No. 100
               
            
            
               
               
               28 November 1860
               
               My Lord Duke
                
            
            
               I have the honor to inform Your Grace that nothing much
               of importance, beyond the usual course of events, has
               transpired in 
British
               
                British Columbia
               British Columbia
               British Columbia since the date of my last Report.
               
               2.  The Miners of 
Alexandria and 
Quesnel River dreading
               the severity of the inland winter, have for some weeks past
               been arriving in great numbers from those Districts, and
               settling in the towns on the 
Lower Fraser, being attracted
               thither by the genial climate and cheaper rate of living:
               their labours, have, I understand, 
               
not
               
               not been unrewarded,
               many of them having been eminently successful;  while,
               contrary to the general experience of mining countries, few
               or none have been entirely disappointed:  so much indeed is
               this the case, that, as I am informed, they almost without
               exception, propose returning to 
Alexandria as soon as the
               snow disappears in Spring, and surface claims become accessible
               to the Miner.  The population of those remote 
               
Districts
               
               Districts will
               probably for this winter be confined to persons who have
               invested their means in the construction of sluices, and
               especially such miners as are employed in tunnelling, whose
               operations are little affected by the external temperature,
               and may be carried on during the severest weather.
               
               3.  I have lately received a communication dated 
Alexandria,
               
17th of October, from 
Mr Philip H. Nind, Magistrate and
               Gold Commissioner 
               
for
               
               for 
Alexandria from which it appears that
               he had from various causes, encountered much detention on his
               route to 
Alexandria.  His arrival in the District was hailed
               with a general feeling of satisfaction and his services were
               immediately called into requisition by the complaints of the
               inhabitants against a few notorious evil-doers who had taken
               refuge there, and become 
               
the
               
               the terror of the place.  The most
               vigorous measures were at once set on foot to bring them to
               justice, and one of the number was soon afterwards apprehended
               and committed for trial;  but the others could nowhere be
               found, and are supposed to have fled over the frontier into 
Oregon.  
Mr Nind had temporarily established his head-quarters
               at 
William's Lake, on account of its 
               
central
               
               central position from
               whence diverge, as from a common focus, all the routes
               leading to the upper and lower country.
               
               4.  The Extract from 
Mr Nind's valuable Report which I
               here subjoin, contains some interesting statistical facts in
               addition to his own views of the auriferous and physical
               character of parts of the 
Alexandria District which he has
               lately visited.
               
               
               The rate of wages 
               
to
               
               to hired labourers is five and six
               dollars ($5 & $6) a day and of provisions and other necessaries about
               the same as at 
Alexandria, in some instances a little lower
               from the greater amount of competition.  I have the honor
               to enclose a list of the prices of various articles at 
Alexandria.
               
               Fergusons or Rich Bar when first discovered proved
               highly auriferous, as much as Sixty dollars ($60) a day to the
               hand having been made; but after the pay-streak near the
               river became exhausted 
               
the
               
               the flat in the road had to be
               pierced, and the gravel wheeled over plank roads for some
               hundreds of yards to be rocked out at the river, the profits
               consequently of the days labour considerably decreased, so
               that when I was there the average receipts were from seven
               to ten dollars ($7 to $10) a day to the hand:  as soon however as water
               can be brought on for sluicing there is no doubt but that
               high wages will be made.  Unlike the bars on the 
lower Fraser,
               the ground 
               
is
               
               is here unobstructed by heavy timber or roots;  and
               the miner finds that not only does the pay-streak yield gold,
               but also the sand overlying it in sufficient quantities to
               pay for the washing.  It is the general opinion that there
               will be employment on this bar for more than a hundred men,
               and that it will not be exhausted in less than two or three
               years.  The introduction of water is an operation requiring
               considerable 
               
capital
               
               capital and engineering skill; the ditch is
               cut from a lake situated between four and five miles to the
               N.E. and has to be brought on by means of a long tunnel: the expense
               of completing it is calculated at Twelve Thousand dollars ($12,000).
               
