The Wildcat Cafe
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The Wildcat Cafe is a vintage log cabin structure in Yellowknife, Northwest Territories, Canada and represents the mining camp style of early Yellowknife. The structure, which houses a summer restaurant, is located in what was then the central business district of the city.[1][2] It is a City of Yellowknife Heritage Building, designated in 1992. First opened in 1937 by owners Willie Wylie and Smokey Stout, it is the oldest restaurant in Yellowknife.[3] Subsequent owners were Carl and Dorothy Jensen (1939-1942) and Mah Gow (1942-1951), Yellowknife's first recorded Chinese resident.[2] The cafe closed in 1951 with the illness of Mr. Gow.[3] The building was saved from demolition in the late 1950s when a small group of Yellowknifers fought to have it protected as a heritage site.[2] By 1970 no work had been done to restore the abandoned cabin and it was in poor shape when a new generation of concerned citizens lobbied for its protection. It was soon renovated and reopened as a functional restaurant in 1979.[2] The Old Stope Association, a non-profit heritage society, was responsible for its operation in the 1970s-1980s, and today it is managed by the Wildcat Cafe Advisory Committee.[2][4] In 1992, the cabin was declared a heritage site as an important old building in Yellowknife and the city took ownership.[2] It is one of Yellowknife's most popular tourist attractions.
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In 2011, the city of Yellowknife decided to completely renovate the log building, which had settled far into the ground and was leaning dangerously in several directions at once. The dis-assembly process, including cataloguing and numbering the pieces, started on May 11, 2011.<ref name="name="franhurcombphotography">The Wildcat Cafe: rebirth 2011</ref> Reconstruction and repair continued during the summer of 2012 and the opening was delayed due to a number of unforeseen problems; however, the Wildcat Cafe reopened on June 22, 2013. [5]
The Canadian Museum of Civilization in Gatineau, Quebec, exhibited a replica of the cabin.[2] This replica is being removed as part of a larger renovation to the museum's Canada Hall.[6]
References
- ↑ Wildcat Cafe to close in 2011 for renovations
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Wildcat History
- 1 2 Old Town - Heritage Walking Tour of Yellowknife The Wildcat Cafe p.20
- ↑ Wildcat Cafe Advisory Committee
- ↑ City of Yellowknife Heritage Building Project, 2013
- ↑ Rendell, Mark (December 4, 2014). "Wildcat replica coming down, could be up for sale - EDGEYK.com".
Coordinates: 62°27′59.46″N 114°20′56″W / 62.4665167°N 114.34889°W