Canal Flats Explained

Canal Flats
Official Name:Village of Canal Flats
Settlement Type:Village
Pushpin Map:Canada British Columbia
Pushpin Map Caption:Location of Canal Flats in British Columbia
Subdivision Type:Country
Subdivision Name:Canada
Subdivision Type1:Province
Subdivision Name1:British Columbia
Subdivision Type2:Region
Subdivision Name2:Columbia Valley/East Kootenay
Subdivision Type3:Regional district
Subdivision Name3:East Kootenay
Leader Title:Governing body
Leader Name:Canal Flats Village Council
Leader Title1:Ute Juras
Established Title:Founded
Established Title2:Incorporated
Established Date2:2004
Area Total Km2:11.07
Population As Of:2021
Population Total:802
Population Density Km2:auto
Timezone:MST
Utc Offset:-7
Coordinates:50.16°N -115.8086°W
Area Codes:250, 778, 236, & 672
Blank Name:Highways
Blank1 Name:Waterways
Blank1 Info:Columbia Lake, Columbia River, Kootenay River
Website:Official website

Canal Flats is a village municipality in the East Kootenay region of southeastern British Columbia. This Columbia Valley community lies between the southern end of Columbia Lake and the northwest shore of the Kootenay River. The locality, on Highway 93/95, is by road about 83km (52miles) north of Cranbrook and 165km (103miles) southeast of Golden.

First Nations

The Ktunaxa Nation has occupied the region around Canal Flats for thousands of years.[1] On a bluff just to the south, remnants of shelter pits evidence a former Ktunaxa salmon fishing camp.[2]

Differing versions exist of the missionary endeavours of Father Pierre-Jean DeSmet of the Jesuits. According to one account, he organized a great assembly at the south end of Columbia Lake in 1845, where he baptized hundreds of tribal members. Afterward, he erected a cross in a prominent place to commemorate the occasion.[3]

Relocated to the village in 2011, a log building to house the Columbia Discovery Centre and Ktunaxa Interpretive Centre opened in 2013.[4]

Name origin

Canoeing upstream, David Thompson reached the headwaters of the Columbia River in April 1808. He named the 1.2miles land mass separating the waterways as McGillivray's Portage.[5] Although probably named after Duncan McGillivray, who accompanied Thompson in 1800 in their search for an overland route to the Pacific, other possibilities are Duncan's brothers William and Simon McGillivray. Subsequent interchangeable names have included Columbia Portage or Lake Pass (1858), Howse Portage (1863), Kootenay City (1885), and Grohman (1888).[6] In 1887, Kootenay City comprised a single one-room cabin.[7] In 1892, the townsite was surveyed.[8] In 1897, this name was recycled to promote what would become Procter.[9]

Canal Flat, adopted by 1888,[10] was used interchangeably with the plural version of Canal Flats from 1895.[11] [12] An 1898 reference that lists Grohman as separate from Canal Flats may suggest that the southern portion had a distinct identity for a period.[13] The plural spelling, which first appeared on a map in 1909, gained pre-eminence over time.

Waterway and roads

In 1884, the government called tenders for a ferry across the Kootenay at Upper Crossing.[14] After retendering[15] and negotiations,[16] a charter was awarded to William Adolf Baillie Grohman in 1886.[17]

A wagon road northward from Galbraith's Ferry opened in 1886.[18] Southeastward from Steamboat Landing, and a connecting bridge at Upper Crossing, followed the next year.[19]

Completed in July 1889, the Baillie-Grohman Canal was a barely functional scheme. Giving away 30000acres of good land to create a virtually impassable ditch[20] was a notable fiasco of the era.[21] To make the waterways navigable would have required extensive dredging of the two rivers for many miles and a complete rebuild of the 1.5miles canal.[22] The downstream falls on the Kootenay were especially problematic.[23] In 1890, a wagon bridge across the canal was destroyed when the canal banks collapsed.[24]

In summertime, the Golden–Fort Steele passenger service, which served the locality, encompassed riverboat, tramway and stage modes.[25] In 1892, the Upper Columbia Navigation & Tramway Co opened the tramway which connected Columbia Lake and Windermere Lake.[26] In wintertime, when river ice shut down river traffic, a stage traversed the whole route.[27]

