<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<h2> THE </h2>
<h1> CARIBOO TRAIL </h1>
<h3> A Chronicle of the Gold-fields<br/> of British Columbia<br/> </h3>
<br/>
<h4>
BY
</h4>
<h3> AGNES C. LAUT </h3>
<br/><br/><br/>
<SPAN name="chap01"></SPAN>
<SPAN CLASS="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P1"></SPAN>1}</SPAN>
<h3> CHAPTER I </h3>
<h4>
THE 'ARGONAUTS'
</h4>
<p>Early in 1849 the sleepy quiet of Victoria, Vancouver Island, was
disturbed by the arrival of straggling groups of ragged nondescript
wanderers, who were neither trappers nor settlers. They carried
blanket packs on their backs and leather bags belted securely round the
waist close to their pistols. They did not wear moccasins after the
fashion of trappers, but heavy, knee-high, hobnailed boots. In place
of guns over their shoulders, they had picks and hammers and such stout
sticks as mountaineers use in climbing. They did not forgather with
the Indians. They shunned the Indians and had little to say to any
one. They volunteered little information as to whence they had come or
whither they were going. They sought out Roderick Finlayson, chief
trader for the Hudson's Bay Company. They wanted provisions from the
company—yes—rice, flour, ham, salt, pepper, sugar, and tobacco; and
at the smithy they
<SPAN CLASS="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P2"></SPAN>2}</SPAN>
demanded shovels, picks, iron ladles, and wire
screens. It was only when they came to pay that Finlayson felt sure of
what he had already guessed. They unstrapped those little leather bags
round under their cartridge belts and produced in tiny gold nuggets the
price of what they had bought.</p>
<p>Finlayson did not know exactly what to do. The fur-trader hated the
miner. The miner, wherever he went, sounded the knell of fur-trading;
and the trapper did not like to have his game preserve overrun by
fellows who scared off all animals from traps, set fire going to clear
away underbrush, and owned responsibility to no authority. No doubt
these men were 'argonauts' drifted up from the gold diggings of
California; no doubt they were searching for new mines; but who had
ever heard of gold in Vancouver Island, or in New Caledonia, as the
mainland was named? If there had been gold, would not the company have
found it? Finlayson probably thought the easiest way to get rid of the
unwelcome visitors was to let them go on into the dangers of the wilds
and then spread the news of the disappointment bound to be theirs.</p>
<p>He handled their nuggets doubtfully. Who knew for a certainty that it
was gold anyhow?
<SPAN CLASS="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P3"></SPAN>3}</SPAN>
They bade him lay it on the smith's anvil and
strike it with a hammer. Finlayson, smiling sceptically, did as he was
told. The nuggets flattened to a yellow leaf as fine and flexible as
silk. Finlayson took the nuggets at eleven dollars an ounce and sent
the gold down to San Francisco, very doubtful what the real value would
prove. It proved sixteen dollars to the ounce.</p>
<p>For seven or eight years afterwards rumours kept floating in to the
company's forts of finds of gold. Many of the company's servants
drifted away to California in the wake of the 'Forty-Niners,' and the
company found it hard to keep its trappers from deserting all up and
down the Pacific Coast. The quest for gold had become a sort of
yellow-fever madness. Men flung certainty to the winds and trekked
recklessly to California, to Oregon, to the hinterland of the country
round Colville and Okanagan. Yet nothing occurred to cause any
excitement in Victoria. There was a short-lived flurry over the
discovery in Queen Charlotte Islands of a nugget valued at six hundred
dollars and a vein of gold-bearing quartz. But the nugget was an
isolated freak; the quartz could not be worked at a profit; and the
movement suddenly died out.
<SPAN CLASS="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P4"></SPAN>4}</SPAN>
There were, however, signs of what was
to follow. The chief trader at the little fur-post of Yale reported
that when he rinsed sand round in his camp frying-pan, fine flakes and
scales of yellow could be seen at the bottom.[<SPAN name="chap01fn1text"></SPAN><SPAN href="#chap01fn1">1</SPAN>] But gold in such
minute particles would not satisfy the men who were hunting nuggets.
