- Видео 50
- Просмотров 729 877
Colin M
Канада
Добавлен 2 окт 2011
Видео
Kettle Valley Railway West
Просмотров 24 тыс.8 лет назад
Gold Trails and Ghost Towns - Kettle Valley Railway West (#809): After more than 50 years of operation the railroad line was abandoned. While the rails no longer exist, the right-of-way is virtually intact with tunnels, bridges and trestles marking the historic route.
Kettle Valley Railway East
Просмотров 10 тыс.8 лет назад
Gold Trails and Ghost Towns - Kettle Valley Railway East (#702): The Kettle Valley Railway (K.V.R.) tapped the resources of storied mining towns like Hedley, Carmi, Beaverdell and Copper Mountain, passing through scores of whistle stops, many of them with Shakespearean names like Romeo, Juliet, and Falstaff.
The Kettle Valley Railway
Просмотров 25 тыс.8 лет назад
Gold Trails and Ghost Towns - The Kettle Valley Railway (#21): One of the wonders of the Old West, under the sure hand of engineer Andrew McCulloch this unique railroad traversed some of the most difficult grades on the Pacific Slope. A branch line of the CPR, it outflanked the U.S. based Great Northern Railroad after a gargantuan struggle between the two companies.
Lost Golden Plate Ledge
Просмотров 36 тыс.8 лет назад
Gold Trails and Ghost Towns - Lost Golden Plate Ledge (#22): Lost Golden Plate Ledge, located south of the Canadian-U.S. border near Grand Forks, B.C., was discovered by accident in the early 1900's. After leaving the area, it's founder was never able to relocate the mine.
Lost Gladstone Mine
Просмотров 27 тыс.8 лет назад
Gold Trails and Ghost Towns - Lost Gladstone Mine (#901): Located somewhere near Christina Lake in southeastern British Columbia, the gold from this lost mine would be worth millions of dollars today.
Lost Slumach Mine
Просмотров 76 тыс.8 лет назад
Gold Trails and Ghost Towns - Lost Slumach Mine (#505): One of the greatest treasure stories from Canada's Old West includes a murder, a hanging and a lost mine. Historian Bill Barlee, who researched this story for 20 years, believes the treasure is still there waiting to be rediscovered.
Sternwheelers of the Lower Fraser
Просмотров 7 тыс.8 лет назад
Gold Trails and Ghost Towns - Sternwheelers of the Lower Fraser (#908): When gold was discovered in massive quantities in the Cariboo District in 1861, the stern wheelers leapt to the forefront along the Fraser River. The Canadian Pacific and Great Northern railways fought to control the waterways of British Columbia.
Sternwheelers of the West Kootenay
Просмотров 17 тыс.8 лет назад
Gold Trails and Ghost Towns - Sternwheelers of the West Kootenay (#608): At one time dozens of stern wheelers plied the inland kales of the West Kootenay, and their captains were the lords of the lakes. Gracious vessels with names like Minto, Moyie, Nasookin, Kokanee, and International ruled the Kootenay, Slocan, and Arrow Lakes, stopping at every mining camp along the way.
Gold Trails and Ghost Towns - Prince George
Просмотров 15 тыс.8 лет назад
Gold Trails and Ghost Towns - Prince George (#703): The history of the three Georges: Fort George, Prince George, and South Fort George, and how they all eventually became the town now called Prince George.
Gold Trails and Ghost Towns - Lytton
Просмотров 26 тыс.8 лет назад
Lytton (#402): Originally an Interior Salish Camp, this quiet place was changed forever in the 1850’s when thousands of men searching for gold streamed into the area.
Gold Trails and Ghost Towns - Yale
Просмотров 20 тыс.8 лет назад
Yale (#7): Once the metropolis of the Fraser River, at least two hundred miners lost their lives along the banks of this river in the rush to make their fortune around Yale.
Gold Trails and Ghost Towns - Bill Miner
Просмотров 21 тыс.8 лет назад
Bill Miner (#512): Billy Miner, the most notorious train robber in British Columbia history, was known as the "Hands Up" robber for using this infamous phrase on his victims.
Gold Trails and Ghost Towns - Rossland
Просмотров 25 тыс.8 лет назад
Rossland (#4): Rossland was the "Golden City" of British Columbia. From the depths of fabulous Red Mountain celebrated mines like the LeRoi, Centre Star, War Eagle, Sourdough Alley, to resplendent Columbia Avenue, there were few minings towns like it anywhere in B.C.
