Hell’s Gate is a narrow pinch of 34 m within the 
Fraser Canyon, along the 
Fraser River.
1 Its name appears to have originated from 
Simon Fraser’s account of portaging around 
the gates of hell
 in his descent of 
the Fraser in 1808.
2 By the time of the Fraser River Gold Rush, 1857-58, miners ensured that the name
                  stuck, and this feature, which boasts and astonishing peak flow of over 900 million
                  litres per minute, was likely an intimidating sentinel to 
the Fraser’s various northward bars and other gold-mining sites.
3Today, visitors can view Hell’s Gate from the safety of an aerial tram, unless they
                  wish to raft the rapids, of course.
4 Hell’s Gate was also known as  “Upper Narrows”, or “Big Canon”, as seen in 
this despatch.