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list price: $16.99
edition:eBook
also available: Paperback
category: History
published: Aug 2020
ISBN:9781553805182
publisher: Ronsdale Press

Gold in British Columbia

Discovery to Confederation

by Marie Elliott

tagged: north america, pre-confederation (to 1867), native american
Description

The influx of over 20,000 European and Chinese miners to the Fraser River in the spring of 1858, all of them hungry for gold, compelled the British government to declare the mainland, known then as New Caledonia, the Colony of British Columbia. In an attempt to capture the excitement of this period and the challenges faced by the colonial government during the years prior to Confederation, this book seeks to answer three vital questions: How did the gold rush unfold? Who were the participants? And what were the outcomes? Excerpts from the correspondence of government officials and from Matthew Baillie Begbie, the only Supreme Court judge in the Colony of British Columbia for most of that period, provide insight, humour and new perspectives into the actual gold rush events and the enormous task of establishing law and order during one of the major social upheavals of North America. In this history, readers will meet the miners, First Nations peoples, Hudson’s Bay personnel, governors, royal engineers, assistant gold commissioners, steadfast community leaders, and women who trekked over the mountains—a kaleidoscope of colourful people and events.

About the Author
Marie Elliott, M.A., has written numerous articles and two definitive books about British Columbia’s interior: Gold and Grand Dreams and Fort St. James and New Caledonia: Where British Columbia Began. She makes her home in Victoria, B.C.
Editorial Review

“Marie Elliott probes behind the glitter, greed, politics and often raw ambition of the seething mass of humanity who trekked north to British Columbia’s goldfields. Her meticulous research underpins the detailed portraits of hundreds of the individuals involved in the gold rushes, bringing them to life as they so richly deserve.”—Martin Segger, British Columbia historian

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