Northern British Columbia
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In West Quesnel, BC
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West Fraser Timber Park.
Walking Trail
North of Quesnel, BC
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Named after Ah Bau, a Chinese miner: Ahbau Lake, Ahbau Creek and Ahbau Creek Bridge. All of these sites are situated north of Quesnel, in an area around Cinema that stretches east to the Cottonwood River in the Bowron Lake watershed. The Lake and Creek are relatively unaltered natural landscape features. The Bridge is a steel trestle bridge with a plate girder spanning Ahbau Creek. ( Source : "Canada Historic Place")
Ahbau Creek Bridge.
"The Lightning Hotel" - The last standing building…
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Gold was found in nearby Lightning Creek in 1861 resulting in the towns of Stanley and Van Winkle springing up as part of the Cariboo Gold Rush. Stanley is located in the Cariboo region of British Columbia’s central interior. Stanley can be found by following Highway 26 east from the city of Quesnel. A 45-minute drive along Highway 26 passes by the appropriately named Stanley Road on which the town of Stanley was located.
Stanley once had a sprawling population that surpassed the town of Barkerville at one time due to the gold in the area. Passing by the vicinity one would not even know that there was ever a bristling town full of gold-hungry prospectors and their families. A lone building that is now being renovated is the little visible evidence from the gravel road that there was anything ever there. But just a few steps into the now thick underbrush reveals plenty of evidence of the town of Stanley. An abundance of scrap wood, metal and remnants of buildings can be seen buried in the brush and earth. By the end of the 19th century (1800s), Stanley had a population that surpassed the nearby town of Barkerville; Over half the population of Stanley consisted of Chinese.
The Lightning Hote; in Stanley, BC
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Gold was found in nearby Lightning Creek in 1861 resulting in the towns of Stanley and Van Winkle springing up as part of the Cariboo Gold Rush. Stanley is located in the Cariboo region of British Columbia’s central interior. Stanley can be found by following Highway 26 east from the city of Quesnel. A 45-minute drive along Highway 26 passes by the appropriately named Stanley Road on which the town of Stanley was located.
Stanley once had a sprawling population that surpassed the town of Barkerville at one time due to the gold in the area. Passing by the vicinity one would not even know that there was ever a bristling town full of gold-hungry prospectors and their families. A lone building that is now being renovated is the little visible evidence from the gravel road that there was anything ever there. But just a few steps into the now thick underbrush reveals plenty of evidence of the town of Stanley. An abundance of scrap wood, metal and remnants of buildings can be seen buried in the brush and earth. By the end of the 19th century (1800s), Stanley had a population that surpassed the nearby town of Barkerville; Over half the population of Stanley consisted of Chinese.
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10 Mile Lake. (Quesnel, BC)
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MacLeese Lake, BC
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Old shack on the Cariboo Highway.
Dragon Lake
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Fraser River.
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Spot at the Fraser River in Quesnel, BC
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