 
            
            
               Three miles below 
Ferguson's Bar is 
British Bar, where
               a company of six Cornishmen are bringing in a ditch about
               five miles in length for their own use:  the Bar 
               
is
               
               is but of
               small size.  I did not notice any miners between here and
               
Alexandria, though there were signs of work done in the
               spring.  
The Fraser between 
Alexandria and 
Quesnel River,
               is a swift but not turbulent river, averaging from two to
               three hundred yards across, it has a few small ripples,
               but none of the dangerous whirlpools so common in its
               lower course; the navigation does not appear difficult;
               
Ferguson's
               
                Ferguson's Bar
               Ferguson's Bar
               Ferguson's Bar being supplied with necessaries by boats from
               
Alexandria, which make the trip of Sixty miles in about two
               days and a half.  Between 
Alexandria and 
Fort George I hear
               but of two impediments to Steamboat navigation which it
               would be difficult to surmount, viz
t two passes on Canons where the river narrows and rushes violently through precipitous
               rocks.  The physical features on the Upper 
Fraser
               that attract the attention of the 
               
miner
               
               miner are three—
               
               1st  Its benches, bars and flats,
               
            
            
               2nd  Its earth-slides, and high banks displaying several
               strata of wash gravel,
               
            
            
               3rd  The water in its vicinity that can be made available
               for mining.
               
            
            
               The first are very extensive, and some have been worked with
               rockers;  but rockers are really only an advanced kind of
               prospecting apparatus, and stand in the same relation to
               sluicing and the hydraulic 
               
pipe
               
               pipe as the Chilian Arastra does
               to the California Quartz Mill; in both cases the deposit of
               gold must be very large to yield remuneration to the employers
               of so limited and primitive a method of obtaining it.
               
               Respecting the second feature, the earth-slides and high banks
               yield the "colour" to prospectors, and in many cases two or
               three cents to the pan; were the hydraulic pipe brought to
               bear upon them, ground that is now unemployed 
               
would
               
               would be highly
               remunerative.
               
               Respecting water, this great essential to
               extensive mining operations, can be procured without much
               difficulty, though not without labour and expense, for if
               streams are less frequently met with descending from these
               wooded hills than flow from the snow-topped mountains of the
               Lower 
Fraser, yet the great number of Lakes situated within
               accessible distances of either bank, would afford a supply
               entirely independent of rain-fall or melting snow.
               
               at
               
               At present
               the country is struggling against the high rate of provisions
               and necessaries, the class of men that arrive in the spring
               have but enough money to purchase a few weeks provisions,
               they cannot afford to work for the future, but must make money
               immediately or return, so that a thorough testing or development
               of the auriferous resources of this particular section of
               country, till very considerable reduction takes place in the
               price of things, is not to be looked for.  
               
I
               
               I have conversed
               with many men who have been prospecting from 
Alexandria to the
               farthest point hitherto reached, and I find even amongst the
               unsuccessful no disbelief in the richness of the mines but a
               general impression to return next year, and try their luck
               again.  Amongst the geological phenomena of this portion of
               
Fraser River there is much to attract attention, more
               particularly a dark brown substance which the people call
               coal; on 
Ferguson's Bar 
               and
               
               and the adjacent banks many detached
               pieces lie scattered about, and I was informed by a person on
               that Bar that he had used it for blacksmithing purposes and
               found it to answer; some eight or nine miles above 
Alexandria
               where the river, from a north and south course, makes an
               almost rectangular bend to the East, a high bank displays a
               complete stratum of this singular formation.  I collected some
               specimens of it, and found on examination 
               
that
               
               that its specific
               gravity was much lighter than that of coal, that it did not
               soil the fingers, and that the grain of the wood was distinctly
               visible.  I apprehend it to be lignite in a transition state,
               but whether it could be utilized for commercial purposes I
               am unable to judge.  The banks of the river here are of
               considerable altitude, and are composed of a kind of inundated
               clay, called by the Miners, "soap-stone," they have been worn
               by the action of the water into 
               
cylindrical
               
               cylindrical forms and assume
               the appearance of buttresses and columns.
               
