Thrums Explained

Official Name:Thrums
Pushpin Map:Canada British Columbia
Pushpin Map Caption:Location of Thrums in British Columbia
Subdivision Type:Country
Subdivision Type1:Province
Subdivision Type2:Region
Subdivision Name2:West Kootenay
Subdivision Type3:Regional District
Subdivision Name3:Central Kootenay
Coordinates:49.343°N -117.592°W
Area Codes:250, 778, 236, & 672
Blank Name:Highways

Thrums is an unincorporated community on the northwest shore of the Kootenay River in the West Kootenay region of southeastern British Columbia. The location, on BC Highway 3A, is by road about 11km (07miles) northeast of Castlegar, and 33km (21miles) southwest of Nelson.

Name origin

J.M. Barrie, Peter Pan author, also wrote Auld Licht Idylls, A Window in Thrums, and The Little Minister, set in the fictional Scottish village of Thrums. In 1900, the second book in the trilogy gave Thrums, BC, a railway switch, its name. The suggested proponent/s are Robert W. and Janie A.S. Chalmers (a farming couple who settled around this time), an unknown female train passenger,[1] or the daughter of an unspecified Canadian Pacific Railway (CP) director.[2]

Railway

CP's adding of this Columbia and Kootenay Railway siding to the timetable in 1900 may have been merely as a designated siding. The flag stop, which appeared around 1905 was 3.61NaN1 northeast of Brilliant, and 21NaN1 southwest of Tarry's.[3] Passenger service ended in 1964.

Train Timetables (Regular stop or Flag stop)
Year 1905 1909 1912 1916 1919 1929 1932 1935 1939 1943 1948 1953 1954 1961 1963
Ref. [4] [5] [6] [7] [8] [9] [10] [11] [12] [13] [14] [15] [16] [17]
Type

Early community

Fruit growing was initially the main industry,[18] which transformed to farming over time. The Chalmers, longtime residents from Scotland, also raised poultry. A general store opened in the 1910s.[19] Becoming predominantly a Doukhobor community, the Thrums Cemetery opened in 1912. Operated by the Union of Spiritual Communities of Christ (USCC) from 1940 until the 1970s, the site is now disused and overgrown.[20] Several stores operated by the 1940s.[21] The Chalmers ran a small store and tea room called The Window from the early 1940s.

The population was about 150 by 1928,[22] 250 by 1934,[23] 174 by 1939,[24] 387 by 1943,[25] 250 by 1946,[26] and 218 by 1951.[27] The post office, which opened in 1906, did not reopen after burning down in 1978.

Freedomites

Various incidents linked to the Freedomites:
1930: Attempted arson of community hall[28] and damage by explosives to school.[29]
1932: Parading in nude prompted 118 arrests[30] and three-year sentences.[31]
1938: Church burned.[32]
1946: Doukhobor hall destroyed by fire.
1947: Barns burned.[33]
1958: Nearby gas pipeline dynamited.
1959: Three feet of CP track dynamited.[34]

Present community

A market/deli and small businesses operate. Since Thrums can be used as a generic name for the area that stretches north to Glade, the boundary with Tarrys is unclear.

Notable people

Joe Irving (1911–2015), author, ironworker activist, graduated high school in his 90s, and centenarian, was the first baby born in Thrums.[35] [36]

References

Notes and References

  1. Web site: BC Local News, 14 Sep 2017 . www.bclocalnews.com.
  2. Web site: Castlegar News, 28 Sep 2018 . www.castlegarnews.com.
  3. Web site: 1935 timetable . 10 (TT 70) . www.library.ubc.ca.
  4. Web site: 1905 timetable . 62 (43) . www.library.ubc.ca.
  5. Web site: 1909 timetable . 78 (45) . www.library.ubc.ca.
  6. Web site: 1912 timetable . 92 (TT113) . www.library.ubc.ca.
  7. Web site: 1916 timetable . 159 (TT125) . www.library.ubc.ca.
  8. Web site: 1919 timetable . 183 (TT115) . www.library.ubc.ca.
  9. Web site: 1929 timetable . 30 (TT115) . www.library.ubc.ca.
  10. Web site: 1932 timetable . 471 (TT155) . www.library.ubc.ca.
  11. Web site: 1939 timetable . 126 (TT151). www.library.ubc.ca.
  12. Web site: 1943 timetable . 44 (TT151) . www.streamlinermemories.info.
  13. Web site: 1948 timetable . 45 (TT151). www.library.ubc.ca.
  14. Web site: 1953 timetable . 44 (TT121) . www.library.ubc.ca.
  15. Web site: 1954 timetable . 44 (TT121) . www.library.ubc.ca.
  16. Web site: 1961 timetable . 73 (TT40) . www.library.ubc.ca.
  17. Web site: 1963 timetable . 18 (TT99) . www.library.ubc.ca.
  18. Web site: 1910 BC Directory . www.bccd.vpl.ca.
  19. Web site: 1918 BC Directory . www.bccd.vpl.ca.
  20. Web site: Thrums Doukhobor Cemetery . www.doukhobor.org.
  21. Web site: 1945 BC Directory . www.bccd.vpl.ca.
  22. Web site: 1928 BC Directory . www.bccd.vpl.ca.
  23. Web site: 1934 BC Directory . www.bccd.vpl.ca.
  24. Web site: 1939 BC Directory . www.bccd.vpl.ca.
  25. Web site: 1943 BC Directory . www.bccd.vpl.ca.
  26. Web site: 1946 BC Directory . www.bccd.vpl.ca.
  27. Web site: An Approach to Planning for Small Communities in BC . Darshan . Johal . 103 (93) . 1958 . www.library.ubc.ca.
  28. Web site: Grand Forks Sun, 11 Jul 1930 . 1 . www.library.ubc.ca.
  29. Web site: The Daily Colonist, 19 Dec 1930 . 1 . www.archive.org.
  30. Web site: The Daily Colonist, 3 May 1932 . 2 . www.archive.org.
  31. Web site: The Daily Colonist, 17 Jun 1932 . 3 . www.archive.org.
  32. Web site: The Daily Colonist, 5 Aug 1938 . 1 . www.archive.org.
  33. Web site: Calgary Herald, 26 Aug 1947 . 1 . The red glow of flaming barns lit the pre-dawn sky over this small Doukhobor settlement today as fanatical night raiders striking without warning, put the torch to two farm buildings and were foiled in an attempt to fire a third. . www.newspapers.com.
  34. Web site: The Daily Colonist, 20 Oct 1959 . 1 . www.archive.org.
  35. Web site: Nelson Star, 6 Oct 2011 . www.nelsonstar.com.
  36. Web site: Joe Irving obituary . www.thompsonfs.ca.