
Route of the Douglas Road (water portions in blue, land portions in red) and the Cariboo Road (green)
The 'Douglas Road', aka the 'Lillooet Trail', 'Harrison Trail' or 'Lakes Route', was a
goldrush-era transportation route from the
British Columbia Coast to the
Interior (NB another route known as the Lillooet Trail was the
Lillooet Cattle Trail, which used some of the same route but was built 25 years later). Over 30,000 men are reckoned to have travelled the route in, although by the end of the 1860s it was virtually abandoned due to the construction of the
Cariboo Wagon Road, which bypassed the region.
History
Originally traversed by
HBC employees in 1828 and charted by
HBC explorer
Alexander Caulfield Anderson in 1846, the route was heavily travelled by prospectors seeking to avoid the dangers of the
Fraser Canyon to access the gold-bearing bars of the
Fraser around today's
Lillooet. Pressure for an alternative route to the Upper Fraser had mounted in the wake of the
Fraser Canyon War of the winter of 1859, and miners were wary of travelling through the territory of the
Nlaka'pamux (Thompson Indians), even though the war was over.
Thousands had travelled the route already, in nightmarish conditions including heavy rain and even heavier infestations of
mosquitos, when Governor
Sir James Douglas decided to formalize the route with the construction of a wagon road over the land portions in order to avert starvation among the thousands already on the upper
Fraser. As one of the very first acts of the newly-incorporated
Colony of British Columbia, the Governor commissioned the building of the road in an unusual road-development scheme whereby men willing to work on the road would invest twenty-five dollars each, which would be paid back in goods upon reaching Cayoosh (
Lillooet).
Five hundred men, in two teams of two hundred and fifty and comprised of a cosompolitan mix of
British,
Americans,
Chinese,
Mexicans,
Scandinavians,
Kanakas (Hawaiians),
Germans and others signed up for the job. Controversy erupted at the end of construction over whether prices at the
Port Douglas end of the trail or the more expensive rates at
Lillooet would be used to reckon the reimbursement as promised. The Governor settled finally on the cheaper
Port Douglas prices.
But the construction work was of very poor condition, such that when the
Royal Engineers resurveyed the route a year later it was unusable, and further public funds were dedicated to fixing and improving it, adding bridges and taking down steep hills. Despite their efforts the route was little-used by 1861 or so, although it remained in use by locals and the occasional traveller for years afterwards. Regular
steamer service to and from
Port Douglas ended in the
1890s, although small-steamer traffic on
Anderson and
Seton Lakes continued for decades after, ending on
Seton Lake only in the 1950s.
Description

The last leg of the Douglas Road, near Lillooet, June 1910 (Photo:
Frank SwannellThe route begins at
Port Douglas, British Columbia, at the head of
Harrison Lake and the head of river navigation from the
Strait of Georgia. From there a land portion of the route follows the lower
Lillooet River to Port Lillooet at the south end of
Lillooet Lake, where steamers and canoes carried travellers to Port Pemberton, at the mouth of the
Birkenhead River near present-day
Mount Currie.
The next land portion of the route, known as the Long Portage or the Pemberton Portage, follows the lower
Birkenhead River then diverges from it to Birken Lake (aka Summit Lake or Gates Lake) and then via the
Gates River to present-day D'Arcy at the head of
Anderson Lake, then known as Port Anderson. From there a motley variety of watercraft, including a few small steamers and the ubiquitous native
canoe, ferried travellers to the Short Portage (today known as
Seton Portage). There packers and ultimately a short mule-drawn "railway" shuttled men and freight to the head of
Seton Lake, where another collection of steamers carried them to the foot of that lake and a final five-mile wagon road to the boomtowns of Cayoosh Flat, Parsonville and Marysville (today's
Lillooet).
In response to the
Cariboo Gold Rush, a
toll road from there to
Fort Alexandria was built by entrepreneur
Gustavus Blin Wright, followed the
Fraser Canyon for about twenty miles, then cut up eastwards onto the
Cariboo Plateau via the town of
Clinton, where the later
Cariboo Wagon Road met the older route.
Lillooet was numbered as "Mile 0" of this road, with its roadhouses taking their name from their distance from a certain point on
Lillooet's Main Street.
See also
★
Cariboo Road
★
Old Cariboo Road
★
Whatcom Trail
★
Okanagan Trail
★
River Trail
★
Lillooet Cattle Trail
★
Pemberton Trail
★
Similkameen Trail
★
Dewdney Trail