Population: 1,600
Driving Time: 5 hrs
Room Inventory: ? Winter
Room Inventory: ? Summer
Meeting Space:  ? Sq. Feet

Getting Here

Francis (Frank) Watson, whom the town is named after, was born in 1883 in Tahoe City, Placer County, California and died in 1938 in Ft. Saint John, B.C. In 1897, at the age of 14, Frank and his father set out for the Yukon in search of gold. Fighting their way through unmapped country, they arrived on the upper Liard River in the spring of 1898. The Watsons found themselves on the shores of a lake rumoured to have been named "Fish Lake" by the native Kaska Indians for its abundance of fish. When his father returned to California in 1900, Frank stayed behind to work their claims. He later married an attractive Indian girl from Lower Post and from then on led an unrestricted and unhurried life. The upper Liard and its tributaries were his trapping and prospecting grounds while his home was on the shore of Watson Lake. The lake retained his name when constuction began on the military airport in 1941 and the Alaska Highway, completed in 1942.

Today, the town of Watson Lake is the key transportation, communication and distribution centre for mining and logging activities in southern Yukon, northern B.C., and a portion of the N.W.T. It also serves as a major service area for tourism and is the site of regional Territorial Government administration services.
 
Tourism: Northern Lights Space & Science Centre, Alaska Highway Interpretive Centre, Watson Lake Signpost Forest, Heritage House Wildlife & Historic Museum, Lucky Lake, The Liard Canyon, Greenway's Greens Golf and Country Club, Wye Lake Park.

Fishing: arctic grayling, dolly varden trout, lake trout, and northern pike in the Liard river, Albert Creek, and Watson Lake.

Wilderness Adventure: local outfitters in the area offer guided trips for hunting, fishing, photo safaris, horseback rides and hiking and camping.

Golfing under the Midnight Sun
The Northern Lights Centre
 
  4133 Fourth Ave, Suite 205
Whitehorse, YT, Y1A 1H8
Phone: 867-668-3555
Fax: 867-668-3550
E-mail: info@ycb.ca
 

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