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  2. Fraser Canyon Gold Rush - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fraser_Canyon_Gold_Rush

    When news of the Fraser Canyon Gold Rush reached London, Richard Clement Moody was hand-picked by the Colonial Office, under Sir Edward Bulwer-Lytton, to establish British order and to transform British Columbia into the British Empire's "bulwark in the farthest west" [4] and "found a second England on the shores of the Pacific."

  3. Pitt Lake's lost gold mine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pitt_Lake's_lost_gold_mine

    The story of Pitt Lake gold begins in 1858, the year of the Fraser Canyon Gold Rush, when a number of maps were published in San Francisco promoting the gold fields of British Columbia. [1] Two of these maps show the words "gold" and "Indian diggings" in the country above Pitt Lake.

  4. Gold mining in Canada - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gold_mining_in_Canada

    Canada is the 4th largest producer of gold in the world, only behind China, Australia, and Russia. [7] 2.2% of the world's total gold reserves belong to Canada. [2] Canada mainly trades gold with the United Kingdom. In 2021, 47% of exported Canadian gold went to the United Kingdom. [2]

  5. Fraser Canyon War - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fraser_Canyon_War

    The Fraser Canyon War, also known as the Canyon War or the Fraser River War, was an incident between white miners and the indigenous Nlaka'pamux people in the newly declared Colony of British Columbia, which later became part of Canada, in 1858. It occurred during the Fraser Canyon Gold Rush, which brought many white settlers to the Fraser ...

  6. List of gold mines in Canada - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_gold_mines_in_Canada

    This list of gold mines in Canada is subsidiary to the list of mines article and lists working, defunct and future mines in the country. For practical purposes, defunct and future mines are demarcated in italics and bold respectively. Asterisks (*) note mines which produce(d) gold as a secondary product..

  7. Yale, British Columbia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yale,_British_Columbia

    Its maximum population during the gold rush era was in the 15,000 range. More generally, it housed 5,000-8,000. The higher figure was counted at the time of evacuation of the Canyon during the Fraser Canyon War of 1858. Most of today's population are members of the self-governing Yale First Nation. Non-native businesses have included a couple ...

  8. Boston Bar, British Columbia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boston_Bar,_British_Columbia

    The name dates from the time of the Fraser Canyon Gold Rush (1858–1861). A "bar" is a gold-bearing sandbar or sandy riverbank, and the one slightly down river and opposite today's town was populated heavily by Americans, who were known in the parlance of the Chinook Jargon as "Boston men" or simply "Bostons". A settlement developed on the ...

  9. British Columbia gold rushes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/British_Columbia_gold_rushes

    In the ensuing unrest, known as the Fraser Canyon War, most of the mining population fled the Canyon for Spuzzum and Yale, and war parties composed of Americans, Germans, French and others (many who had been mercenaries in Nicaragua, or in service of France in Mexico), forayed up the canyon and made a peace with the Nlaka'pamux, though many ...