Gold Trails and Ghost Towns - K & S Railway
Просмотров 16 тыс.8 лет назад
Gold Trails and Ghost Towns - K & S Railway
Gold Trails and Ghost Towns - Granite City
Просмотров 20 тыс.8 лет назад
Gold Trails and Ghost Towns - Granite City
Gold Trails and Ghost Towns - Princeton
Просмотров 18 тыс.8 лет назад
Gold Trails and Ghost Towns - Princeton
Gold Trails and Ghost Towns - Hedley
Просмотров 26 тыс.8 лет назад
Gold Trails and Ghost Towns - Hedley
Gold Trails and Ghost Towns - Fort St. James
Просмотров 15 тыс.8 лет назад
Gold Trails and Ghost Towns - Fort St. James
Gold Trails and Ghost Towns - Hudson's Bay Company
Просмотров 11 тыс.8 лет назад
Gold Trails and Ghost Towns - Hudson's Bay Company
Gold Trails and Ghost Towns - Silverton
Просмотров 11 тыс.8 лет назад
Gold Trails and Ghost Towns - Silverton
Gold Trails and Ghost Towns - Phoenix
Просмотров 19 тыс.8 лет назад
Gold Trails and Ghost Towns - Phoenix
Gold Trails and Ghost Towns - Barkerville
Просмотров 16 тыс.8 лет назад
Gold Trails and Ghost Towns - Barkerville
Gold Trails and Ghost Towns - Yukon 1896
Просмотров 18 тыс.8 лет назад
Gold Trails and Ghost Towns - Yukon 1896
Gold Trails and Ghost Towns - Rock Creek
Просмотров 16 тыс.8 лет назад
Gold Trails and Ghost Towns - Rock Creek
Gold Trails and Ghost Towns - Lightning Creek
Просмотров 17 тыс.8 лет назад
Gold Trails and Ghost Towns - Lightning Creek
Gold Trails and Ghost Towns - Greenwood
Просмотров 20 тыс.8 лет назад
Gold Trails and Ghost Towns - Greenwood
Gold Trails and Ghost Towns - Midway
Просмотров 17 тыс.8 лет назад
Gold Trails and Ghost Towns - Midway
I just discovered this series. I love it. This is on par if not better than contemporary historical documentaries.❤ I'd love to sit down with these two good old boys!
You know what's really sad is, in 2024 I don't know which is worse Canada or the United States.
Im pretty sure i watched every episode back in late 70s I actually have a couple books written by NL Barlee.
History channel is re-telling this story with Curse of Oak Island type story telling. I got more info here than that current show.
Iam still captivated each time when I watch these shows, as a young teenager in the 70’s my dad and I would watch every episode every Saturday! Now that I’ve taken up gold panning as a hobby, and reading books on the history of mining in BC I can only imagine how hard life was back in the gold rush hay day! Thank you for these priceless time capsules of BC history! Bill was a true story teller and is truly missed !
I vaguely recall travelling up the canyon as a 6 or 7 year old and being terrified of the cantilevered roadway perched over the roaring Fraser. This would have been during the mid 50’s or so. If Bill or Mike travelled it in 1956, then it must have been true. I always thought of it as part of a nightmare!
Good story! Miss that show . Mr.ballen just did an episode on this. Now Im scouring google earth . Found some interesting stuff. White creek, bedrock at the top,boxed in canyons and all. Fun stuff. Mike said it would be like this.
I met Mr. Barley at the celebrations in Hedley B.C. years ago.
I grew up in Penticton, and used to play on the SS Sicamous. It was just docked there for years and years, before the city fixed it up and turned it into a museum. I thinks it a restaurant now. Memories.
Bill should admonish the camerman behind him for filming his huge bald-spot
I remember watching this program on CBC back in the 80's while growing up in Golden BC . Living in Fernie BC now for nearly 30 years, I find so much value and cultural significands from programs like this .More - so as I grow older and continue to explore fascinating local history and appreciate the toll and turbulence of that era, craftsmanship and quality . I wish there was more of this content available on the internet these days.
B C Canada the great gold rush what a time to live in
I live here in BC right on the gold rush trail 60 feet from my front door so I enjoy these videos
You go to old digs and you can find gold were the white guys worked but were the Chinese worked it is cleaned out they did a good job they missed nothing they were very good miners I live in this area
Bill sure did know his stuff I have panned in some of the sites he talked about I did not hit it big but I did find some nice small nuggets and flakes Bill will be missed if you would like to try panning watch these videos Bill gave good info about were to look
I watch this history and wonder what the future history will play out as purple haired paracetamol and pro non pirates
Volcanic Brown sure got around in BC
Sounds like the great Canadian rail road war great story
What is that piano jingle called that they used for the intro music on this show?
Lytton totally destroyed by Wildfire on June 30, 2021. Lytton was destroyd by fires frequently.. 1931, 1937, 1949, ,,
Love these episodes.
Yeah the one guy really seems to know everything you really knows this stuff
Oilberta
It's sad that the millions of Americans who flooded in during the BC-Alberta gold rush sat by and let the British claim the territory for Canada! Fucking traitors! Now my Canadian coworkers, who are their descendants of these treasonous Americans, in N. Dakota say they wish their provinces were part of the US!