The 1894 flood destroyed the original 323adj=onNaNadj=on bridge, which was replaced near year end with a 140adj=onNaNadj=on Howe truss, a 78adj=onNaNadj=on Queen truss, and four 20adj=onNaNadj=on pile bents.[28] [29]

In 1897, the 6miles tramway permanently closed. Passengers transferred to a stage for the Windermere–Fort Steele leg.[30] [31]

In 1899, the respective mileages from Golden were Windermere (82.2), Brewer's (95.3), Canal Flat (111.4), and Kootenay Bridge (113.2).[32] In the early 1900s, a substantial replacement bridge appears to have been built adjacent to Canal Flats.[33] In 1911, the relevant listed stopping places were Windermere (82), Fairmont Springs (93), Sante's (106), Wolf Creek/Hanson's (151), and Fort Steele (160).[34]

In 1931, the new bridge comprised two 140adj=onNaNadj=on Howe trusses.[35] [36] The relief camp at Canal Flats during the Great Depression carried out highway improvements.[37]

In 1950, Highway 4 was renumbered as Highway 95, which was rebuilt in the late 1950s and paving was completed in 1962.[38] In 1966, the highway bridge was replaced by a concrete structure.[39]

Earlier community

Adjacent to the northwest is Thunder Hill, forming part of the Canal Flats area. The hill is first mentioned in an 1891 mining claim.[40] A 1.5miles tramway was installed from the 70-ton concentrator to the mine,[41] but work ceased in 1893.[42] The company was wound up the next year.[43] The concentrator was sold for relocation in 1902[44] but the removal did not eventuate.

The local post offices were called Grohman 1888–1889,[45] Thunder Hill 1893–1913,[46] and Canal Flats 1913 onward.[47]

During the canal construction, a hotel and general store operated. Shacks provided winter accommodation for the 200 workers.[48] Once the construction crews left, the hotel, which Charles J. Brownrigg took over, was too large for likely patronage.[49] The business soon closed, but the 1893 hotel opening by James Durick was welcomed.[50]

Eneas (Enie) H. Small, who became the proprietor of Columbia House,[51] made considerable enlargements to the hotel in 1897[52] but months later sold the business to John Bullman.[53] That year, the Kootenay Valley Lands Co, the recipient of the 30000acres land grant, which included Canal Flats and parcels stretching to the Canada–United States border, began releasing the holdings for sale.[54] Bullman, who also operated a ranch on Thunder Hill and a freight business, found the Kootenay Valley Lands Co (the hotel landlord) obstructive.[55] The final mention of the hotel was 1900, when Douglas Grainger was the proprietor.[56]

During an episode of insanity in 1901, the Hon. Francis John Lascelles, twelfth child of Henry Lascelles, 4th Earl of Harewood, murdered the Chinese cook at his Thunder Hill ranch.[57] Acquitted at trial,[58] Lascelles was returned to the custody of his family in England.[59]

By 1906, all that remained of the Grohman townsite was an abandoned hotel.[60] The next year, Enie Small repaired his Canal Flat summer resort hotel for operation.[61] The next mention is a further rehabilitation for opening in November 1909.[62] In 1910, F.W. Reeves was the manager,[63] and Lord Hindlip purchased property to build a summer house[64] and develop the Thunder Hill Ranch.[65]

In 1913, E.H. Small erected a two-storey, 35-room hotel at a new site to accommodate railway construction crews.[66] The next year, the premises were granted a liquor licence,[67] and Fred A. Small built a general store.[68]

In 1915, William J. McFarlane bought the hotel,[69] which was destroyed by fire the following year.[70] About this time, Dennis Greenwood bought the general store,[71] which by 1922 also sold gasoline.[72] In 1925, A.H. MacKinley purchased the business. Renamed Canal Flat Roadhouse, meals were served and a liquor licence was pending.[73] A series of owners followed. In 1929, a new school opened,[74] and a provincial police post was established, indicating that the arrival of the large Canadian Pacific Railway (CP) mill had brought a permanence to the community.[75]

In 1930, an offender charged with trapping without a licence fatally shot the game warden in front of the general store.[76] A jury found him not guilty on account of momentary insanity.[77] That year, a fire destroyed two stores, a pool room, and rooming house.[78] In 1931, over 200 men successfully fought a forest fire that threatened the CP sawmill, station, and section house. Destroyed were the CP warehouse, police residence and few small shacks.[79] A month later, a fire at Wheeler Motor Garage burned down the building and an adjacent restaurant.[80]