It required treatment by quicksilver. Though Maclean, the chief factor
at Kamloops, kept all the specks and flakes brought to his post as
samples from 1852 to 1856, he had less than would fill a half-pint
bottle. If a half-pint is counted as a half-pound and the gold at the
company's price of eleven dollars an ounce, it will be seen why four
years of such discoveries did not set Victoria on fire.</p>
<p>It has been so with every discovery of gold in the history of the
world. The silent, shaggy, ragged first scouts of the gold stampede
wander houseless for years from hill to hill, from gully to gully, up
rivers, up stream beds, up dry watercourses, seeking the source of
those yellow specks seen far down the mountains near the sea.
Precipice, rapids, avalanche, winter storm, take their toll of dead.
Corpses are washed down in the spring floods; or the
<SPAN CLASS="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P5"></SPAN>5}</SPAN>
thaw reveals a
prospector's shack smashed by a snowslide under which lie two dead
'pardners.' Then, by and by, when everybody has forgotten about it, a
shaggy man comes out of the wilds with a leather bag; the bag goes to
the mint; and the world goes mad.</p>
<p>Victoria went to sleep again. When men drifted in to trade dust and
nuggets for picks and flour, the fur-traders smiled, and rightly
surmised that the California diggings were playing out.</p>
<p>Though Vancouver Island was nominally a crown colony, it was still,
with New Caledonia, practically a fief of the Hudson's Bay Company.
James Douglas was governor. He was assisted in the administration by a
council of three, nominated by himself—John Tod, James Cooper, and
Roderick Finlayson. In 1856 a colonial legislature was elected and met
at Victoria in August for the first time.[<SPAN name="chap01fn2text"></SPAN><SPAN href="#chap01fn2">2</SPAN>] But,
<SPAN CLASS="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P6"></SPAN>6}</SPAN>
in fact, the
company owned the colony, and its will was supreme in the government.
John Work was the company's chief factor at Victoria and Finlayson was
chief trader.</p>
<p>Because California and Oregon had gone American, some small British
warships lay at Esquimalt harbour. The little fort had expanded beyond
the stockade. The governor's house was to the east of the stockade. A
new church had been built, and the Rev. Edward Cridge, afterwards known
as Bishop Cridge, was the rector. Two schools had been built. Inside
the fort were perhaps forty-five employees. Inside and outside lived
some eight hundred people. But grass grew in the roads. There was no
noise but the church bell or the fort bell, or the flapping of a sail
while a ship came to anchor. Three hundred acres about the fort were
worked by the company as a farm, which gave employment to about two
dozen workmen, and on which were perhaps a hundred cattle and a score
of brood mares. The company also had a saw-mill. Buildings of huge,
squared timbers flanked three sides of the inner stockades—the
dining-hall, the cook-house, the bunk-house, the store, the trader's
house. There were two bastions, and from each cannon pointed. Close
to the
<SPAN CLASS="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P7"></SPAN>7}</SPAN>
wicket at the main entrance stood the postoffice. Only a
fringe of settlement went beyond the company's farm. The fort was
sound asleep, secure in an eternal certainty that the domain which it
guarded would never be overrun by American settlers as California and
Oregon had been. The little Admiralty cruisers which lay at Esquimalt
were guarantee that New Caledonia should never be stampeded into a
republic by an inrush of aliens. Then, as now, it was Victoria's boast
that it was more English than England.</p>
<p>So passed Christmas of '57 with plum-pudding and a roasted ox and
toasts to the crown and the company, though we cannot be quite sure
that the company was not put before the crown in the souls of the
fur-traders.</p>
<p>Then, in March 1858, just when Victoria felt most secure as the capital
of a perpetual fur realm, something happened. A few Yankee prospectors
had gone down on the Hudson's Bay steamer <i>Otter</i> to San Francisco in
February with gold dust and nuggets from New Caledonia to exchange for
money at the mint. The Hudson's Bay men had thought nothing of this.
