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Cariboo Map Hat Creek Ranch Pollards Cornish Ranch and Roadhouse |
Retired Hudson's Bay Company Chief trader Donald McLean and his family moved from Kamloops to the area of Hat Creek and the Bonaparte River in 1860.
Modern maps show these lots lying west of the Bonaparte River, and intersected by the old Cariboo Wagon Road that was completed in the summer of 1863.
The present highway is on the east side, not the west side, of the Bonaparte. Hat Creek, flowing from the west, empties into the Bonaparte just east of the present boundary of Lot 94.
In 1861, McLean and his sons constructed a log stopping house beside the Cariboo Trail.
It appears from reports that the old McLean cabin at the mouth of Hat Creek was moved to its present location in the 1880s by William Cargile who bought the property in 1881.
The original walls of this building form the core of the Hat Creek House.
Donald McLean and others established ranchers and roadhouses along the newly built Cariboo Wagon Road provided feed for the hardworking horses, and accommodations for the weary drivers and passengers.
It would have been about a dollar a night in the early days to stay one night at the ranch, which would be the equivalent of $50.00 today.
Few would have had beds similar to this one shown here.
According to an interpreter at Hat Creek Ranch, "the dining area displayed here are the few pieces that are original to the house." It was said to be brought to the house in 1862, for the daughter-in-law of Donald McLean.
In 1864 McLean joined a posse in search of the murderers of a survey party, it was during this event that he was shot and killed.
A man named George Dunn acquired ownership of this land between 1866 and 1871.
George Dunn bought out Hat Creek after Donald McLean was shot, which was possible because McLean never signed his pre-emption papers.
The first room in the house was originally a single story, and was just a dirt floor.
Different additions were made over the years including a second floor added in 1872.
A partition wall was created to make a ladies' washroom.
The wallpaper you see here was brought from England. There was next to no insulation in this building which made the summers warm and the winters very cold.
The Harper Brothers acquired Hat Creek Ranch in 1872 through a mortgage foreclosure.
A man named William Cargile purchased Hat Creek Ranch in 1881 and ran its hotel through a series of managers.
The hotel saloon was a popular place for travellers to socialize. After the Canadian Pacific Railway arrived at Ashcroft in 1886, Cargile established the Cargile Hotel there. He now lies in the Ashcroft cemetery with many other pioneers of the area.
Steve Tingley was a transportation baron whose career began as a stagecoach driver with Barnard's Express at the start of the Gold Rush.
Steve Tingley became its owner and renamed it the B.C. Express locally known as the BX. In 1894 he bought Hat Creek Ranch and the hotel and made numerous improvements.
Many Cariboo towns have street names commemorating Tingley's career.
Born in Germany Charles Doering earned a fortune as a brewer in Vancouver with a passion for hunting game birds. He retired at Hat Creek Ranch in 1912 where game was plentiful and easily found in open range.
In 1990, most of the property was acquired by the British Columbia Heritage Trust to preserve and present a chapter of provincial history.
Site produced by Industrial Art Internet Group, 1999. Maintained by fishAbility |