About British Columbia
BC
at a Glance | Geography
| Climate | Environment
Economy | History
| Significant Historical Dates
British
Columbia at a Glance
Capital – City
is Victoria situated on Vancouver Island
Largest City – Vancouver, BC
Canadian Pacific Railway Western Terminal
– Vancouver
Port Cities – Vancouver, Prince
Rupert, & Victoria, BC
Confederation – British Columbia
joined Canada in 1871
Provincial Premier – Gordon
Campbell, Liberal Party
Population - 4.096 million people,
as of July 2001.
First Peoples - are known as First
Nations. There are 197 First Nations bands in the
province.
Cultural Diversity – people
of many different origins, cultural traditions, languages,
ethnicities, and religions live in British Columbia.
Top 10 languages – English,
Chinese (Cantonese/Mandarin), Punjabi, German, French,
Dutch, Italian, Tagalog, Spanish and Japanese. (source:
1996 Census)
Immigaration - 35,000 immigrants
from around the world arrive in B.C. yearly.
Area – is 95 million hectares
(larger than France and Germany combined) - about
10 per cent of Canada's land surface – Canada’s
3rd largest province with 3rd largest population.
BC Ferries – One of the largest
ferry fleets in the world
http://www.bcferries.bc.ca/schedules/
Parks & Protected Areas –
attract about 24 million visits every year.
http://wlapwww.gov.bc.ca/bcparks/explore/regions.htm
Tallest Waterfall in Canada –
Della falls, Vancouver Island
Hydro Electricity – Canada's
third-largest generator of hydro electricity
Natural Gas – Canada's second-largest
natural gas producer
Natural Resources – Forestry,
mining, fishing and agriculture are important to B.C.'s
economy
New Industry – Eco-tourism,
agri-tourism, film and high tech industries are growing
Gateway to the Asia-Pacific –
BC is economically and geographically part of the
northwest region of North America.
NHL Team – Canucks in Vancouver,
BC
NFL Team – B.C. Lions in Vancouver,
BC
Provincial Flower – Pacific
Dogwood
Provincial Bird – Steller's
Jay
Provincial Gemstone – Jade
Provincial Tree – Western Red
Cedar
Geography
British Columbia is Canada’s most western province
and is bounded on the west by the Pacific coast and
on the east by the Rocky Mountains. It is Canada’s
third largest province and accounts for just under
10% of Canada’s land area. The province is 2.5
times larger than Japan, larger than all US states
except Alaska, and nearly 4 times larger than Great
Britain.
BC’s coast is deeply indented with fiords extends
from the Washington State border to the south to the
northwest coast border at Alaska for nearly 7,000
kilometers. The southern border of BC touches the
US states of Washington, Idaho, and Montana –
western border, Alberta – northern border, the
Northwest Territories and the Yukon – and the
northwest, Alaska. BC’s north/south length is
nearly 1,200 kilometers and east/west nearly 1,000
kilometers.
British Columbia’s topography is mountainous
with substantial areas of inland plateau and lowland
valleys. The four regions of BC are:
1. The Coast Mountain Range
2. The Interior Plateau
3. A series of mountain ranges to the Rocky Mountains,
and
4. A segment of the Great Plains in the northeastern
corner.
Freshwater is abundant in the form of rivers, lakes
and streams. River systems include:
The Fraser River – draining 1/5 of the province
The Columbia River –
The Skeena River -
The Peace River –
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Climate
http://www.weatheroffice.ec.gc.ca/
British Columbia’s climate varies from continental
to marine and is determined by:
1. The provinces location north of the 49th parallel
2. The prevailing westerly winds
3. The mountainous topography, and
4. The warm waters of the Pacific Ocean.
The interior climate is continental and the southern
interior has the province’s driest and warmest
climate. in the winter months Coastal climate is characterized
by mild temperatures and heavy rainfall. Canada’s
longest frost-free periods are enjoyed in the coastal
region.
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Environment
British Columbia is characterized by the diversity
of habitats including softwood forests, wetlands,
meadows and grasslands and in coastal areas estuaries,
inter-tidal to the continental shelf.
These diverse habitats support globally significant
populations of wildlife species including grizzly
bears, trumpeter swans, bald eagles, mountain goats,
stone sheep, and blue grouse.
