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Cayoosh Gold Rush

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Lillooet ( English: / ˈ l ɪ l oʊ . ɛ t / ) is a district municipality in the Squamish-Lillooet region of southwestern British Columbia . The town is on the west shore of the Fraser River immediately north of the Seton River mouth. On BC Highway 99 , the locality is by road about 100 kilometres (62 mi) northeast of Pemberton , 64 kilometres (40 mi) northwest of Lytton , and 172 kilometres (107 mi) west of Kamloops .

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40-518: The Cayoosh Gold Rush was one of several in the history of the region surrounding Lillooet , British Columbia , Canada . If estimates of its yield are true, it would be one of the richest single finds in the gold mining history of that province. Cayoosh Creek is a relatively major tributary of the Fraser River , merging with the outflow from Seton Lake before joining the larger river at Lillooet. Six miles (9.5km) upstream from that confluence

80-850: A "road train", one of the earliest motorized vehicles. From Wallula Gap on the Columbia River, the Old Cariboo Trail was built over the route of the Hudson's Bay Brigade Trail , which began at Fort Okanagan , near the Wallula Gap area on the Columbia River and passed north through Eastern Washington along the Columbia River to the Okanogan River and north into British Columbia . Hudson's Bay Company fur traders brigades followed this route up until 1847, when

120-582: A decade when the official total gold revenue for the entire province was only about C$ 1.5 million. By the end of the decade the claims were exhausted but the renewed interest in the Lillooet region helped spur a wave of new exploration in the area, which had been bypassed for the most part during the Fraser Canyon Gold Rush a few decades earlier. The discovery of the famous (but largely worthless) Golden Cache Mine farther up Cayoosh Creek,

160-589: A decrepit specimen) at the river. In 1859, Governor Douglas granted a petition to change the name to Lillooet. The Lil'wat people lived on the Douglas Road , a.k.a. the Lakes Route, which was the main trail from the south. This name, which means "wild onion", appears on Anderson's 1849 map. For the fortune seekers of the Fraser Canyon Gold Rush (upper canyon) and the Cariboo Gold Rush ,

200-528: A depot between the Seton River and Cayoosh Creek. That month, the first passenger train arrived, triggering a revival for the isolated town, since a railway could ship agricultural produce. By year end, the track reached Clinton , an additional 72 kilometres (45 mi). To benefit the railway rather than land speculators, PGE had bypassed the downtown by crossing the Fraser south of the Seton River on

240-494: A humid continental/oceanic climate, but it borders on a semi-arid climate (Köppen Cfb/Dfb/BSk ). Situated at an intersection of deep gorges in the lee of the Coast Mountains , it has a dry climate with an average of 349.5 mm (13.76 in) of precipitation being recorded annually. The locality often vies with Lytton and Osoyoos for the title of "Canada's Hot Spot" on a daily basis in summer. Lillooet holds

280-599: A prominent British-Swedish entrepreneur in colonial British Columbia who also contracted to build roads and provide steamer services in the Kootenay region. Blin-Wright also operated the steamer which connected the end of the road at Alexandria with Quesnel (then Quesnellemouthe). When the Cariboo Road proper was built, it converged with the existing route of the Old Cariboo Road at Clinton , and followed

320-413: A relatively high-rate of intermarriage between all groups. According to the 2021 census , religious groups in Lillooet included: Lillooet has one high school, Lillooet Secondary, which also serves students from neighbouring rural localities such as Shalalth , Seton Portage , Gold Bridge and Bralorne , although those communities do offer students a secondary school program. Cayoosh Elementary School

360-609: Is a reference to the original wagon road to the Cariboo gold fields in what is now the Canadian province of British Columbia . It should not be confused with the Cariboo Road , which was built slightly later and used a different route. It was built from Lillooet to Alexandria , beginning in 1859, and was a precursor to the slightly later Cariboo Wagon Road that was built from Yale via Cache Creek - Ashcroft . Access to

