Fraser River District
               
               
               
               
               
               Today, the lands on and around the 
Fraser River are represented in two districts: the Regional District of Fraser-Cheam, to the south, and the Regional District of Fraser-Fort George, to the north.
During the late 1850s gold rush, however, these districts appear less defined, for
                  example, 
this correspondence inquires as to the present state of the 
various Districts of Fraser's River,
 and this draft of a warrant, enclosed with 
this correspondence, and which appoints 
Douglas as Governor of 
Her majesty's Territories and Possessions in North America,
 includes the 
Fraser's River Territory
 in its list of possessions.
In its most general sense, and as 
this correspondence suggests, these 
Mining Districts
 denoted the lands, sites, and bars worked for gold along 
the Fraser, chiefly, between 
Hope and 
Yale, and through the 
Fraser Canyon. In 1858, it is thought that at least 30,000 gold seekers of various backgrounds,
                  national and otherwise, swarmed 
the Fraser region in search of auriferous reward.