In 1967, a radio repeater antenna was relocated to Windermere[81]

The Canal Flats Airstrip, which existed from the late 1960s until the mid-1980s, was decommissioned when the paved more modern Fairmont Hot Springs Airport opened.[82]

In 1985, a nearby wildfire forced an evacuation of about 1,400 residents.[83]

Railway

The Kootenay Central Railway (KCR) was a CP subsidiary. In 1913, Burns and Jordan, the prime contractor for the railway construction, employed a large force in the vicinity. In November 1914, the last spike was driven near the north end of Columbia Lake.[84] In January 1915, the inaugural passenger train arrived on the commencement of a through service.[85]

Train Timetables (Regular stop or Flag stop)
Mile 1916 1919 1929 1932 1935 1939 1943 1948 1953 1955 1960 1963
[86] [87] [88] [89] [90] [91] [92] [93] [94] [95] [96] [97]
Fairmont Hot Springs 77.1
Radium 76.8
Environ 69.2
Columbia Lake 68.8
Canal Flat/s 64.1
Torrent 52.6
Skookumchuck 46.3

In 2021, a southbound freight train struck the rear trailer of a fully loaded logging truck at the Thunderhill Road railway crossing. Although damages were extensive, no injuries were sustained.[98]

Forestry

In 1888, a steam sawmill was installed for the duration of the canal construction.[99]

In 1910, Canal Flats camps, under the oversight of T.G. Procter, took out 4000000feet of logs for transportation to the Crow's Nest Pass Lumber Co mill.[100]

In 1928, CP erected a warehouse at Canal Flats. Construction began on a logging railway up Findlay Creek[101] and a mammoth mill northeast of the station.[102] The next year, the CP planing mill followed the relocation of the CP sawmill from Bull River. The logging railway advanced farther up Findlay Creek, and the Crow's Nest Lumber Co also laid tracks toward Canal Flats along the main road from the south.[103]

During the early 1930s, CP operated several small tie mills in the area.[104]

A 1miles spur led to the several yard tracks at the sawmill, which was owned by Crestbrook Forest Industries in the 1970s and Canadian Forest Products on closing in 2015 with the loss of 75 jobs.[105]

Later community

In 2004, the settlement incorporated as a village municipality. That year, the Nature Conservancy of Canada became a conservation partner in the Thunder Hill Ranch.[106]

From the mid-2010s, the village was transitioning from a forestry-dependent economy. To promote tech and trades, the Columbia Lake Technology Center opened in 2018 within the skeleton of the old mill. Two key tenants were PodTech, which manufactured transportable data centres, and Bid Group, which manufactured products such as steel conveyors for forestry companies. The existence of fibre optic infrastructure on site and in town was strategic.[107]

In 2016, Mountain Mercantile opened in the old high school building opposite the arena. A range of boutique small businesses set up on the site, which was also the venue for a local weekend vendors market.[108]

In 2020, the BID Group permanently closed its manufacturing facility.[109] The next year, the village adopted a bylaw to waive the municipal portion of property taxes for new commercial developments.[110]

In 2022, Richard Wayken was appointed as Chief Administrative Officer for the village.[111]

An elementary school,[112] motel, post office, café, and general store/liquor outlet/gas bar exist.[113]

Demographics

In the 2021 Census of Population conducted by Statistics Canada, Canal Flats had a population of 802 living in 362 of its 470 total private dwellings, a change of from its 2016 population of 668. With a land area of, it had a population density of in 2021.[114]

Recreation and entertainment

Adjacent to the north is the 1.5km (00.9miles) trail forming the Columbia Greenway.[115] To the northwest is Thunder Hill Provincial Park.[116] To the northeast is the Tilley Memorial Park (formerly Canal Flats Provincial Park).[117] Whiteswan Lake Provincial Park is 8km (05miles) south.[118]

The Canal Flats Arena (early 1970s) received a major renovation in 2013 and upgrade in 2018. The civic centre (1968), which was expanded in the 1980s, includes a seniors' centre and food bank.[119] In 2021, the new pavilion at the Canal Flats Lions Park opened.[120]

