Grand Canyon of the Fraser
Template:Short description Script error: No such module "Settlement short description".Script error: No such module "Infobox".Template:Template otherScript error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".Script error: No such module "Check for conflicting parameters".Expression error: Unexpected < operator. The Grand Canyon of the Fraser is a short gorge on the upper Fraser River in the Robson Valley region of east central British Columbia.[1] The location, about Script error: No such module "convert". south-southwest of Hutton, became part of the Sugarbowl-Grizzly Den Provincial Park and Protected Area in 2000.Template:Sfn The canyon head was about Script error: No such module "convert". by river from Fort George,[2] and is about Script error: No such module "convert". due east of downtown Prince George.
The name is commonly confused even by journalists with the Fraser Canyon, which runs south from the city of Williams Lake to the town of Hope.[3]
Locale
The canyon is about Script error: No such module "convert". in length. Striking Green's Rock in the upper rapids was the single largest contributor to deaths. Allegedly, a surveyor called Green died there around 1908.Template:Sfn The two sets of falls in the upper canyon, each about Script error: No such module "convert". high,Template:Sfn were surrounded by large hazardous boulders. In 1912, Foley, Welch and Stewart (FW&S), the principal contractor for the Grand Trunk Pacific Railway (GTP), engaged Frank Freeman to dynamite the boulders. The falls also disappeared, increasing the dangerous current.Template:Sfn
A lake connects the upper and lower rapids.Template:Sfn During high water, a huge whirlpool in the lower rapids pulled small vessels under.Template:Sfn Eddies form whirlpools Script error: No such module "convert". deep, and Script error: No such module "convert". wide, which can suck in large floating objects.Template:Sfn
First Nations and explorers
First Nations people have travelled the river in canoes for generations. In 1825, James McMillan surveyed a trail along the upper river for the Hudson's Bay Company (HBC).Template:Sfn In March 1827, George McDougall trekked upstream along the frozen river.Template:Sfn
When high water, First Nations would portage canoe contents, and sometimes canoes themselves, around the canyon.Template:Sfn Between 1906 and 1910, First Nations crews earned good money piloting GTP surveyors through the whitewaterTemplate:Sfn and were highly regarded for their river skills.Template:Sfn Crews left vulnerable valuables, such as watches, with the portage party, which would trek around the obstacle.Template:Sfn
Overlanders and successors
In 1860, four prospectors carrying $1,600 in gold successfully travelled upstream, possibly inspiring the Overlanders.Template:Sfn The first recorded drowning was one of the Overlanders in 1862.Template:Sfn The party lost 10 scouting canoes at this spot.Template:Sfn They portaged their supplies around the first two stretches of wild water. For the third stretch, a small crew remained on the rafts loaded with supplies. Although sustaining some damage, each craft reached safety below.Template:Sfn Back upriver, seven stragglers fell overboard and one drowned. Later that month, another victim drowned.Template:Sfn
The next year, a small party traversed the canyon, but three died. Account details differ widely, but the essence of the story was that their craft was swamped and the men were marooned either on the sandbar in the middle of the river or on an inaccessible part of the shore. In due course, all died, but one had been cannibalized.Template:Sfn
In winter 1874–75, a survey team, comprising eight men with six dog sleds, passed upstream along the frozen river.Template:Sfn In the early 1880s, Sandford Fleming and his survey team came downstream.Template:Sfn
Railway anticipated
In 1909, the Nechacco was the first sternwheeler to navigate the treacherous canyon,[4] assisted by ropes to the shores.Template:Sfn Over the following years, sternwheelers were winched up the rapids by ropes that connected onboard capstans with rings placed in the canyon walls.Template:Sfn That year, a three-man survey party heading upriver lost their canoe and supplies. In 1910, the small steamer Fort Fraser passed through en route to Tête Jaune,Template:Sfn and George Williams paddled a Script error: No such module "convert". dugout canoe both ways for the HBC.Template:Sfn
In wintertime, dog sleds hauled along the snow-covered ice.Template:Sfn
Canoes carried supplies upstream from Fort George to GTP surveyors above the canyon. Capsizing and drownings were common.Template:Sfn Fort George also supplied crews clearing and grading eastward from Tête Jaune.Template:Sfn In July 1912, when the rail head reached westward to that point,[5] the freight direction switched from upriverTemplate:Sfn to downriver, carried largely on scows.Template:Sfn FW&S launched numerous scows to transport supplies and equipment to advance depots along the railway right-of-way.Template:Sfn