 
            
            
               The trail between 
Alexandria and 
Ferguson's Bar passes through some exceedingly
               rich open land consisting of heavy black loam with a subsoil
               of clay apparently well adapted to the growth of wheat.  The
               land that 
Mr Davidson has pre-empted, has produced excellent
               crops, a small patch of less than half an acre has returned
               twenty bushels of wheat, 
               
and
               
               and the turnips and cabbages would
               be considered fine in any country.  
Mr Davidson owns several
               head of cattle, a yoke of oxen, waggons and other agricultural
               implements.  Finding his experiments so successful, he is
               preparing to farm next year more extensively, and is anxious
               to purchase land in addition to his pre-emption claim: several
               white men and Indians are at present in his employ.  A
               substantial and commodious log-house has been built, and 
               
farm
               
               farm
               buildings are in process of erection.  The price of vegetables
               on the ground has ranged from twenty cents a lb. to twelve
               and a half, onions excepted, which have never been sold for
               less that fifty cents a lb.  Several of the hills that enclose
               the valley of 
Williams Lake are covered with pasture of the
               finest description, and in the valley and on the slopes are
               hundreds of acres of prairie that would repay the labor of
               the agriculturalist.  
               
The
               
               The timber in these hills principally
               consists of Douglas pine, Larch, Fir and Balsam; the larger
               trees make useful lumber, free from knots.  Since I have
               resided in this District, the weather, during the early part
               of September was unsettled, but from the middle of the month
               'till the present time it has been exceedingly fine; sharp
               at night, but the thermometer in my tent ranges between 60
o
               and 70
o 
               during
               
               during the middle of the day. I have been enabled
               from the central position of this spot to transact a good deal
               of business with miners and traders returning from the Upper Country.
               
               The Indians around here seem well disposed:  some
               work well and readily, and are very intelligent, and would be,
               I think, susceptible of the influences of civilization:  others,
               on the contrary, are extremely indolent, and neglect 
               
providing
               
               providing
               against the wants of tomorrow if supplied with food for today.
               As there has been a dearth of Salmon this summer, I very much
               fear they will suffer severely this winter:  the greater
               number talk of wintering on the 
Thompson River and at 
Cayoosh.
               
               
               
               5.  I have received intelligence from 
Hope and 
Yale up to
               the 
29th of November. The Gold Commissioners report 
               
that
               
               that
               the weather had been so far most favorable for mining operations,
               and that nearly all the miners in those Districts had built
               comfortable houses where they intend to remain for the winter.
               
               Some Miners from the 
Cariboeuf Country  had lately arrived
               at 
Hope with very fine specimens of lump gold worth from £1
               to £8 a piece; their object being to remain at 
Hope until
               the winter is over, when they propose 
               
returning
               
               returning to their distant
               mining claims.
               
               6.  The miners at 
Shimilkomeen were making fair wages varying
               from 30 to 60 shillings a day to the man; and there was a
               sufficient stock of food in that part of the country to last till spring.
               
               7.  In consequence of the number of new steam boats which
               have been lately built here and commenced running on 
Fraser
               
                Fraser River
               Fraser River
               Fraser River,
               the charge for freights from this place to 
Hope has fallen to
               20
s/- a ton, being a reduction of 300 per cent on the former
               rates of transport.
               
               The Reports from 
British Columbia contain nothing further
               deserving of special notice.
               
               Minutes by CO staff
               
                
                  
                  
                     Acke.
                     
                  
                  
                     Lay before Parlt.
                     
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                     If there be a Special Paper on 
B. Columbia, I suppose that this
                     may be included.
                     
 
                
            
            
               Documents enclosed with the main document (not transcribed)
               
                
                  
                  
                     "List of Prices at 
Alexandria, 
18 September 1860," including food, clothing, and miscellaneous equipment.
                     
                     
 
            
            
               Other documents included in the file