Germansen River
The Germansen River, formerly Germansen Creek, is a major south tributary of the Omenica River in the Northern Interior of British Columbia, Canada.[1] The settlement and former gold-rush centre of Germansens Landing is located at its confluence with the Omineca.[2] Along its course is Germansen Lake[3] at 55°41′45″N 124°51′10″W, south of which is the Germansen Range[4] and Mount Germansen.[5]
Name origin
All "Germansen" placenames were named for James Germansen, of St. Paul, Minnesota, who first discovered gold deposits here in 1870, during the Omineca Gold Rush.[6]
Gold placer earnings
The first reported earnings from the benches along Germansen Creek were a little over a year after James Germansen's first strike, with $10,000 reported in the last week of August, 1871. By the end of that season in October, a total of $400,000 by Peter O'Reilly, who was then Gold Commissioner for the Cariboo Mining Division. Earnings waned from that point, with $80,000 being reported for Germansen and Manson Creeks for the season in 1874 and $32,000 being reported for 1875. By 1876, the mining district was "almost deserted".[7]
References
- "Germansen River" in BC Names/GeoBC
- "Germansen River" in BC Names/GeoBC
- "Germansen Lake" in BC Names/GeoBC
- "Germansen Range" in BC Names/GeoBC
- "Mount Germansen" in BC Names/GeoBC
- "Germansen River" in BC Names/GeoBC
- British Columbia From The Earliest Times to the Present. Vol. 2, F.W. Howay and E.O.S. Scholefield, S.J. Clarke, Vancouver (1914), pp. 266-267