A group of rivermen, called canyon cats, charged steep fees to pilot various craft through the canyon.Template:Sfn A scow could be carrying 20 or 30 tons of freight.Template:Sfn However, new settlers would often portage their personal possessions around the canyon, hoping to meet their raft downstream.Template:Sfn
The sternwheelers Operator and Conveyor were transported in pieces to Tête Jaune, reassembled, and relaunched in 1912. FW&S used these vessels on the Fraser run to the canyon. Powerboats also moved scows through the rapids.Template:Sfn Roy Spurr (later at Willow River, Penny, and Upper Fraser) operated a café and rooming house during 1912 and 1913 above the canyon.Template:Sfn
During summer 1912, FW&S built a huge warehouse above the upper canyon, connected by a horse tramway to a reloading warehouse at the lake. Freight was unloaded from the sternwheelers, sent by tramway, and reloaded onto scowsTemplate:Sfn for supplying the construction camps.[6] That summer, using 30 tons of dynamite, experienced rock men removed some of the larger obstructions from the steamboat channel here and at other Fraser rapids.[7] Although not limited to the canyon, 80 were reported drowned prior to the river freezing in 1912. That winter, hundreds of horse teams hauled freight to the canyon.Template:Sfn
Railway advancing
Following the 1913 thaw, wrecks and drownings continued despite the improved river flow.Template:Sfn During the spring high water, a whirlpool sucked down and destroyed a FW&S scow carrying a mile of steel cable, a hoisting boiler, and steel rails, but the crew reached shore safely. When a J.M. Olsen & Co. scow struck a rock, the impact sent Mike Johnson overboard and knocked the steersman unconscious. Sucked under, Johnson, a strong swimmer, managed to reboard. Clearing the canyon, they completed the journey without further mishap. On its first round trip for the season, the sternwheeler B.C. Express required three lines to navigate the canyon going upriver, but when returning ran the canyon untethered and without difficulty.[8] This steamer carried the mail between Fort George and Tête Jaune, the only vessel offering a scheduled service.Template:Sfn
From June, an onsite police constable ensured each scow doubled its crew to eight men and offloaded for portaging any cargo in excess of 15 tons.[9] Large warning signs were placed above the canyon at this time.[10] FW&S stationed a boat in the lake for rescuing survivors from upper canyon mishaps.Template:Sfn Of the 12 drownings reported for the period to early August, the only body recovered was at Mile 176, three miles below the canyon.[11]
From August, the low-level rail bridge erected at Dome Creek blocked steamer traffic, ending an era.Template:Sfn Charles S. Sager operated a barber shop/bathhouse on a good-sized scow from September 1913,[12] prior to establishing a bathhouse in Prince George in early 1915.[13]
Later years
Around 1911, all drowned from a raft carrying about 20 Chinese.Template:Sfn During summer 1936, an inexperienced adventurer in an inflatable canoe survived the rapids.Template:Sfn In 1937, a capsizing canoe almost resulted in drownings below the canyon.[14] From the 1920s to the 1960s, sawmills drove logs through the canyon.Template:Sfn Ray Mueller of Longworth was one of the most experienced canyon users.Template:Sfn In 1966, he blasted the top off Green's Rock.Template:Sfn In 1961, a helicopter carrying three people struck an unmarked cable and plummeted into the river, with one fatality. Up to 200 people are believed drowned over the years.Template:Sfn
Some scenes in Overlanders, tv movie (1979), were filmed at the canyon. Jack Boudreau from Penny and Glen Hooker from Bend were riverboat operators who ferried personnel and equipment to site.Template:Sfn Recreational trails were established in the late 1980s.Template:Sfn
Footnotes
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- ↑
- REDIRECT Template:Cite bcgnis
- ↑ Fort George Herald: 21 Jan 1911; 15 Apr 1911; 20 May 1911; & 3 to 24 Jun 1913
- ↑ Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
- ↑ Fort George Tribune, 25 Jul 1914
- ↑ Fort George Herald, 27 Jul 1912
- ↑ Fort George Herald: 8 Feb 1913 & 13 Sep 1913
- ↑ Fort George Herald, 3 Aug 1912
- ↑ Prince George Citizen, 26 May 1938
- ↑ Fort George Herald, 14 Jun 1913
- ↑ Fort George Herald, 21 Jun 1913
- ↑ Fort George Herald, 16 Aug 1913
- ↑ Fort George Herald, 20 Sep 1913
- ↑ Fort George Herald, 26 Mar 1915
Prince George Post, 10 Apr 1915 - ↑ Prince George Citizen, 3 Jun 1937
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References
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