400-589: Is in the Cayoosh Heights subdivision and George M. Murray Elementary serves North Lillooet. The Upper St'at'imc Culture, Language and Education Society (USCLES) operates education programs, but most St'at'imc children attend the public school system. Post-secondary programs are offered at a Thompson Rivers University campus. The Fountainview Academy , about 24 kilometres (15 mi) south, is an international private school, which offers work-study experience that includes organic farming. Lillooet experiences

440-707: The Cariboo Prospector passenger train in October 2002 ended through service. Canadian National Railway freight trains on break and the Kaoham Shuttle still use the station. The town began as a goldrush centre in the late 1850s, booming during the progression of discoveries on the Fraser and in the Cariboo in the early 1860s. The title of "the largest town west of Chicago and north of San Francisco " moved in rapid succession from Yale to Lillooet, and then to Barkerville . Just after this gold rush,

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480-489: The Deadman River towards the initial strikes near Likely and Horsefly, British Columbia . The Old Cariboo Road started at Lillooet (or 0 Mile House) where it directly went to Alexandria. From there a steamboat service was provided to Quesnellemouthe (now Quesnel) where it ended. A trail from there then went east to Barkerville where gold was discovered. From Lillooet there was a trail that went south to Lytton. This

520-531: The Klondike . Other gold prospecting in the area included underground hard-rock mining in the Bridge River Country , which began in the 1880s and 1890s, but peaked from the 1930s to the 1950s. Gold Bridge and Bralorne were mining centres. Prospecting for gold continues and to a lesser extent for copper, silver and nephrite jade . Until the discovery of larger jade deposits near Cassiar ,

560-490: The Lillooet Airport . In the 2021 Census of Population conducted by Statistics Canada , Lillooet had a population of 2,302 living in 1,111 of its 1,214 total private dwellings, a change of 1.2% from its 2016 population of 2,275. With a land area of 27.63 km (10.67 sq mi), it had a population density of 83.3/km (215.8/sq mi) in 2021. Lillooet's larger regional population includes that of

600-520: The Lillooet railway bridge . PGE erected a station and four-stall roundhouse at East Lillooet, which was a divisional point . The initial depot, called Lillooet station, was 2.4-kilometre (1.5 mi) westward across the Fraser. In 1930, PGE built the 8.9-kilometre (5.5 mi) Lillooet Diversion from the head of Seton Lake, through the downtown, and north to the Polley bridge. In 1931, PGE completed

640-664: The British Columbia Coast in 1942. Each were "self-support" sites, where family groups who had the financial means could remain together, but the locations were more isolated than the camps in the Kootenays. Since internees were not permitted to return to the coast until 1949, many families permanently settled in Lillooet. The largest camp was East Lillooet, housing 309 people. The other nearby camps were at Shalalth , Minto Mine , and McGillvray Falls. The town includes infrastructure typical for its size. In 2009,

680-553: The Excelsior in the early 1900s. Further lodgings were the International Hotel (1866) and Victoria Hotel (1892). In 1864, Joseph Watkinson, Thomas Harris, F.W. Foster, and Richard Hoey built the first flour mill . In 1896, St. Andrews Presbyterian church was erected. In 1904, the town was surveyed. The 1930 fire destroyed the Excelsior, Hurley's Grocery, a movie theatre and the government liquor store. In 1946,

720-729: The Hudson's Bay Company withdrew from the Northwest. Cattle drives were common along this trail to supply the gold miners, who arrived in British Columbia in the late 1850s. In Washington Territory a wagon road from Wallula ( Fort Nez Percés near Walla Walla ) to the gold mining regions of British Columbia was known as the "Cariboo Trail" or the "Wallula-Okanogan Road". Connecting to the Oregon Trail at Wallula, it ran north across Quincy Flats past Moses Lake , then crossed

760-461: The Lillooet area was the world's largest source of the nephrite form. Unknown tonnes were exported to China before government assayers discovered the nature of the "black rocks" that the Chinese miners found so interesting. In the 1950s, local farmer and teacher Ron Purvis adapted the skil-saw concept to create a diamond rotary blade. The blade could safely cut the immovable jade boulders which line

