Granite Creek


Day Hike Granite Lakes via Granite Creek โ€” The Mountaineers

new George Gilbert Batstone (1878-1967) arrived at Granite Creek in 1898 to set up mining machinery for the Boston-British Columbia Placer Gold Company. Like so many of the keen, young men arriving in the area, George led a colourful, adventurous life. These memoirs were donated by his Granddaughter, Skip Broderick.


Granite Creek

Granite Creek is a creek and townsite in British Columbia located in the Similkameen region. Granite Creek flows north into the Tulameen River and joins that river approximately one and a half miles to the east of Coalmont, British Columbia. [1] It is assumed Granite Creek yielded more than $500,000 in placer gold since its discovery.


The Granite Creek Archive Images

MINFILE No 092HSE232. Newton Creek flows east to northeast, over a distance of about 11 kilometres, into Granite Creek, west of Princeton. The lower half of the creek cuts through a narrow steep-sided valley while the upper half flows over a broader, more open valley floor. Gold and platinum were produced from gravels in this creek between 1890.


BC Whitewater Granite Creek (Tulameen)

Granite City at the confluence of Granite Creek and the Tulameen River was rapidly built and boosted a population of over 700 in its heyday. It contained a typically Wild West conglomeration of saloons, barbershops, and general stores but the bustle was short lived.


Living the Dream... Sunday, June 22, 2014 (Travel to Granite Creek

Granite Creek, 1888 (George Dawson photo) There was a time when the Similkameen gold rush town of Granite Creek was the third largest centre in British Columbia. Two thousand people streamed in after John Chance discovered gold in 1885 โ€” only Victoria and New Westminster had more people. Chance hit the jackpot while resting beside Granite Creek.


Granite Creek BC Gold Adventures

Granite Creek circa 1886. The cabin of Frenchy, a Chinese immigrant and well-known placer miner, is in the foreground. Placer gold was supposedly first discovered in the Similkameen region of southwestern British Columbia as early as 1852 by trappers working for the Hudson's Bay Co.


BC Whitewater Granite Creek (Tulameen)

In the late 1880s, Granite Creek was the third largest town in BC, following behind Victoria and New Westminster. About 2,000 people called Granite Creek home. Many were Chinese Canadians and American immigrants. Some of the ancestors of those founding pioneers still live in the area.


BC Whitewater Granite Creek (Tulameen)

"In 1885, Granite Creek had 2,000 people living there. It was the third largest town in British Columbia. The only two that were bigger were Victoria and New Westminster," Bob Sterne, with the.


Granite Creek Ghost Town Similkameen Valley

The Granite Creek Cemetery, with numerous fenced plots and headstones, is located on a higher, mostly treed bench, overlooking the Granite Creek Town Site. This historic place includes the Town Site with log building remains and a Chinese section, the west bank of Granite Creek in front of the Town Site, the Cemetery, and wagon roads.


Granite Creek BC Gold Adventures

Granite Creek is a locality in British Columbia, Canada. Granite Creek is situated nearby to Coalmont and Blakeburn. Mapcarta, the open map.


BC Whitewater Granite Creek

Give good old Wikipedia a great new look Install Wikiwand for Chrome "Granite City" is the informal name for the mining settlement located near Granite Creek. Established during the 1885 gold rush, Granite Creek townsite is now a ghost town in the Similkameen region of British Columbia, Canada.


BC Whitewater Granite Creek (Tulameen)

Granite Creek Granite Creek is a creek and townsite in British Columbia located in the Similkameen region. Granite Creek flows north into the Tulameen River and joins that river approximately one and a half miles to the east of Coalmont, British Columbia.


BC Whitewater Granite Creek (Tulameen)

Shuttle The takeout is at Granite Creek Recreation Site just outside of Coalmont, which can be reached by a paved roads branching off Highway 3 in Princeton. Total driving time from Vancouver is 4 hours. The Tulameen zone can also be accessed from the Coquihalla Highway via forest service roads.


Granite Creek & Tulameen River Getaway places, Beautiful places

Welcome to our Website. Stay a while and enjoy the exciting history of Granite Creek. Do you have any stories, documents, photos, or artifacts? Please click here to tell us about them. "White Gold and Black Diamonds - The History of Granite Creek and Coalmont" is now online. Read about the 1885 Granite Creek gold rush and stories about old timers.


BC Whitewater Granite Creek

Granite Creek is a creek and townsite in British Columbia located in the Similkameen region. Granite Creek flows north into the Tulameen River and joins that river approximately one and a half miles to the east of Coalmont, British Columbia. It is assumed Granite Creek yielded more than $500,000 in placer gold since its discovery.


BC Whitewater Granite Creek (Tulameen)

HISTORY Visit the Granite Creek Archive Gateway BC Ministry of Mines records indicate that production of placer gold in this area was first reported in 1877, and may have commenced as early as 1860. In July of 1885 there was a major gold strike, and when word got out there was soon an extrordinary influx of people.

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