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 Hope, British Columbia, Canada
1808 Simon Fraser arrived in Hope after his journey through the Canyon.
1846 Oregon Boundary Treaty signed, establishing 49th Parallel as the Canada/U.S. Border.
1847 Indian warfare closed the Columbia Basin to trade and fear of U.S. taxation on furs caused James Douglas to order the construction of an alternate road through the Fraser Canyon. The last fur caravan passed down the old brigade trail along the hillsides above Great Okanagan Lake.
1848 The barely passable Hope Trail was used for the first time, which opened the lower Fraser River as a commercial highway.
1858 Gold was discovered in the Fraser River above Hope. Trails were cut from Bellingham Bay through dense forests to Fort Hope. Sternwheelers began to provide transportation on the Fraser River to Fort Hope and Fort Yale. The first sawmill on the BC Mainland was constructed at Fort Yale. The first ferry crossing was made at Spuzzum. Lower Fraser Valley population tripled.
>> more about Fraser River gold...
>> more about sternwheelers on the Fraser River...
>> more about famous steamboat captains on the Fraser...
1859 Fort Hope and Fort Yale townsites laid out by James Douglas. Royal Engineers started construction of Cariboo Road through Fraser Canyon. >> readmore...
1860 James Douglas ordered a trail to be built from Hope to the Rockies. Edgar Dewdney and Walter Moberly opened the Dewdney Trail from Hope to Similkameen (presently followed by Highway 3). St. John the Divine Anglican Church built by Royal Engineers in Yale.
1861 Christ Church built and consecrated in Hope.
1863 Last ferry crossing at Spuzzum. The first Alexandra Bridge built at Spuzzum by Joseph Trutch. The Cariboo Wagon Road completed Yale to Quesnel.
1866 The two colonies of Vancouver Island and British Columbia united to become the Colony of British Columbia
1867 Confederation of 4B colonies to the east.
1868 At Yale, a convention of British Columbia political leaders, who advocate a union with Canada.
1869 The Dominion of Canada acquired Hudson's Bay Company lands of the Northwest. First proposal of a railway to link British Columbia with the rest of Canada.
1871 British Columbia becomes a province of Canada.
1880-88 Construction of CPR railway through the Fraser Canyon required supply of bridge timbers and trestle material. Emory City established at Emory Creek - site of first newspaper published on BC Mainland, First locomotive landed in BC for use in CPR construction.
1889 The beginning of logging and milling in Hope. First sawmill established by John Coe to supply local markets. The townsite of Hope was logged with oxen to supply the mill.
1911-18 Kettle Valley Railway built - construction of Quintette Tunnels through Coquihalla Canyon.
1913-14 Great Northern Railway constuction on east side of Fraser Canyon. Fraser River channel at Hell's Gate obstructed by slide and debris from railway construction.
>> read more about early Canyon transportation systems...
1914 Kettle Valley Railway Bridge constructed across Fraser River at Hope, carried railway traffic on bottom deck, highway traffic along upper timber deck.
1914 Beginning of World War 1.
1916 Hope Station built by Great Northern Railway.
1919 Gorge Dam construction in Skagit Valley.
1926 Second Alexandra Suspension Bridge built at Spuzzum.
1927 Diablo Dam construction in Skagit Valley.
1929 Hope incorporated as Village.
1936 Ross Dam Phase 1 construction in Skagit Valley.
1939 World War II is declared.
1940-86 Boston Bar/North Bend Aerial Ferry in operation at Boston Bar/North Bend.
1942 Major forest fire Mile 30 - 36 Hope/Princeton Highway.
1942-45 Tashme (Japanese internment camp) in operation in Sunshine Valley.
1944-46 Hell's Gate Fishways built through international efforts of the Pacific Salmon Commission.
1945-52 Phases 2 and 3 of Ross Dam construction, massive timber removal from the Skagit Valley.
1948-49 Fraser River Flood. Highway timber deck on top of Kettle Valley Railroad bridge removed and replaced with steel T-sections. Construction of Hope-Princeton Highway.
1953 Flooding of the Skagit Valley.
1959 Kettle Valley Railway Line closed.
1965 The Hope Slide, largest earth and rock slide in the history of British Columbia, closes Highway No.#3. Trans Canada Highway #1 completed. Hope incorporated as a Town.
1973 Skagit Valley Recreation Area established.
1978 Start of Coquihalla Highway construction (Highway #5).
1981 Filming of "First Blood" - the start of movie industry activity.
1984 Alexandra Bridge Class A Provincial Park established in the Fraser Canyon.
1985 Start of phase-out Carolin Mine.
1986 Cog Harrington bridge built across Fraser River, replacing aerial ferry between Boston Bar and North Bend. Expo 86 in Vancouver.
1992 Town of Hope becomes District of Hope.
;

How About That!



Who was this man?
Joe Hill wrote a labour union protest song in 1912.

Where? Sitting in the strike boss's office in Yale, 22 kms upstream of Hope on the Fraser River.

The song was entitled; "Where the Fraser River Flows"
>> read more...


Informative site about
The Gold Rush Trai
l