A system of parks, recreational areas and ecological
reserves has been established to protect some areas
and to make other areas available for the enjoyment
of visitors. These areas cover 11.8% of the provinces
land and water.
Provincial Parks – http://wlapwww.gov.bc.ca/bcparks/explore/regions.htm
Provincial Heritage Sites: http://www.heritage.gov.bc.ca/
Parks Canada – XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX
Federal Heritage Sites - XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX
Ecological reserves - http://www.knowbc.com/iebc/book/E/ecores.ASP
A system of federal parks has been established including
three UNESCO World Heritage Sites: Anthony Island
(Ninstints), part of Gwaii Haanas/South Moresby National
Park, Queen Charlotte Islands; the Burgess Shale,
that lies within Yoho National Park and the Tatshenshini-Alsek
watershed, located in the north western corner of
British Columbia.
UNESCO Heritage – http://parkscanada.pch.gc.ca/unesco/canmap/Canmap_e.htm
UNESCO Biosphere –
http://www2.unesco.org/mab/br/brdir/europe-n/Canadamap.htm
British Columbia is home to tens of thousands of
plant and animal species living in a rich diversity
of habitats. Many of these species and their habitats
are at risk.
BC Species at Risk – http://srmwww.gov.bc.ca/atrisk/
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Economy

British Columbia’s economy has, from earliest
history depended upon forestry, mining, fishing and
agriculture. Recently, there is strong growth in industries
such as eco-tourism, agri-tourism, film and high tech.
Nearly 50% of all jobs in British Columbia are generated
by Small business who employs 950,000 workers.
Over 90% of the land mass of British Columbia is
owned by the Crown and managed for the peoples of
British Columbia by the Provincial Government. Coniferous
forests that are logged to provide fibre for lumber,
newsprint, pulp and paper products, shingles and shakes
cover Fifty six percent of the land area of British
Columbia. BC’s forest industry formulates about
50% of the total softwood production of Canada.
Tourism is the second most important industry and,
in 2001, nearly 22 million visitors come to British
Columbia. Our largest attraction is the spectacular
scenery in the Provincial Parks of The Rocky Mountains.
The beaches, hiking trails, gardens, cultural diversity,
whale watching and a UNESCO Biosphere Reserve at Tofino
draw many people to the coastal areas. Dude ranches;
vineyards & wineries; ski mountains; and river
rafting make interesting activities in the interior
region. The Queen Charlotte Islands in the northwest,
contain an abandoned Haida First Nations village designated
a UNESCO world heritage site.
The third most important industry is mining. Metals
include copper, gold and zinc; minerals include sulphur,
and asbestos; and fuels include coal, petroleum and
natural gas.
The Fraser River is the largest wild salmon producer
in the world and supports a large commercial fishery.
Commercial fishing for numerous salt water species
supports coastal communities. Dairy cattle in the
Fraser Valley and Vancouver Island; beef cattle in
the hot dry interior; orchards and vineyards in the
Okanagan Valley; and market gardens, mushrooms, berries
in the Fraser Valley are important suppliers to local
and international markets.
The manufacturing sector is resource-based. But high-tech
and computer-based industries, including telecommunications,
aerospace and sub-sea are developing. British Columbia
exports to the United States, Japan, the European
Union and the Pacific Rim countries in rough equal
proportion.
The film industry has boomed in British Columbia
to become the third largest in the world after Los
Angeles and New York generating over a billion dollars
of activity in 1999 from just under 200 movies.
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History
The earliest human history of British Columbia begins
with the receding of the glaciers about 10,000 years
ago. Archaeological digs have produced evidence that
people have lived in some areas of the lands now called
British Columbia since the glaciers departure.
First Peoples occupied all areas of BC. There are
7 major language groups on the coast and 5 in the
interior. The milder coastal climate and surplus of
food and material supported a larger population than
the interior.
EXPLORATION AND FUR TRADE
The earliest explorers arrived looking for the mythical
“Northwest Passage” that would shorten
the trading route from Europe to the Orient. There
is some evidence that movement occurred from Asia
to the west coast and that some interaction between
the peoples occurred, however, the first recognized
exploration began from England by Sir Francis Drake.