On the first weekend in June, Canal Flats holds the annual Canal Days Party. The program include parades, pancake breakfast, beer garden, food vendors, competitive events, and live music.[121]

Maps

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Village of Canal Flats: History . www.canalflats.ca.
  2. Web site: Canal Flats . www.nwcouncil.org.
  3. Web site: Cranbrook Herald . 1 . 28 Apr 1910 . library.ubc.ca.
  4. Web site: Columbia Valley Pioneer . 20 Sep 2013 . www.columbiavalleypioneer.com.
  5. Canadian Institute: A Brief Narrative of the Journeys of David Thompson in Northwestern America . Tyrrell . J.B. . October 1888 . XXIV . 50 . 18 (150) . library.ubc.ca.
  6. BC Historical News: Baillie-Grohman's Diversion . Welwood . Ron J. . 2003 . 36 . 4 . 11 (7) . library.ubc.ca.
  7. Book: B.C. 1887 : a ramble in British Columbia . Lees . James Arthur . Clutterbuck . Walter J . 207 (179) . 1888 . library.ubc.ca.
  8. Web site: Miner. 10 . 24 Dec 1892 . library.ubc.ca.
  9. Web site: Mining Review. 4 . 12 June 1897 . library.ubc.ca.
  10. Web site: Commissioner of Lands annual report, 1887 . 41 (164) . library.ubc.ca.
  11. Web site: Summer Tours by the Canadian Pacific Railway. 151 (149) . 1895 . library.ubc.ca.
  12. Web site: BC News . 1 . 24 Sep 1897 . library.ubc.ca.
  13. Web site: Golden Era . 1 . 16 Dec 1898 . library.ubc.ca.
  14. Web site: British Columbian . 4 . 30 Jul 1884 . library.ubc.ca.
  15. Web site: Daily British Columbian . 2 . 12 Sep 1885 . library.ubc.ca.
  16. Web site: Granting ferry charters at Farwell and Upper Kootenay Crossing . 1–13 . 9 Mar 1886 . library.ubc.ca.
  17. Web site: Old MSS Lands Records at the BC Archives: C/C/30.7/B15 . 12 . royalbcmuseum.bc.ca.
  18. Web site: Commissioner of Lands annual report, 1886 . 32 (308) . library.ubc.ca.
  19. Web site: Cranbrook Herald . 4 . 2 Mar 1922 . library.ubc.ca.
  20. Web site: Golden Era . 1 . 1 Sep 1899 . library.ubc.ca.
  21. Web site: East Kootenay Miner . 1 . 23 Dec 1898 . library.ubc.ca.
  22. Web site: Prospector . 1 . 28 Mar 1896 . library.ubc.ca.
  23. Book: Somerset, Susan Margaret . Impressions of a tenderfoot during a journey in search of sport in the far West . 203–204 (171–172) . 1890 . library.ubc.ca.
  24. Web site: Commissioner of Lands annual report, 1890 . 55 (271) . library.ubc.ca.
  25. Web site: Golden Era . 4 . 19 Aug 1893 . library.ubc.ca.
  26. Web site: Pert . wordpress.com.
  27. Web site: Golden Era . 4 . 3 Nov 1894 . library.ubc.ca.
  28. Web site: Commissioner of Lands and Works annual report, 1894 . 92 (412) . library.ubc.ca.
  29. Web site: Golden Era . 4 . 10 Nov 1894 . library.ubc.ca.
  30. Web site: East Kootenay Miner . 2 . 23 Sep 1897 . library.ubc.ca.
  31. Web site: East Kootenay Miner . 1 . 2 Dec 1898 . library.ubc.ca.
  32. Web site: Commissioner of Lands and Works annual report, 1899 . 95 (373) . library.ubc.ca.
  33. Web site: Daily News . 4 . 23 Nov 1905 . library.ubc.ca.
  34. Book: Wheeler, A.G. . A Guide for Mountain Climbers and Pilgrims . 135–136 (119–120) . 1911 . us.archive.org.
  35. Web site: Daily News . 5 . 1 Jan 1931 . library.ubc.ca.