I remembering watching these when I was a kid. Great memories!
my great grandparents and grand parents along with a handful of aunts and uncles moved to kaslo in the mid 40's from the coast. i was born in 1949 in vancouver and i don't have a memory of it but in 1951 my mom brought me to kaslo for the family to meet me and we made the last leg of the trip on the moyie.
Must have been rough building in the winter months.
I have Pierre Burton's book! Fascinating!!
You can still find gold in Dawson city today.
A book named, KLONDIKE, written by Pierre Burton, Canadian author, confirms this story. Excellent book!! Yes, Jim Skookum, the Indigenous man, found the motherlode. Its all true.
There's a place Australia they discovered 7 times the amount of the Klondike.
Today's gold price is just over $2300 oz. American. Some say gold will be $5000. Oz. In 5 years. American dollars.
The highway past my farm in Alberta, highway 633 was the Great Northern railway till 1936. Its not unusual for families to continue with the profession the family knows, including women taking up their father or husband's profession.
Great storey . What untold history in BC! Great area! So long for now and remember- every day is a treasure!!
These are priceless stories, I say, driving out of Pentiction to Kelwona at 10.30pm
There are still immense treasures out there! The greatest being salvation through Christ! Don't neglect it- Hell is waiting and continually expanding her borders!
I knew a man,mr Gadsby that prospected that area a lot and staked a few decent claims up there problem was getting it out circa 1964 4 grs per ton on grab samples
Thanks to Mr Barlee's help - the Mascot Mine Buildings are now a British Columbia Heritage Site. Visit the Hedley Museum for more stories about Hedley's mining history.
Thank you for your hometown stories of our beautiful British Columbia
About a week before the most recent Lytton fire in 2021 that destroyed the town, I enjoyed coffee and food during a break before heading up into the canyon overlooking the confluence. Lytton still has not been rebuilt, despite the federal and provincial governments promises to fund a complete rebuild of every house & business It’s sad. Lytton is probably my favorite spot in the canyon. I’ve spent all my life driving the canyon , hiking the canyon and the mountains around the villages.
Well great love these 2 used to watch this in the 1970s ?? they are the very best of the top no one is better⛏️🏆 PS and Bill barley also produce some books which are very excellent have fun looking for the books they're there ⛏️🤔
Interesting story. A few minor details left out. While he was on his second time at San Quentin, he and his cell partner tried to escape. They had gotten ahold of a few tools and were working on their cell door in the old Spanish block. They had it all planned, but another inmate informed the guards. The guards set up an armed watch in another building facing the Spanish Block. On the night they put their plan into action, the two inmates got out of their cell and proceeded towards the stairs. The armed guard shot both of them. The cell partner died, but Bill got shot in the cheek and survived. The Spanish Block was torn down in the 1920's-30's where the Adjustment Center now stands. I love history. After working at the prison for 32 years, I learned quite alot. After many times working in the Adjustment Center, it always amused me that I was within feet of where he was shot. Another detail. This case went to the Marin County Grand Jury because the staff laid in wait for the two to escape. Nothing ever came of it.
The good news is that they are refurbishing that mine. It is closed right now April 2024 but will be open for touring eventually.
This is amazing. The you said he asked his uncle last year in 1987 about a mine. That means this video was from 1988. That’s awesome these older videos are on RUclips to preserve information. Kind of reminds me of terry carters channel where he interviews old miners or story tellers about gold or even Native American stuff.
Denim jackets are popular on this show.
It's the Canadian tuxedo. Jean jackets are standard issue for Canadians.
@@vadenk4433 Its a chill style for a chill place i guess.
Too funny, as I’m watching this I am camping overnight at the smoke stack in Greenwood. No trains to run me over any more. Such a cool town!😎
Lytton sure has had its dealings with fires. The last one a couple of years ago wiped it completely out. Hopefully they will rebuild it. I feel for the people who have suffered. Terrible thing.
Would have thought New Dener or Silverton would be the smallest incorporated town
These programs these 2 put togather are price less.Used to Watch these on Saturday mornings better vhs came out 🙏🏆🤔❤️
Thank you so much for this video! I was introduced to the SS Minto through a song by Mullingar that, as a bluenoser living in BC, captured my heart and imagination. We love our boats too! Despite having booked a week to visit Nakusp in 2020, Covid and on going serious disappointments of life prevented my visit. But I’m coming to visit Nakusp this July and I’m grateful for the information both of you shared! Thank you!
The kokiney sank in my family’s property I can swim down to it
@lukemacsteven3735 my Great Grandfather worked on the SS Kokanee, may I ask which lake does she lie? Thank you
@@Jack-2day kootney lake
@@lukemacsteven3735Thank you! Cheers