompanied by their
Native Alaskan guide, Chief Kowee. On August 17, Harris recorded in his diary that he and
Juneau discovered a creek flowing into Gastineau Channel, which Harris named
Gold Creek. They found modest
placer gold and gold-bearing
quartz there but, with provisions running low, returned to Sitka after only a short exploration. When they returned to Pilz with little to show for their efforts, he was dissatisfied. Chief Kowee later stated that much of the delay was due to prolonged drinking and the loss of their boat after it was left untied. The
Aakʼw Ḵwáan Tlingits referred to the area around
Gold Creek as
Dzántik’i Héeni, roughly meaning “creek at the base of the flounder-shaped hill.”
Indigenous people were involved in early mining operations, serving as packers, hunters, and laborers, and they provided crucial local knowledge that aided the establishment of the mining camp. Today, Harris Street still exists in Juneau. Both Harris and Juneau are buried in the city's
Evergreen Cemetery. == Later career and personal life ==