(red spot). Following the discovery of gold in
Klondike, Yukon during 1896, the
Klondike Gold Rush brought a flood of trade during 1897 to the Pacific Northwest. This boom encouraged shipping companies to bring steamers to the region for the 1898 season. The
Roanoke, bound from Baltimore, was one of 17 steamers listed in the February 28, 1898 edition of the Seattle
Post-Intelligencer as heading for Seattle to transport miners and their supplies to the gold fields. There were two primary routes from Seattle to the Yukon gold fields. One was by ship to the south-east Alaskan towns of
Dyea and
Skagway, and then via land for 30 miles over high mountain passes from where the miners could travel down the tributaries of the
Yukon River. The other route was longer and more costly but faster and less grueling: Miners would take a coastal steamer to the Yukon delta port of
St. Michael, from where they could transfer to a river steamer to head up the Yukon River. The
Roanoke was brought to Seattle specifically by the
North American Transportation and Trading Company to serve the long coastal route to St. Michael, sometime calling at intermediate ports such as
Dutch Harbor. The NATTC began advertising the
Roanoke's service in March 1898. The lead story in the July 20, 1898 edition of the
Post-Intelligencer was the docking of the
Roanoke in Seattle with four tons of gold from Alaska aboard. After the discovery of gold at
Nome, Alaska in September 1898 precipitated the
Nome Gold Rush, the
Roanoke's route was modified to end at Nome. The
Roanoke remained serving the Alaska route until at least June 1904. In August 1904, the
Roanoke was reported to be laid up for repairs. ==Oregon and California coast (1905–16)==