800-603: The banks and beds of the Fraser and Bridge rivers, whereas blasting would have shattered the rock. Although local stores sell polished jade souvenirs, major commercial jade operations no longer exist in the Lillooet area. The northward advance of the Pacific Great Eastern Railway (PGE) rail head reached the head of Seton Lake in January 1915 and the Lillooet locality the following month. PGE built

840-472: The bridge, built a new two-storey station downtown, and dismantled and reassembled the roundhouse nearby. The latter was demolished during the early 1970s. The Lillooet station building, which was replaced in 1986, was 4.8 kilometres (3.0 mi) east of Craig (14.3 kilometres (8.9 mi) east of Retakit after Craig closed) and 4.3 kilometres (2.7 mi) south of Polley (12.4 kilometres (7.7 mi) south of Fountain after Polley closed). The withdrawal of

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880-452: The district developed a community plan. In 2013, the water treatment plant received a $ 5.6 million upgrade. In 2019, Tourism Lillooet released a strategic plan. In 2022, an electric vehicle fast charging station opened. Police, fire, and ambulance, respectively operate emergency service bases. The Lillooet Hospital & Health Centre is a Level 1 Community Hospital which includes 24-hour emergency services. The district owns and operates

920-406: The earlier road to Alexandria, but was extended up the Fraser from there to Quesnel (thereby eliminating the need for steamer travel on that stretch of the upper Fraser) and completed eastward from there to Barkerville . It was along this route that an attempt was made to use Bactrian camels purchased from the U.S. Camel Corps for freight, and also a tractor-style Thomson Road Steamer known as

960-499: The largest ancient pit-house communities in the Pacific Northwest , is one of the many archaeological and heritage sites in the vicinity. Several petroglyph sites have been documented along the Fraser in the vicinity of Lillooet. The First Nations name of Pap-shil-KWA-KA-meen translates as the "place where the three rivers meet". The former European name of Cayoosh Flat inferred a dead or dying Cayuse horse (namely

1000-795: The lower Grand Coulee at present day Coulee City . From there it turned north and crossed the Waterville Plateau to reach the Columbia River near Fort Okanogan . From there it followed the valley of the Okanagan River into Canada, connecting with the Okanagan Trail . The section known in Canada as the Cariboo Trail departed from the northernmost of the Okanagan Trail routes near today's Savona to head up

1040-612: The majority. First Nations communities assert the land is traditional territory, having been continuously inhabited for thousands of years. The confluence of several main streams with the Fraser attracted large seasonal and permanent indigenous populations. Situated in the Lower Fountain , the Bridge River Rapids (Sat' or Setl), which blocked migrating salmon, has remained a popular fishing and fish drying site for centuries. Keatley Creek Archaeological Site , one of

1080-463: The months of April (36.1 °C [97.0 °F]), May (41.7 °C [107.1 °F]), and December (22.2 °C [72.0 °F]). The coldest temperature recorded was measured at the airport during a November cold snap in 1985. With an average annual snowfall of 26.5 cm (10.4 in), Lillooet is the least snowy place in the BC Interior. Old Cariboo Road The Old Cariboo Road

1120-624: The portage-intensive Douglas Road from the south terminated at Lillooet. Across the Fraser, Parsonville was "Mile 0" of the Old Cariboo Road , which stretched about 339 kilometres (211 mi) northward to Alexandria . Built as a toll road by Gustavus Blin Wright , the first 20 to 30 kilometres of tortuous canyon-brink grade remained little changed until the 1970s. In 1864, the shorter Cariboo Road , which connected Yale to Barkerville via Ashcroft , bypassed Lillooet. The Fraser

1160-617: The railway, ranching, farming, and government services. The long growing season has favoured orchards, and in recent times, ginseng. Once, hop and tobacco crops supported the former local beer, cigar and chewing tobacco industries. The town has relied upon forestry since the mid-1970s. In the 1940s, an Italian named Savona planted vines in the Fountain area. Established in 2009, the Fort Berens Winery in East Lillooet

1200-405: The record for the fourth-hottest temperature recorded in British Columbia and Canada (behind Lytton , Ashcroft and Kamloops ). On 29 June 2021, during the 2021 Western North America heat wave which brought unprecedented heat to the Pacific Northwest , the temperature reached 46.8 °C (116.2 °F). Lillooet also holds the record for the hottest temperature recorded in the province during

