This river, to the east of
Prince George, in the
Cariboo region, flows into the
Fraser River and, on early maps, was known as Bear River. Bancroft notes that
a number of miners
prospected the
head-waters of Bear River, and there developed rich ground
—a bounty mentioned
this 1861 report by
Douglas, which recounts
reports of some wonderfully rich discoveries on Bear River, a stream which discharges
into the south branch of Fraser's River above Fort George.
This river, and other features in the surrounding region, draws a name from John Bowron
(1837-1906), a Quebec-born “Overlander” who trekked to
the Cariboo in search of gold, but soon became Camerontown's librarian, in 1864, then a postmaster
at
Barkerville in 1866, a mining recorder in 1872, a government agent in 1875, and a gold commissioner
in 1883, from which he retired in 1905.