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'First Lady of the Yukon' recognized with bust in Whitehorse

Martha Black, the second woman to serve as a member of Parliament in Canada, has become the latest historic Yukoner honoured with a sculpture.

Martha Black, second woman to serve as MP in Canada, honoured for contributions to the Yukon

Martha Black will now gaze out over the intersection of Main Street and Fourth Avenue in Whitehorse. (Jackie McKay/CBC)

The second woman to serve as a member of Parliament in Canada has become the latest Yukonerhonoured with a bust on a Whitehorse street.

Martha Louise Black came to the territory in 1898 during the Klondike Gold Rush andwas elected to represent the Yukon in the House of Commons when she was69. Shedied in 1957 at the ageof 91.

Former Yukon senator Ione Christensen said she knowsthe historic woman from her own childhood as Christensen'sfamily wasclose friends withBlack.

"She would love it, she would be very proud and so happy,"Christensen said of the bust installed at Fourth Avenue and Main Street on Thursday.

A strong-willed woman

Christensen saidBlack was a strong-willed woman. Indeed, her life story resembles that of a movie plot.

Black left Chicagofor the Klondike in 1898 with her husband and brother. The couple separated during the journey and Black continued on with her brother.

They climbed the Chilkoot Pass with tens of thousands of other gold rush stampeders on their way to Dawson City.

Martha Black, right, with her son Lyman during the First World War. (CBC Archive)

Black was pregnant at the time and gave birth to her son Lyman after she arrived in the city. Shelater said she took it all in stride.

"I determined I would not brood over my troubles. It is the pioneer spirit not to be overwhelmed by trouble, but to arise and go forth to meet it," she once said.

She went on to marryGeorge Black who became Commissioner of the Yukon.

At the beginning of the First World War, Black'shusband and all three of her sons went to fight in Europe. Black, not one to be left behind, went to Britain where she worked to support soldiers from the Yukon however she could.

In the 1930s, her husbandbecame ill and Blackran in his place during the 1935 federal election.

Black detailed her life story in her autobiography, My Seventy Years, published in 1938, which sheupdated before her death with the publication of My Ninety Years.

Inspiration from Europe

Longtime Whitehorse businessperson Rolf Hougen began the project of recognizing Yukon historic and cultural figures with busts on downtown streets in 1995.

Hougensaid when he and his wife were travelling in the 1950s, he noticed many statues in Vienna honouring artists and began thinkingabout doing something similar in the Yukon.

He's since commissioned seven busts. They include Carcross-Tagish elder Angela Sidney, writers Jack London and Pierre Berton and painter Ted Harrison.

Rolf Hougen, left, and Ione Christensen unveil the bust of Martha Black sculpted by Harreson Tanner. (Jackie McKay/CBC)

Black has been dubbedthe "First Lady of the Yukon," a title Hougen agrees with.

"She is probably, without question, the most famous woman in the Yukon," he said, pointing to her many contributions and abilities.

Black's bust was sculpted by local artist HarresonTanner.

With files from Sandi Coleman

Clarifications

  • This story has been edited to clarify the timeline of Hougen's trip to Europe.
    Aug 10, 2018 10:36 AM CT