Tête Jaune Cache is a community located on the
Fraser River near the
British Columbia-Alberta border. The area is named after Pierre Bostonois, an Iroquois guide with
blond hair who first led HBC explorers west through the
Rocky Mountains pass in 1820. “Tête jaune” is French for
yellow head,
and the Yellowhead Pass is also named after Bostonois.
Tête Jaune Cache became an important travel point on the way to Jasper, and was described
in
this despatch as
remarkable [for] being the western terminus of one of the least elevated and most
accessible passes in the Rocky Mountains.
The community boomed at the beginning of the twentieth century with the establishment
of a supply depot for the Grand Trunk Railway. At one point, Tête Jaune Cache was considered the largest tent city in
British Columbia, with all the trappings associated with living rough in close quarters: gambling,
fighting, and seized whisky smuggled into the fray in the bellies of pig carcasses. Today, however, Tête Jaune Cache is a ghost town.