  36. Web site: Daily News . 18 . 1 Jan 1932 . library.ubc.ca.
  37. Web site: Minister of Public Works annual report, 1934–35 . 30 (T22) . library.ubc.ca.
  38. Book: Trescher, Hedi . Brisco & Spillimacheen, A History . 69 . Brisco Hospital Aid . 1998 . 0-96840-025-6.
  39. Web site: Minister of Highways report, 1965–66 . C146 . library.ubc.ca.
  40. Web site: Kootenay Star . 4 . 24 Jan 1891 . library.ubc.ca.
  41. Web site: Golden Era . 4 . 6 May 1893 . library.ubc.ca.
  42. Web site: Golden Era . 4 . 4 Nov 1893 . library.ubc.ca.
  43. Web site: Golden Era . 3 . 6 Jan 1894 . library.ubc.ca.
  44. Web site: Prospector . 1 . 29 Mar 1902 . library.ubc.ca.
  45. Web site: Postmasters (Grohman) . www.bac-lac.gc.ca.
  46. Web site: Postmasters (Thunder Hill) . www.bac-lac.gc.ca.
  47. Web site: Postmasters (Canal Flats) . www.bac-lac.gc.ca.
  48. Book: Graham, Clara . Fur and Gold in the Kootenays . 209 (189) . 1945 . library.ubc.ca.
  49. Book: MacInnes, Donald . Notes of our trip across British Columbia from Golden, on the Canadian Pacific Railway, to Kootenai, in Idaho . 18 (16) . 1889 . library.ubc.ca.
  50. Web site: Golden Era . 2 . 10 Jun 1893 . library.ubc.ca.
  51. Web site: East Kootenay Miner . 1 . 12 Aug 1897 . library.ubc.ca.
  52. Web site: Prospector . 4 . 15 May 1897 . library.ubc.ca.
  53. Web site: East Kootenay Miner . 4 . 18 Nov 1897 . library.ubc.ca.
  54. Web site: East Kootenay Miner . 2 . 14 Oct 1897 . library.ubc.ca.
  55. Web site: Golden Era . 3 . 22 Jul 1898 . library.ubc.ca.
  56. Web site: 1900–1901 BC Directory . www.bccd.vpl.ca.
  57. Web site: Daily Colonist . 5 . 4 Jun 1901 . archive.org.
  58. Web site: Daily Colonist . 6 . 1 Nov 1901 . archive.org.
  59. Web site: Executive Council Order . 27 Nov 1901 . gov.bc.ca.
  60. Web site: Cranbrook Herald . 8 . 12 Jul 1906 . library.ubc.ca.
  61. Web site: Moyie Leader . 1 . 15 Jun 1907 . library.ubc.ca.
  62. Web site: Cranbrook Herald . 1 . 30 Sep 1909 . library.ubc.ca.
  63. Web site: Cranbrook Herald . 5 . 20 Jan 1910 . library.ubc.ca.
  64. Web site: Daily News . 7 . 13 Sep 1910 . library.ubc.ca.
  65. Web site: Cranbrook Herald . 6 . 19 Oct 1911 . library.ubc.ca.
  66. Web site: Cranbrook Herald . 6 . 28 Aug 1913 . library.ubc.ca.
  67. Web site: Prospector . 4 . 18 Apr 1914 . library.ubc.ca.
  68. Web site: Cranbrook Herald . 5 . 30 Apr 1914 . library.ubc.ca.
  69. Web site: Cranbrook Herald . 4 . 2 Sep 1915 . library.ubc.ca.
  70. Web site: Cranbrook Herald . 3 . 4 May 1916 . library.ubc.ca.
  71. Web site: 1918 BC Directory . www.bccd.vpl.ca.
  72. Web site: Cranbrook Herald . 6 . 20 Jul 1922 . library.ubc.ca.
  73. Web site: Cranbrook Herald . 1 . 25 Jun 1925 . library.ubc.ca.
  74. Web site: Public Schools annual report, 1929–30 . Q8 . library.ubc.ca.
  75. Web site: Creston Review . 5 . 20 Sep 1929 . library.ubc.ca.
  76. Web site: Daily News . 1 . 7 Jul 1930 . library.ubc.ca.
  77. Web site: Daily News . 1 . 22 Oct 1930 . library.ubc.ca.
  78. Web site: Daily News . 1 . 8 Jul 1930 . library.ubc.ca.
  79. Web site: Daily News . 1 . 25 Jul 1931 . library.ubc.ca.