Other treasure-seekers had come to New Caledonia before and had gone
back to San Francisco disappointed. But, in March, these
<SPAN CLASS="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P8"></SPAN>8}</SPAN>
men
returned to Victoria. And with them came a mad rabble of gold-crazy
prospectors. A city of tents sprang up overnight round Victoria. The
smithy was besieged for picks, for shovels, for iron ladles. Men stood
in long lines for their turn at the trading-store. By canoe, by
dugout, by pack-horse, and on foot, they planned to ascend the Fraser,
and they mobbed the company for passage to Langley by the first steamer
out from Victoria. Goods were paid for in cash. Before Finlayson
could believe his own eyes, he had two million dollars in his safe,
some of it for purchases, some of it on deposit for safe keeping.
Though the company gave no guarantee to the depositors and simply
sealed each man's leather pouch as it was placed in the safe, no
complaint was ever made against it of dishonesty or unfair treatment.</p>
<p>Without waiting instructions from England and with poignant memory of
Oregon, Governor Douglas at once clapped on a licence of twenty-one
shillings a month for mining privileges under the British crown. Thus
he obtained a rough registration of the men going to the up-country;
but thousands passed Victoria altogether and went in by pack-train from
Okanagan or rafted across from Puget Sound.
<SPAN CLASS="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P9"></SPAN>9}</SPAN>
The month of March had
not ended when the first band of gold hunters arrived and settled down
a mile and a half below Yale. Another boat-load of eight hundred and
fifty came in April. In four months sixty-seven vessels, carrying from
a hundred to a thousand men each, had come up from San Francisco to
Victoria. Crews deserted their ships, clerks deserted the company,
trappers turned miners and took to the gold-bars. Before Victoria
awoke to what it was all about, twenty thousand people were camped
under tents outside the stockade, and the air was full of the wildest
rumours of fabulous gold finds.</p>
<p>The snowfall had been heavy in '58. In the spring the Fraser rolled to
the sea a swollen flood. Against the turbid current worked tipsy rafts
towed by wheezy steamers or leaky old sailing craft, and rickety
row-boats raced cockle-shell canoes for the gold-bars above. Ashore,
the banks of the river were lined with foot passengers toiling under
heavy packs, wagons to which clung human forms on every foot of space,
and long rows of pack-horses bogged in the flood of the overflowing
river. By September ten thousand men were rocking and washing for gold
round Yale.</p>
<p>As in the late Kootenay and in the still later
<SPAN CLASS="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P10"></SPAN>10}</SPAN>
Klondike stampede,
American cities at the coast benefited most. Victoria was a ten-hour
trip from the mainland. Whatcom and Townsend, on the American side,
advertised the advantages of the Washington route to the Fraser river
gold-mines. A mushroom boom in town lots had sprung up at these points
before Victoria was well awake. By the time speculators reached
Victoria the best lots in that place had already been bought by the
company's men; and some of the substantial fortunes of Victoria date
from this period. Though the river was so high that the richest bars
could not be worked till late in August, five hundred thousand dollars
in gold was taken from the bed of the Fraser during the first six
months of '58. This amount, divided among the ten thousand men who
were on the bars around Yale, would not average as much as they could
have earned as junior clerks with the fur company, or as peanut pedlars
in San Francisco; but not so does the mind of the miner work. Here was
gold to be scooped up for nothing by the first comer; and more vessels
ploughed their way up the Fraser, though Governor Douglas sought to
catch those who came by Puget Sound and evaded licence by charging six
dollars toll each for all
<SPAN CLASS="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P11"></SPAN>11}</SPAN>
canoes on the Fraser and twelve dollars
for each vessel with decks. Later these tolls were disallowed by the
home authorities. The prompt action of Douglas, however, had the
effect of keeping the mining movement in hand. Though the miners were
