- John Denison
John Denison (b. 1917 - d. 6 January 2001) was a famous
ice road engineer who operated in theNorthwest Territories ,Canada in the 1950s-1970s.Biography
After training in mechanics, Denison joined the
Canadian Army duringWorld War II . [cite episode |title=Then and Now |series=Ice Road Truckers |network=The History Channel |airdate=2007-08-26 |season=1] After the war, Denison joined theRoyal Canadian Mounted Police and was then attached from 1946 to the RCMP in Yellowknife.A year later, he was involved in a search for a missing fur trapper on the
Barren Lands , and after freezing his fingers, feet and face decided the RCMP was not the career for him. A year later he resigned from the RCMP, and he and his fiancee Hannah left Yellowknife forEdmonton where they married. [ [http://pontoonlake.spaces.live.com/blog/cns!42C420D7F740B75B!776.entry Ol' Sam. A Work in Progress.: John Denison ] ]In search of work, Denison returned to the north in 1947 and worked on the
Cat Trains supplying the mining camps with equipment. He eventually became associated withByers Transport Limited , with whom he engineered a network of winterice road s throughout the Northwest Territories to service various mines (includingPort Radium ,Discovery Mine ,Tundra Mine , andRayrock Mine ). His major interest was hauling around large buildings on ice roads between mining camps. Denison's road into the Tundra Mine was an engineering feat of the day, as not many people in the 1960s would have believed an ice road into the very hostile and cold climate of the Canadian Arctic, beyond thetree line , would be feasible. The exploits of John Denison were the topic of a book in the 1970s by Edith Iglauer entitled "Denison's Ice Road".In 1998, John Denison was awarded the
Order of Canada for his work on the ice roads in the 1950s-1970s [cite news|title=Dawson Creek: Northern Trucker Named to Order of Canada|publisher=Vancouver Sun (reprinted on harbourpublishing.com)|date=18 August 1998|accessdate=August 2007 |url=http://www.harbourpublishing.com/excerpt/DenisonsIceRoad/webonly/109] Denison died at his home inKelowna January 6, 2001, leaving his widow and four children. [http://www.harbourpublishing.com/excerpt/DenisonsIceRoad/webonly/109 Harbour Publishing ] ] at the age of 84.References
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