Close Menu
  • Home
  • Crypto News
  • Tech News
  • Gadgets
  • NFT’s
  • Luxury Goods
  • Gold News
  • Cat Videos
What's Hot

Cat Dance ❤️| Cute kitten #ai #cat #lovecats #cats#catvideos #funny #kittens #catlover 05052025A

May 25, 2025

cat vs mirror #catreaction #funny #catvideos #shaababies #comedy #pets #cute

May 25, 2025

FUNNY PETS! 🤪 😂 | Cute Cat and Dog Videos

May 24, 2025
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
  • Contact Us
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
  • DMCA
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
KittyBNK
  • Home
  • Crypto News
  • Tech News
  • Gadgets
  • NFT’s
  • Luxury Goods
  • Gold News
  • Cat Videos
KittyBNK
Home » How a Black pioneer helped the boom of northern B.C.’s gold rush
Gold News

How a Black pioneer helped the boom of northern B.C.’s gold rush

February 4, 2024No Comments5 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
How a Black pioneer helped the boom of northern B.C.’s gold rush
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

A painting commissioned by the Huble Homestead/Giscome Portage Heritage Society from Richard Estell depicts John Robert Giscome, Henry McDame and two Lheidli T’enneh guides on their travels up to the Peace River Country. (Huble Homestead/Giscome Portage Heritage Society – image credit)

John Robert Giscome left his mark on British Columbia.

A trail and small community north of Prince George, B.C., are named in his honour.

But Krystal Leason, executive director of the Huble Homestead/Giscome Portage Heritage Society in Prince George, says many people don’t know much about the prospector and his role in northern B.C.’s gold rush.

“[People] often assume he’s white and so they’re very surprised to discover that he was actually a Black man from Jamaica, which is pretty neat and really speaks to the early diversity of B.C. and the contributions of Black people to our province’s history,” Leason said.

For Cecil Giscombe,  a writer and professor of English at the University of California Berkeley, learning about the prospector has given him insight into a distant relative.

“The Giscome/Giscombe name, there aren’t very many of us,” Giscombe told CBC News. “It’s a small family and all of us trace our heritage back to the north coast of Jamaica.”

Leason and Giscombe hope more people learn about Giscome’s journey affected travel into northern B.C. for years to come.

“Giscome is kind of a minor figure … [but he] opened up the north for all sorts of mercantile things,” said Giscombe.

John Robert Giscome and Henry McDame were allegedly the first non-Indigenous people to travel on the trail now known as the Giscome Portage Trail. After Giscome publicized knowledge of the shortcut, it became the main way of travel through Northern B.C. during the gold rush.

John Robert Giscome and Henry McDame were allegedly the first non-Indigenous people to travel on the trail now known as the Giscome Portage Trail. After Giscome publicized knowledge of the shortcut, it became the main way of travel through Northern B.C. during the gold rush.

John Robert Giscome and Henry McDame were allegedly the first non-Indigenous people to travel on the trail now known as the Giscome Portage Trail. After Giscome publicized knowledge of the shortcut, it became the main way of travel through Northern B.C. during the gold rush. (Huble Homestead/Giscome Portage Heritage Society)

Retracing ‘a hero’s journey’

Records show Giscome left his hometown of Saint Mary, Jamaica in 1854 to work on California’s Panama Railway.

Giscome and nearly 600 other Black people left California due to discrimination and harassment, according to Giscombe, and settled on Vancouver Island at the invitation of James Douglas, B.C.’s first governor.

“Douglas greeted them happily … he was afraid that British Colombia was about to be annexed by the United States. He was happy to have people who did not like America,” Giscombe said.

Giscome decided to seek his fortune in gold. In Quesnel, he met Bahamian Henry McDame, who joined him to prospect the Peace River country.

As Giscome shared in an 1863 article in the British Colonist newspaper, the pair and a Lheidli T’enneh guide attempted to travel a well-known, but roundabout, route to Fort St. James.

With ice and high water levels impeding their progress, the unnamed guide suggested a shortcut, which Leason says cut a 100-kilometre trip down to just 12 kilometres.

In 1863, John Robert Giscome relayed information about his travels to and through the Peace River country for an article in the British Colonist. The story he relayed of a shortcut between two waterways led to the formation of the Giscome Portage.

In 1863, John Robert Giscome relayed information about his travels to and through the Peace River country for an article in the British Colonist. The story he relayed of a shortcut between two waterways led to the formation of the Giscome Portage.

In 1863, John Robert Giscome relayed information about his travels to and through the Peace River country for an article in the British Colonist. The story he relayed of a shortcut between two waterways led to the formation of the Giscome Portage. (British Colonist archives)

The group was greeted by “a salute of about 30 shots” when they arrived at a Hudson’s Bay Company fort for being the first non-Indigenous people to travel that way, the British Colonist article says.

“It really was a game changer in the way people access the north,” said Leason, adding the article created awareness of the route and prompted it to be named Giscome Portage.

“In the early 1900s when settlement was really booming in Fort George and this region … there’s hundreds of people passing through … for settlement, for mining, for trapping, for prospecting … on Giscome Portage.”

Leason says while not much is known about McDame, records show Giscome “actually struck gold” as a prospector.

She adds he left  $21,000, the equivalent of about $500,000 in today’s dollars, to his Victoria landlady after he died in 1907.

Cecil Giscombe biked and camped from Vancouver to Prince George, B.C. to retrace and better understand the trip taken by his distant relative John Robert Giscome in the 1800s.

Cecil Giscombe biked and camped from Vancouver to Prince George, B.C. to retrace and better understand the trip taken by his distant relative John Robert Giscome in the 1800s.

Cecil Giscombe biked and camped from Vancouver to Prince George, B.C., to retrace and better understand the trip taken by his distant relative in the 1800s. (Cecil Giscombe)

In 1991, Giscombe followed Giscome’s steps through “a hero’s journey,” biking and camping all the way to Prince George.

“I camped [near Giscome Portage] trying to feel authentic and being vaguely nervous about the bears,” said Giscombe, who released books in 1998 and 2000 about his discoveries.

“But walking the portage, just being there and breathing … and you’re just feeling incredibly ebullient like, oh wow, oh sugar, this is beautiful.”

Since then, Giscombe has travelled to Victoria and Jamaica to trace more history, but every year he finds himself back in Prince George to visit friends and walk the trail made popular by a distant, but dear, relative.

For more stories about the experiences of Black Canadians — from anti-Black racism to success stories within the Black community — check out Being Black in Canada, a CBC project Black Canadians can be proud of. You can read more stories here.

(CBC)

Credit: Source link

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Related Posts

4 gold investing moves beginners should make with the price high

July 30, 2024

Fortitude Gold Drills 9.14 Meters Grading 2.33 g/t Gold Within 16.76 Meters Grading 1.58 g/t Gold at Scarlet North

July 30, 2024

First Majestic Announces New High-Grade Gold and Silver Discovery at Santa Elena

July 30, 2024

Those who invested in Serabi Gold (LON:SRB) a year ago are up 163%

July 30, 2024
Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

What's New Here!

Snook Takes Its NFT Play-to-Earn Game to Arbitrum

September 28, 2023

iPhone 16 Pro and Pro Max review: Cameras and customization

September 18, 2024

House Dems call for ethics investigation into Clarence Thomas

November 7, 2023

DOGE Price Confirms Early Bull Phase

May 1, 2025

Zalando sees end-year clothing demand staying weak

November 2, 2023
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Telegram
  • Contact Us
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
  • DMCA
© 2025 kittybnk.com - All Rights Reserved!

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.