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  • 52 VICTORIA ILLUSTRATED. has been before said, be able to turn out 150,000 feet daily when it resumes operations. The following table will give an idea of the export of lumber from the Province of British Columbia for the last ten years : 1881 $172,647 1882 362,875 1883 407,624 1884 458,365 1885 262,071 1886 $194,488 1887 235,913 1888 441,957 1889 449,026 STRENGTH OF BRITISH COLUMBIA TIMBER,. Shewing the weights, specific gravities, deflections, breaking and crushing loads of some of the British Columbia Woods. The pieces tested for transverse strength were one inch square, with a span of one foot, supported at both ends and loaded at the centre. The pieces tested for crushing were rectangular, and twice as long as they were thick. All the pieces were fair average specimens of timber, partly seasoned, but free from knots and flaws. The results obtained from exceptionally good or bad specimens are not included in this table. [table data excluded; image only available] THE MINES. Although the Hudson Bay Company established their chief trading post for the North Pacific coast at Victoria in 1842, it is not due to this fact that British Columbia was brought prominently before the world. The Company of Adventurers confined their attention to trading with the Indians for furs, although they made an unsuccessful attempt to develop the coal mines at Fort Rupert. It will be impossible here to exhaustively discuss the mining history and prospects of British Columbia, but a few general remarks will suffice to outline the past, and show that the future of mining is bright, and that it must become our chief industry. The discovery of gold on the Fraser river bars in 1858 caused a rush of miners from California to the new field, the route chiefly being to Victoria, and thence by means of steamer, sailing vessel, row boat or canoe, to the Fraser. Some of these adventurous spirits penetrated the interior, and in 186o gold was found in Cariboo. The rush to Williams, Lightning, and adjacent creeks, for several years, at times caused Victoria's population to swell to twenty or thirty thousand people, housed in any kind of dwelling available. Victoria has always been the headquarters for supplies, and the source of supply for the province, then established, has never changed. After the discovery of the Cariboo gold fields, other rich finds were made, but none so important, and the claim that the province owes its existence to the gold wealth of Cariboo is, in the main, correct. Cariboo, Lillooet, Kootenay, Yale, Cassiar, Omineca, and the Peace River, have all been worked for their alluvial gold, and while the outputhas decreased year by year, there are many among the best informed who claim that persistent and intelligent prospecting would bring to light as rich districts as those which have furnished the fifty millions or so of dollars now given as the official return of the gold product during the prosecution of gold-mining in British Columbia. The precious metal deposits are not confined to any particular belt, but are found in the islands of the coast, and in the several ranges of mountains to the eastern slope of the Rockies, the sands of the Peace and Saskatchewan rivers carrying fine gold far east of the mountains. The deposits, however, follow the same lines as those to the south of the boundary line, being closer together as the ranges of mountains running north and south on the American continent approach Alaska. Although a quartz excitement visited Cariboo as the placer claims gave out, there was no real progress in this branch of mining until within recent years. The Cariboo road is probably one of the finest highways in the world, but the distance between source of supply and the mine was so great, and the cost of transportation so severe, that it was impossible to successfully or profitably work quartz deposits. During the past ten years, however, prospecting for gold and silver quartz has been diligently prosecuted in the various districts of the province, and many valuable deposits have been located. It was not until after the advent of the Canadian Pacific Railway to the north, and the Northern Railway to the south, that anything really important was accomplished in quartz mining. These two railways made access into the districts of Kootenay and Yale comparatively easy and cheap,
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