  80. Web site: Daily News . 10 . 31 Aug 1931 . library.ubc.ca.
  81. Web site: Minister of Highways report, 1967–68 . C105 . library.ubc.ca.
  82. Web site: Canal Flats Airstrip . www.geocaching.com.
  83. Web site: Macleans . 22 Jul 1985 . macleans.ca.
  84. Web site: Daily News . 2 . 1 Dec 1914 . library.ubc.ca.
  85. Web site: Cranbrook Herald . 1 . 7 Jan 1915 . library.ubc.ca.
  86. Web site: Timetable . 5 (TT 70) . 28 Apr 1935 . library.ubc.ca.
  87. Web site: Timetable . 159 (TT118) . 5 Sep 1916 . library.ubc.ca.
  88. Web site: Timetable . 183 (TT109) . 30 Nov 1919 . library.ubc.ca.
  89. Web site: Timetable . 31 (TT111) . 1929 . library.ubc.ca.
  90. Web site: Timetable . 470 (TT152) . 25 Sep 1932 . library.ubc.ca.
  91. Web site: Timetable . 127 (TT152). 5 Feb 1939 . library.ubc.ca.
  92. Web site: Timetable . 47 (TT152) . 27 Jun 1943 . www.streamlinermemories.info.
  93. Web site: Timetable . 46 (TT152). 5 Dec 1948 . library.ubc.ca.
  94. Web site: Timetable . 46 (TT128) . 27 Sep 1953 . library.ubc.ca.
  95. Web site: Timetable . 46 (TT128) . 24 Apr 1955 . library.ubc.ca.
  96. Web site: Timetable . 35 (TT83) . 30 Oct 1960 . library.ubc.ca.
  97. Web site: Timetable . 3 (TT99) . 27 Oct 1963 . library.ubc.ca.
  98. Web site: East Kootenay News . 22 Mar 2021 . www.e-know.ca.
  99. Book: Baillie-Grohman, William A. . The Kootenay valleys and the Kootenay district in British Columbia . 11 (9) . 1888 . library.ubc.ca.
  100. Web site: Daily News . 4 . 25 Aug 1910 . library.ubc.ca.
  101. Web site: Daily News . 2 . 13 Aug 1928 . library.ubc.ca.
  102. Web site: Daily News . 4 . 14 Sep 1928 . library.ubc.ca.
  103. Web site: Daily News . 10 . 22 Oct 1929 . library.ubc.ca.
  104. Web site: Creston Review . 4 . 13 Nov 1931 . library.ubc.ca.
  105. Web site: Old Time Trains: Canfor Canal Flats . www.trainweb.org.
  106. Web site: Thunder Hill Ranch . www.natureconservancy.ca.
  107. Web site: Toronto Star . 21 Jun 2019 . library.ubc.ca.
  108. Web site: Columbia Valley Pioneer . 25 Oct 2017 . www.columbiavalleypioneer.com.
  109. Web site: BID Group: Canal Flats, BC facility permanent closure . 8 Apr 2020 . bidgroup.ca.
  110. Web site: Rewind Radio . 16 Sep 2021 . 1029rewindradio.ca.
  111. Web site: My East Kootenay Now . 27 May 2022 . www.myeastkootenaynow.com.
  112. Web site: Martin Morigeau Elementary School . sd6.bc.ca.
  113. Web site: Canal Flats . www.ourbc.com.
  114. Web site: Population and dwelling counts: Canada, provinces and territories, and census subdivisions (municipalities), British Columbia . . 9 Feb 2022.
  115. Web site: Columbia Greenway . crownofthecontinent.net.
  116. Web site: Thunder Hill Provincial Park . bcparks.ca.
  117. Web site: Tilley Memorial Park . www.kootenayrockies.com.
  118. Web site: Whiteswan Lake Provincial Park . bcparks.ca.
  119. Web site: Village of Canal Flats: Recreation & Facilities . www.canalflats.ca.
  120. Web site: Columbia Valley Pioneer . 28 Sep 2021 . www.columbiavalleypioneer.com.
  121. Web site: Village of Canal Flats: Canal Days . www.canalflats.ca.