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The Madman of Stewart River: Why He Buried His House in 1894 The Frozen Secret of 1894 Imagine a winter so cold that your spit freezes before it hits the ground. In the brutal Yukon winter of 1894, every man was building high and stacking wood—except one. While they called William Scott "The Mole" and waited for his "grave" to collapse, he was secretly building a geothermal fortress that defied every law of the North. This is the story of how one man’s "madness" became the only thing that could save a dying settlement. DISCLAIMER: This video was created with the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) technology. The script, narration structure, and content presentation were developed using AI tools. This narrative is based on real historical events. Character & Location Spotlight The Protagonist: William Scott Often described as a quiet, observant man, Scott wasn't a scientist—he was a practical dreamer. He studied old-world mining techniques to create arches that could withstand tectonic shifts in the frozen crust, proving that survival is 10% muscle and 90% observation. The Setting: Stewart River, Yukon Known as one of the most unforgiving environments on Earth. In the 1890s, this was a place of isolation where "common sense" was often the difference between life and death. The settlement was a testing ground for human endurance against the "Killing Cold." William Scott, Yukon History, Gold Rush Survival, Arctic Engineering, Stewart River 1894, Subterranean Home, Survival Stories, Primitive Technology, Winter Survival, Geothermal Heating, The Mole of Yukon, Historical Mysteries, Canadian Wilderness, Permafrost Survival, DIY Geothermal, Yukon Lore, 19th Century Engineering, Extreme Cold Survival, Historic Rebels.