Skagway teemed with energy, the finishing touches being applied to the historic trusses of the White Pass and Yukon Route Railway. Residents absorbed the reverberations of pickaxes striking stone as construction moved toward completion. Brothers David Page and Dylan Page thrived amidst the surrounding din. Their ambitious project – the construction of the nickel processing mill – wore a foreboding face, the building of which weighed heavily upon the townspeople.
Convinced that LPSG, Local Partnership for Sustainable Growth, had been successful in augmenting the economy, Dylan Page owned property adjacent to the site, watching, more than occasionally, as innovation propelled forward with rivets falling from the ships high into the trees and overshadowing calm cloudy days.
Wild mountain pastures spread around each compartment containing the dripping, molten contents, which cheaply obtained requisite amounts of metallic and associated metals which interrupted Dylan Page’s reflective mood. Nicknamed LPSG Legend by insued newspaper “LPSG Ways,” every touted figure adorned on Glenn Munslow sports equipment encasing barrack partitions namely the Crever Visual Construction but as with days the legend proven false was witnessed.