The Russians settled Alaska, the Spanish moved up
the Pacific coast from Mexico & California but
did not settle, and the English sent Captain Cook
who traded sea otter pelts from natives and took them
to China where he found a dynamic market. The sea
otter trade began and merchant sailing ships arrived
by the dozen.
Meanwhile,
The Hudson’s Bay Company had established a system
of trading posts across North America to the Rocky
Mountains and was expanding into the northern plateau
area of BC establishing a post at Fort St. James.
Other fur trading enterprises were moving into the
area as well including the Northwest Trading Company.
The expense of moving furs overland across Canada
was curtailed when the Columbia River was found to
be navigable. Fort Vancouver was established near
the mouth of the system and goods were now transported
by sailing ship from England around the southern tip
of South America and north to the Columbia River.
This route proved to be faster, cheaper and more efficient
than the overland route and luxuries such as fine
linen, china, and furniture allowed a fine style of
living at trading posts.
England’s Captain George Vancouver took nearly
3 years to survey the west coast of North America
and discovered Vancouver Island and the Strait of
Georgia. Alexander McKenzie was the first person recorded
to cross the North American continent from east to
west arriving at Bella Coola in 1793. Simon Fraser
of the Northwest Trading Company returned to the river
reported by Alexander McKenzie and followed it to
salt water near present day Vancouver City. He reported
that the river was ‘sure death’ for travelers
and was of no use for movement of trade goods.
James Douglas was sent by the Hudson’s Bay
Company from Fort Vancouver on the Columbia to the
north coast to establish a new post that could become
their headquarters until the border was settled between
the USA and lands claimed by Britain to the north.
James Douglas established Fort Victoria on the location
of today’s Capital of British Columbia. The
Treaty of Washington established the border at the
49th parallel extending from the eastern slopes of
the Rocky Mountains to salt water then along the center
of the main passage to the Pacific Ocean.
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THE GOLD RUSH
The 1846 California gold rush had climaxed and large
numbers of miners had stayed waiting for the next
gold rush. And, in 1858 it arrived when the Hudson’s
Bay Company sent gold traded from natives on the Fraser
and Thompson Rivers to be assayed at San Fransico.
Word of Fraser Gold spread to waiting miners and that
year 30,000 miners arrived at Fort Victoria for supplies
on their way to the new gold fields. Miners arrived
by steamboat from San Fransico to Victoria then made
their way however they could to the Fraser River.
Many died crossing the Strait of Georgia on rafts
and makeshift vessels. Gold was first discovered in
river bars in the lower river below Hope then all
the way up through the treacherous Fraser Canyon.
The Douglas trail was built from Harrison Lake over
the Seton portage to Lytton but was found too treacherous
and in 1862 the Cariboo Wagon Road was constructed
up the Fraser Canyon. By 1859 miners had arrived as
far upstream as present day Quesnel and the first
major find occurred at Horsefly in the summer of 1859.
Exploration continued and in 1862, gold was discovered
at William’s Creek and Barkerville became the
home of thousands of miners. When the surface gold
ran out, large well-financed companies hired crews
to dig shafts. By the early 1870’s the gold
rush was over but the mines at Barkerville continued
producing for many years. In 1887 silver was discover
in the Kootenay region and a new mining rush began.
In 1871, the Colony of British Columbia agreed to
join Canada on condition that a transcontinental railway
be constructed to the City of Victoria. The Canadian
Pacific Railway began construction in BC in 1880 at
Yale. In 1887 the first train arrived at the new western
terminus at today’s Vancouver City. The trip
across the continent took 5 days and 20 hours! Ashcroft,
junction of the Cariboo Wagon Road and Canadian Pacific
Railway, became the terminal for goods shipped to
Barkerville, now the largest community in BC. Goods
were hauled north along the Cariboo Wagon Road from
Ashcroft by horse and oxen drawn wagon trains.
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Significant Dates
1577 – 1580 Sir Francis Drake
likely sighted Vancouver Island on his voyage around
the world. After plundering Spanish ships off Mexico,
Drake tried to find a polar route back to England; the
supposition that he sailed north to Vancouver Island
is based on a study of the winds and currents of the
northwestern Pacific.