1240-571: The settlement incorporated as a village municipality. In 1948, fire destroyed the Log Cabin Theatre, an 1860s livery barn that had been remodelled into theatre in 1934. Booms occurred during local gold mining activity, and in the 1940s and 50s during the construction of the Bridge River Power Project . In 1996, the town re-incorporated as a district municipality. The economy was historically based upon logging,

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1280-492: The start of the road at Lillooet was made by the Douglas Road or Lakes Route from Port Douglas , at the head of Harrison Lake. It is the mileages from Lillooet on the Old Cariboo Road, properly known as the Lillooet-Alexandria Road, that the "road house" placenames of British Columbia, such as 100 Mile House , are measured. The road was a toll-route and built by private contractor Gustavus Blin-Wright ,

1320-760: The station bridge over the Seton River. In 2020, a two-lane structure replaced the temporary single lane bridge installed in 1994. The section of Main Street north from the cairn was called "the Golden Mile" allegedly to reflect gold dust scattered on the ground but indisputably as a supply hub fueled by the goldrush traffic. West of Lillooet, the Golden Cache Mine on Cayoosh Creek , was staked in 1895. However, promising expectations proved illusive, which ended further investment. The associated prospecting boom ceased by 1900, when mining activity relocated to

1360-645: The three large bands of the St'at'imc or Lillooet Nation whose reserves abut the town on all sides, and another three large reserves within 20 miles (32 km); 430 of the District of Lillooet's population are aboriginal. Historical populations have included large numbers of Americans and Chinese, although there are few of either today (although many longtime local families, First Nations and non-First Nations, have some bloodlines from both). The town's non-native population has been historically multi-ethnic in extraction, with

1400-630: The town's layout was surveyed by the Royal Engineers . In 1860, the population was 4,000–5,000. About that time, Richard Hoey was granted 16 hectares (40 acres) on the Texas Creek Road. St. Mary the Virgin Anglican church was built in 1861 and a school established in 1863. That year, the hotels and shops served a population of about 1,600. The Stage Hotel (1860) was considered first class. The Pioneer Hotel (1862) became

1440-624: The various mines of Bridge River goldfields and a profitable mine at McGillivray Falls on Anderson Lake , to the west of Seton Lake, are all the result of the Cayoosh Gold Rush. Lillooet, British Columbia A main population centre of the Stʼatʼimc (Lillooet Nation), who comprise just over 50 per cent of the Lillooet area residents, it is one of the southernmost communities in North America where indigenous people form

1480-454: Was a large waterfall, Cayoosh Falls (now inundated by a private estate's small hydroelectric dam and powerplant). In early 1884 staking of gold claims on Cayoosh Creek between the falls and the Fraser began and by the end of the year there were 600 men working that section of the creek - all of which had been fully staked by the end of the year. What distinguishes the mining activity on Cayoosh Creek from other mining operations at that time

1520-585: Was crossed by ferry at Lillooet . Parsonville had faded into obscurity by 1889, when the first bridge at Lillooet opened. Consequently, Lillooet became "Mile 0". The numbered roadhouse names of the Cariboo district became measured from the bend in Main Street commemorated by a cairn erected in 1939. However, when the present bridge was constructed south of the town, these old travel measurements became understated by about two miles. In 1994, fire destroyed

1560-469: Was that all of the 300 claimholders were Chinese , word-of-mouth having spread through their community throughout the Fraser Canyon and the Cariboo of the find such that all claims were staked by the time any non-Chinese found about it. Local government agent and claims recorder Caspar Phair , who presided over the issuing of claims, in 1887 estimated C$ 6-7 million in gold had been taken out, in

1600-437: Was the first attempt at commercial viticulture . Visitors can taste the award-winning wines. The Cliff & George Vineyards, about 20 kilometres (12 mi) south on the west side of the Fraser, offers a similar opportunity as well as picnic areas on the historic Texas Creek Ranch near Texas Creek . Four internment camps existed in the Lillooet area during World War II , following the removal of Japanese Canadians from

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