d. 1876-09-21
               
               
               
                  
                  Ivel “Long” Abbott, who stood six foot six inches tall, struck gold in the summer
                     of 
1861 on 
Lowhee Creek, nicknamed Humbug Creek before the gold finds.
1 While his partner 
William Jourdan went to fetch supplies, Abbott carelessly struck through what was thought to be the
                     blue-clay bedrock to expose rich gold deposits underneath.
2 
                  
                  
                  In this despatch, 
Douglas
                     remarks on the richness of the find, which he claims could produce up to $100,000
                     for each member of the company; however, Akrigg and Akrigg write that the 
Otter docked in 
Victoria with $250,000 from Abbott and Company.
3 
                  
                  
                  Abbott became a local personality when he took his share and spent it on gambling
                     and drinking sprees in 
Victoria, on one of which he smashed a mirror with gold pieces.
4 After spending all his funds, he tried his luck in Cassiar gold country.
5 
                  
                  
                  His luck failed him, and he died in 1876 in Glenora, where his death certificate reads as “Joel Abbott.”6
                  
                  
                  
                     
                        - 1. Richard Wright, Barkerville, Williams Creek, Cariboo: A Gold Rush Experience, rev. ed. (Williams Lake: Winter Quarters Press, 1998), 122-23.
 
                        - 2. Don Waite, The Cariboo Gold Rush Story (Surrey: Hancock House, 1988), 34.
 
                        - 3. G. P. V. Akrigg and H. B. Akrigg, British Columbia Chronicle, 1847-1871 (Victoria: Discovery Press, 1977), 212.
 
                        - 4. Ibid., 257-58.
 
                        - 5. Richard Wright, Barkerville, Williams Creek, Cariboo, 122-23.
 
                        - 6. Geneaology: Abbott, Joel, Royal BC Museum.