1640 Canada’s oldest corporation,
the Hudson’s Bay Company (HBC), was formed when
a group of merchant-traders in England received by
royal charter the exclusive right to trade in northern
North America.
1740 Vitus Jonassen Bering, an officer
of the Russian navy, appointed by Peter the Great
to explore the Siberian coast. After 3 years delay,
Bering sailed from Okhotsk and passed through Bering
Strait, proving that Asia and America were not joined.
On a subsequent expedition in 1741, he sailed from
Siberia eastward into the Gulf of Alaska and was the
first navigator to sight mainland Alaska. On the return
voyage his ship was delayed by storms and had to put
in at Bering Island were he died of scurvy.
Spanish exploration of the BC coast was motivated
by concern about a Russian approach to New Spain (Mexico)
and later by a search for the Northwest Passage. Spain
claimed the entire Pacific coast of America following
the late 16-centure papal division of the world between
Spain and Portugal.
1763 The Hudson’s Bay Company
competed with French merchants for dominance in the
fur trade until 1763 when Great Britain won control
of Canada over the French. The North West Company
was created by Montreal fur traders and a spirited
competition continued until 1821 when HBC absorbed
its rival.
1774 Juan Perez left San Blas, Mexico
commanding the Santiago. On 18 July he sighted the
northern end of the Queen Charlotte Islands and traded
with Haida people. Later he anchored off Nootka Sound,
Vancouver Island, and again traded with local people
but did not land or claim the area for Spain.
1775 Juan Francisco de la Bodega
Y Quadra reached the shores of Prince of Wales Island
in Alaska.
1776-1780 James Cook embarked on
a voyage in search of the Pacific entrance to the
fabled Northwest Passage. With two ships, Resolution
and Discovery, he arrived at Resolution Cove in Nootka
Sound on 29 March 1776. After spending a month taking
on wood and water, trading with the local people and
repairing his vessels, Cook departed north and explored
Prince William Sound and Cook Inlet. This visit opened
the northwest coast of America to the outside world
and drew attention to its wealth of sea otter furs,
leading to the maritime Fur Trade.
1779 Spain heard of James Cook’s
(England) plan to explore the Pacific Northwest and
explored as far as Cook Inlet and Kodiak Island.
1785 Capt James Hanna (British)
with his brig the Sea Otter traded sea otter furs
with the Nootka peoples that fetched over $20,000
in Canton and the rush was on.
1786 Laperouse lead a French expedition
to the Northwest Coast.
1788 Esteban Jose Martinez explored
the Alaskan Coast north and west to Unalaska Island,
returning to Mexico with information that the Russians
planned to occupy Nootka.
1789 Spain establishes a settlement
at Yuquot in Friendly Cove on Nootka Island. Here
Martinex seized British fur-trading vessels, touching
off the Nootka Sound Controversy. The Spanish withdrew
that fall, but in 1790 brought soldiers to occupy
the site more permanently.
1789 The first American sea otter
trader was Robert Gray. By 1800 American traders,
mainly from Boston, dominated the trade. Furs from
the coast were taken to Canton and exchanged for tea,
silk, porcelains and sugar. In the peak years from
1790 to 1812, there were as many as 24 vessels on
the coast trading for tens of thousands of pelts.
Coastal First Nations people were experienced traders
who drove a hard bargain. In exchange for their furs
they obtained guns, metal-wares, cloth and liquor.
Relations between traders and aboriginals were often
strained by ignorance and suspicion and there were
instances of violence on both sides. The trade expanded
the wealth of the coastal people and seems to have
stimulated their ceremonial and artistic lives. But
it also introduced diseases such as Smallpox which
eventually led to drastic population decreases. By
the 1820’s trade was in decline and the Hudson
Bay Company was taking over from American traders
and establishing forts on the coast.
1791 George Vancouver received orders
to explore the north west coast of America from California
to Alaska and to resolve a disagreement with Spain
over the owvership of the area. By the summer of 1792
he explored as far as the north tip of Vancouver Island.
In 1793 he continued surveying northward and barely
missed meeting Alexander Mackenzie in Dean Channel.