of the same class as the 'argonauts' of California, they never broke
into the lawlessness that compelled vigilance committees in San
Francisco.</p>
<SPAN name="img-010"></SPAN>
<center>
<ANTIMG CLASS="imgcenter" SRC="images/img-010.jpg" ALT="Sir James Douglas. From a portrait by Savannah" BORDER="2" WIDTH="366" HEIGHT="522">
<H4 CLASS="h4center" STYLE="width: 366px">
Sir James Douglas. From a portrait by Savannah
</h4>
</center>
<p>Judge Howay gives the letter of a treasure-seeker who reached the
Fraser in April, the substance of which is as follows:</p>
<br/>
<P STYLE="font-size: 90%">
We're now located thirty miles above the junction of the Fraser and the
Thompson on Fraser River... About a fourth of the canoes that attempt
to come up are lost in the rapids which extend from Fort Yale nearly to
the Forks. A few days ago six men were drowned by their canoe
upsetting. There is more danger going down than coming up. There can
be no doubt about this country being immensely rich in gold. Almost
every bar on the river from Yale up will pay from three dollars to
seven dollars a day to the man at the present stage of water. When the
river gets low, which will be about August, the bars will pay very
well. One hundred and ninety-six dollars was taken out by one man last
winter in a few hours, but the water was then at its lowest stage. The
gold on the bars is all very fine and hard to save in a rocker, but
with quicksilver properly
<SPAN CLASS="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P12"></SPAN>12}</SPAN>
managed, good wages can be made almost
anywhere on the river as long as the bars are actually covered with
water. We have not yet been able to find a place where we can work
anything but rockers. If we could get a sluice to work, we could make
from twelve dollars to sixteen dollars a day each. We only commenced
work yesterday and we are satisfied that when we get fully under way we
can make from five dollars to seven dollars a day each. The prospect
is better as we go up the river on the bars. The gold is not any
coarser, but there is more of it. There are also in that region
diggings of coarser gold on small streams that empty into the main
river. A few men have been there and proved the existence of rich
diggings by bringing specimens back with them. The Indians all along
the river have gold in their possession that they say they dug
themselves, but they will not tell where they get it, nor allow small
parties to go up after it. I have seen pieces in their possession
weighing two pounds. The Indians above are disposed to be troublesome
and went into a camp twenty miles above us and forcibly took provisions
and arms from a party of four men and cut two severely with their
knives. They came to our camp the same day and insisted that we should
trade with them or leave the country. We design to remain here until
we can get a hundred men together, when we will move up above the falls
and do just what we please without regard to the Indians. We are at
present the highest up of any white men on the river, and we must go
higher to be satisfied.
<SPAN CLASS="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P13"></SPAN>13}</SPAN>
I don't apprehend any danger from the
Indians at present, but there will be hell to pay after a while. There
is a pack-trail from Hope, but it cannot be travelled till the snow is
off the mountains.</p>
<P STYLE="font-size: 90%">
The prices of provisions are as follows: flour thirty-five dollars per
hundred-weight, pork a dollar a pound, beans fifty cents a pound, and
other things in proportion. Every party that starts from the Sound
should have their own supplies to last them three or four months, and
they should bring the largest size chinook canoes, as small ones are
very liable to swamp in the rapids. Each canoe should be provided with
thirty fathoms of strong line for towing over swift water, and every
man well armed. The Indians here can beat anything alive stealing.
They will soon be able to steal a man's food after he has eaten it.</p>
<br/>
<SPAN name="img-012"></SPAN>
<center>
<ANTIMG CLASS="imgcenter" SRC="images/img-012.jpg" ALT="Indians near New Westminster, B.C. From a photograph by Maynard." BORDER="2" WIDTH="541" HEIGHT="417">
<H4 CLASS="h4center" STYLE="width: 541px">
Indians near New Westminster, B.C. From a photograph by Maynard.
