S. D. Levi was part of a Jewish, merchant community that supplied goods to the
Cariboo gold fields.
1 Originally from
San Francisco,
2 Levi partnered with
John Boas, as general-provisions merchants, and he made his fortune in the famished
Cariboo region.
3 A letter from the area described the conditions:
People above are nearly starving, and thousands are rushing back to save them[selves]
from famine. The only parties that have anything to sell are Levi and Boas, and they are making a heap of money.
4
As one of the few vendors with provisions, Levi left
Barkerville as one of the richest merchants, with $20,000 in
1862,
5 but the journey back was difficult. When he left
Quesnel Forks for
New Westminster, the temperature was at -27 degrees Celsius and a metre of snow forced him to follow
the trail close to the
Fraser River.
6
After leaving the
Cariboo region and
New Westminster, Levi moved his family to
Nanaimo, where he was a charter member of the
Nanaimo Freemasons Lodge, no. 3, and Caledonia Lodge, no. 6.
7 Unfortunately, three of Levi’s four children died within nine days of each other
in
1875, and were brought down to
Victoria to be buried in the Jewish cemetery.
- 1. Marie Elliott, Gold and Grand Dreams (Victoria: Horsdal and Schubart, 2000), 13.
- 2. Robie L. Reid, Historical Notes and Biographical Sketches: 1848-1935 (Vancouver: Chapman and Warwick Ltd.), 16.
- 3. William Henry Knight, Hand-book Almanac for the Pacific States: an Official Register And Business Directory
... for the Year 1864 (San Francisco: H. H. Bancroft, 1864), 420.
- 4. Elliott, Gold and Grand Dreams, 52.
- 5. Ibid., 59.
- 6. Ibid., 44.
- 7. Reid, Historical Notes and Biographical Sketches: 1848-1935, 16.