During his three summers on the coast, his crews mapped
the entire shoreline of BC and many of its offshore
islands. All of this work was done laboriously and
meticulously, the men exploring every cove and inlet
in small rowboats. Vancouver’s expedition effectively
shattered the dream of a Northwest Passage through
North America to the Atlantic and completed a realistic
map of the Pacific basin.
1792 Bodega y Quadra was sent by
Spain to negotiate details of a diplomatic agreement
with Gorge Vancouver of England at Nootka Sound in
the summer of 1792. For two weeks the Spanish and
British explored the islands of the Strait of Georgia
together, sharing information as they sailed. However
Quadra and Vancouver failed to settle the competing
Spanish and British claims and the Nootka affair was
ultimately resolved in Europe.
1793 Alexander Mackenzie of the
North West Company (fur traders) traveled up the Peace
River, across the Rocky Mountains, down the Fraser
River and overland with the help of First Nations
guides to reach the Pacific at the mouth of Bella
Coola River. He and his party continued by canoe and
reached Dean Channel where he painted on a rock in
Elcho Harbour the famous message “Alex Mackenzie,
from Canada, by land, 22 July, 1793” before
returning the way he had come. His was the first known
crossing of North America by a non-aboriginal person.
Mackenzie was unaware that just 6 weeks earlier Vancouver
had rowed through these same waters as part of his
survey of the coast.
1795 Spain ended its occupation
of Yuquot on Nootka Island and ceased maritime activity
north of California.
1804 Lewis & Clark expedition
departs to identify a route to the west.
1805 Simon Fraser of the North West
Company explored the Fraser River to its mouth looking
for an alternate navigable water route to the ocean
(other than the Columbia River). The Hudson’s
Bay Company was using the Columbia River.
1821 Hudson’s Bay Company
absorbs the North West Company and becomes the principal
fur trader in the Pacific northwest.
1825 Hudson’s Bay Company
headquarters is moved from Fort St. James in today’s
central British Columbia to Fort Vancouver near the
mouth of the Columbia River.
1830 American setters begin to arrive
along the Columbia River.
1843 James Douglas built Fort Victoria
in anticipation of a boundary settlement between USA
and Great Britain over disputed lands west of the
Rocky Mountains in the Pacific North West.
1846 USA & Great Britain sign
the Treaty of Washington (Oregon Treaty) extending
the existing international boundary of 49 degrees
N west from the Rocky Mountains circling around the
southern tip of Vancouver Island to the Pacific Ocean.
Britain formally took possession of the mainland creating
the colony of British Columbia.
1849 Britain created the Colony
of Vancouver Island and assigned the Hudson’s
Bay Company the task of encouraging settlement.
1849 The California Gold Rush begins
and transforms the territory newly acquired from Spain
by the US.
1858 The Colony of British Columbia
(mainland) was created and Hudson’s Bay Company
factor, James Douglas, was appointed as Governor.
FRASER RIVER GOLD RUSH
1858 The Fraser River Gold Rush
begins and 30,000 miners arrive in Fort Victoria on
route to the gravel bars of the river. The rush of
miners up the Fraser River changed forever the culture
and practices of the First Nations in British Columbia
1862 Billy Barker strikes gold below
the canyon on Williams Creek and “Barkerville”
became the largest community in BC with a floating
population that peaked at about 5,000. The Barkerville
area boomed 3 times (1862 – 1872), (1898-1910),
and (1932-1942).
CONFEDERATION
1871 At the end of the gold rush
and in debt, British Columbians considered their options,
including annexation to the US, and chose confederation
with the Dominion of Canada. Canada agreed to take
over BC’s debt and to complete a railway to
Victoria within 10 years. BC agreed to give the Dominion
government a 32 kilometre wide strip of land on either
side of the track. The Crown Lands given to Canada
totaled almost 58,500 square kilometers. The new provincial
government would consist of a 25 seat legislative
assembly. Confederation represented an economic arrangement
more than a sentimental attachment to Canada.
1880 The Canadian Pacific Railway
begins at Yale heading east.
1887 The western terminus of the
Canadian Pacific Railway was established at Burrard
Inlet and a community was established which quickly
became the City of Vancouver.
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