</h4>
</center>
<br/>
<p>Within two miles of Yale eighty Indians and thirty white men were
working the gold-bars; and log boarding-houses and saloons sprang up
along the river-bank as if by magic. Naturally, the last comers of '58
were too late to get a place on the gold-bars, and they went back to
the coast in disgust, calling the gold stampede 'the Fraser River
humbug.' Nevertheless, men were washing, sluicing, rocking, and
digging gold as far as Lillooet. Often the day's yield ran as high as
eight hundred dollars a man; and the higher up the treasure-seekers
<SPAN CLASS="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P14"></SPAN>14}</SPAN>
pushed their way, the coarser grew the gold flakes and grains.
Would the golden lure lead finally to the mother lode of all the yellow
washings? That is the hope that draws the prospector from river to
stream, from stream to dry gully bed, from dry gully to precipice edge,
and often over the edge to death or fortune.</p>
<p>Exactly fifty-six years from the first rush of '58 in the month of
April, I sat on the banks of the Fraser at Yale and punted across the
rapids in a flat-bottomed boat and swirled in and out among the eddies
of the famous bars. A Siwash family lived there by fishing with clumsy
wicker baskets. Higher up could be seen some Chinamen, but whether
they were fishing or washing we could not tell. Two transcontinental
railroads skirted the canyon, one on each side, and the tents of a
thousand construction workers stood where once were the camps of the
gold-seekers banded together for protection. When we came back across
the river an old, old man met us and sat talking to us on the bank. He
had come to the Fraser in that first rush of '58. He had been one of
the leaders against the murderous bands of Indians. Then, he had
pushed on up the river to Cariboo, travelling, as he told us, by
<SPAN CLASS="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P15"></SPAN>15}</SPAN>
the Indian trails over 'Jacob's ladders'—wicker and pole swings to
serve as bridges across chasms—wherever the 'float' or sign of mineral
might lead him. Both on the Fraser and in Cariboo he had found his
share of luck and ill luck; and he plainly regretted the passing of
that golden age of danger and adventure. 'But,' he said, pointing his
trembling old hands at the two railways, 'if we prospectors hadn't
blazed the trail of the canyon, you wouldn't have your railroads here
to-day. They only followed the trail we first cut and then built. We
followed the "float" up and they followed us.'</p>
<p>What the trapper was to the fur trade, the prospector was to the mining
era that ushered civilization into the wilds with a blare of
dance-halls and wine and wassail and greed. Ragged, poor, roofless,
grubstaked by 'pardner' or outfitter on a basis of half profit, the
prospector stands as the eternal type of the trail-maker for finance.</p>
<br/><br/>
<SPAN name="chap01fn1"></SPAN>
<SPAN name="chap01fn2"></SPAN>
<p class="footnote">
[<SPAN href="#chap01fn1text">1</SPAN>] The same, of course, may be done to-day, with a like result, at
many places along the Fraser and even on the Saskatchewan.</p>
<p class="footnote">
[<SPAN href="#chap01fn2text">2</SPAN>] This was the first Legislative Assembly to meet west of Upper
Canada in what is now the Canadian Dominion. It consisted of seven
members, as follows: J. D. Pemberton, James Yates, E. E. Langford, J.
S. Helmcken, Thomas J. Skinner, John Muir, and J. F. Kennedy.
Langford, however, retired almost immediately after the election and J.
W. M'Kay was elected in his stead. The portraits of five of the
members are preserved in the group which appears as the frontispiece to
this volume. The photograph was probably taken at a later period; at
any rate, two of the members, Muir and Kennedy, are missing.</p>
<br/><br/><br/>
<SPAN name="chap02"></SPAN>
<SPAN CLASS="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P16"></SPAN>16}</SPAN>
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