Cornish Bar, roughly 6 km south of 
Hope, was one among dozens of gold rush sites worked along the 
Fraser River, largely, from 1858 to 1859. It was named Murderer, or Murderers, Bar in reference to a murder committed there,
                  but 
Douglas found the name distasteful and decreed that it change to Cornish Bar, likely in homage to the men of Cornish descent who worked the area, along with hundreds
                  of others, at the time of 
Douglas's visit in 1858.