Rock Creek Gold Rush
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The Rock Creek Gold Rush was a gold rush in the Boundary Country region of the Colony of British Columbia (now part of a Canadian province). The rush was touched off in 1859 when two US soldiers were driven across the border to escape pursuing Indians and chanced on gold only three miles into British territory, on the banks of the Kettle River where it is met by Rock Creek, and both streams turn east towards what is now Grand Forks. The first claim was filed by an Adam Beam (or Beame) in 1860, and the rush was on, composed mostly of Americans and some Chinese, all of whom had come overland from other workings, either at Colville or Oregon or all the way from California.
At its peak, an estimated 5,000 men were in the Rock Creek area, where the new town of Rock Creek had grown to a population of about 300, when trouble broke out between American and Chinese miners, and the efforts of British Gold Commissioner Peter O'Reilly to end the disturbances, and also to collect the Queen's mining licenses, resulted in him being driven from the mining camp by a hail of stones in what has become known to history as the Rock Creek War, as it was dubbed at the time by the Victoria newspapers. O'Reilly is later notable in provincial history (and legal history) for his treaty commission, and today remembered mostly for his Point Ellice House, his gracious home in Victoria, today preserved as a museum.
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[edit] The Governor Ends the Rock Creek War
O'Reilly fled to Victoria and reported to Governor Douglas, who after a trip via Port Douglas to Lillooet via the Lakes Route, continued on to Princeton (which he named on that trip - "Princetown" in honour of the Prince of Wales, who was visiting distant Canada at the time; it was also during this visit to Lillooet that the Governor approved its residents' new name for the former Cayoosh Flat, a.k.a. Cayoosh Flat). Douglas, accompanied by W.G. Cox, who was to be new commissioner, and Arthur Bushby, who is most well-known for being clerk and companion to Judge Begbie, proceeded to Rock Creek. Once arrived there, he admonished a meeting of 200 miners and told them that if they didn't follow his orders, he would come back with 500 marines and make them obey. As he had at Yale two seasons earlier, he also instructed them that the Chinese had the same rights to the gold workings as any other, and that further molestation of them would not be permitted. At the end of the meeting, he insisted on shaking each man's hand and looking them in the eye as they left the tent.
The workings on Rock Creek did not last many years, and when the Colville Gold Rush began soon after, many Americans went on to the new diggings and Rock Creek's gold-mining heyday became a memory. The troubles of this goldfield were a critical demonstration of Douglas' awareness that communications between the Coast and the Interior was vital to the security of the colony, underscoring his contracting of Edgar Dewdney to build a trail from Fort Hope to the East Kootenay (where similar troubles had broken out). The purpose of the Dewdney Trail was to prevent the draining of the Interior's gold and other resources from being sent to the United States, as well as to be able to deploy troops should trouble break out and either Indian war or outright annexationist uprising should arise in areas where access to and through the United States was far easier than it was from the Coast.
[edit] Legacy
Because of its location on the Dewdney Trail, Rock Creek - at first abandoned quickly when the gold ran out - was revived as a small service centre for the Kettle Valley as well as for the ranches and farms which were starte in the area, which has an arid, hot-summer climate and long growing season. In the days of the Slocan silver and galena mining boom and the discovery of copper and galena in abundance in the Kettle River basin, many new towns sprang up around a whole new era of industrial mining and smelting in the Boundary Country as well as in the Slocan and West Kootenay. Expansion of the CPR became urgent due to similar economic and strategic interests as those concerning the Dewdney Trail and because of the steep grade to the Kettle River via the route of the Dewdney Trail, the southern mainline of the CPR, known as the Kettle Valley Railway, ran down that river from near its head via a different pass from Kelowna and a famous series of trestles (see Myra Canyon Trestle), Rock Creek became important once again as a railway service town and also part of the new Boundary District (as the Boundary Country was also called) mining and smelting industrial economy.
Today it is a small tourism, artists, arts & crafts, agricultural and resource community on British Columbia Highway 3 (the Crowsnest Highway), and lies at the junction of British Columbia Highway 33 from Kelowna and the Big White Ski Resort, a few miles west of the City of Greenwood, the last survivor of the great smelter cities of the copper and galena boom in the Boundary Country in the early 20th Century.
[edit] See also
- Gold rush
- Yakima War
- Colony of British Columbia
- British Columbia Gold Rushes (index)
- Fraser Canyon Gold Rush
- Fraser Canyon War
- Fort Colville Gold Rush
- Dewdney Trail
- Boundary Country
- Rock Creek, British Columbia
- Point Ellice Bridge Disaster
[edit] References
- McGowan's War, Donald J. Hauka, New Star Books, Vancouver (2000) ISBN 1-55420-001-6
- British Columbia's Highway 3: The Dewdney Trail - Hope to Fort Steele, Garnet Basque, Heritage House Publishing, Surrey BC (1967).
- British Columbia Chronicle, 1847-1871: Gold & colonists, Helen and G.P.V. Akrigg, Discovery Press, Vancouver (1977) ISBN 0-919624-03-0
[edit] External link
- Crowsnest Highway history site (excellent detailed history of the Rock Creek Gold Rush)
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