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Wikipedia

Kamloops

Kamloops (/ˈkæmlps/ KAM-loops) is a city in south-central British Columbia, Canada, at the confluence of the South flowing North Thompson River and the West flowing Thompson River, east of Kamloops Lake. It is located in the Thompson-Nicola Regional District, whose district offices are based here. The surrounding region is sometimes referred to as the Thompson Country.

Kamloops
Tk'əmlúps
City
City of Kamloops
Downtown Kamloops
Motto(s): 
Salus et Opes (Health and Wealth)
Kamloops
Location of Kamloops in British Columbia
Kamloops
Kamloops (Canada)
Coordinates: 50°40′33″N 120°20′22″W / 50.67583°N 120.33944°W / 50.67583; -120.33944[1]Coordinates: 50°40′33″N 120°20′22″W / 50.67583°N 120.33944°W / 50.67583; -120.33944[1]
CountryCanada
ProvinceBritish Columbia
RegionThompson Country
Regional districtThompson–Nicola
Founded1811 (fur trading post)
Incorporated1893
Amalgamated1973
Government
 • TypeElected city council
 • MayorReid Hamer-Jackson
 • Governing bodyKamloops City Council
 • MPFrank Caputo
 • MLAsPeter Milobar
Todd Stone
Area
 • Land299.25 km2 (115.54 sq mi)
Elevation345 m (1,132 ft)
Population
 (2021)[2][5]
 • City97,902
 • Metro
114,142
DemonymKamloopsian
Time zoneUTC−08:00 (PST)
 • Summer (DST)UTC−07:00 (PDT)
Forward sortation area
Area code(s)250, 778, 236, 672
HighwaysHwy 1 (TCH)
Hwy 5
Hwy 5A
Hwy 97
GNBC CodeJAFNW[6]
NTS Map92I9 Kamloops[6]
Websitewww.kamloops.ca

The city was incorporated in 1893 with about 500 residents. The Canadian Pacific Railroad was completed through downtown in 1886, and the Canadian National arrived in 1912, making Kamloops an important transportation hub.

With a 2021 population of 97,902, it is the twelfth largest municipality in the province.[2] The Kamloops census agglomeration is ranked 36th among census metropolitan areas and agglomerations in Canada with a 2021 population of 114,142.[5]

Kamloops is promoted as the Tournament Capital of Canada. It hosts more than 100 sporting tournaments each year (hockey, baseball, curling, etc) at world-class sports facilities such as the Tournament Capital Centre, Kamloops Bike Ranch, and Tournament Capital Ranch. Logging, Beef Cattle, Vegetable farming, Transportation, Viticulture, Health care, tourism, and education are major contributing industries to the regional economy and have grown in recent years. Thompson Rivers University (~25,000 students) was established as Cariboo College in 1970.

History

 
Kamloops and the Thompson River, 1886
 
Paddle steamer at Kamloops in 1887

The first European explorers arrived in 1811. David Stuart, a trader sent from Fort Astoria, then still a Pacific Fur Company post, spent a winter with the Secwépemc people. In May of the following year, trader Alexander Ross established a post, which was known as "Fort Cumcloups".

The rival North West Company established Fort Shuswap nearby in the same year. The two businesses merged in 1813 when the North West Company bought the operations of the Pacific Fur Company. In 1821, the Hudson's Bay Company took over the North West Company, and the post became known commonly as Thompson's River Post, or Fort Thompson. Later it was known as Fort Kamloops.[7] The post's Chief Traders kept journals, which document a series of inter-Indian wars and personalities for the period, in addition to the daily business of the fur companies and their personnel along the entire Pacific Slope.

Soon after the forts were founded, Kwa'lila, chief of the main local village of the Secwépemc, moved his people closer to the trading post, so they could control access and gain in prestige and security. After Kwa'lila died, his nephew and foster son Nicola became chief. He later led an alliance of Syilx (Okanagan) and Nlaka'pamux peoples in the plateau country to the south around Stump, Nicola and Douglas lakes.

Relations between Nicola and the fur traders were often tense, but Chief Nicola was recognized for his aid to colonizers during the Fraser Canyon Gold Rush of 1858. He did try to control those who had been in parties waging violence and looting on the Okanagan Trail, which led from American territory to the Fraser goldfields.[8][9] Throughout, Kamloops was an important way station on the route of the Hudson's Bay Brigade Trail, which connected Fort Astoria with Fort Alexandria and the other forts in New Caledonia to the north (today's Omineca Country, roughly). It was integral during the onset of the Cariboo Gold Rush as the main route to the new goldfields around what was to become Barkerville.

The 1862 Pacific Northwest smallpox epidemic swept through the Kamloops area during the summer of that year, decimating the Secwepemc, Nlaka'pamux, and other indigenous peoples. They had no acquired immunity. The epidemic had started in Victoria and quickly spread throughout British Columbia, especially among First Nations. In June 1862, indigenous people went to Fort Kamloops seeking smallpox vaccine, William Manson, chief clerk at the fort, vaccinated numerous persons, but fatalities were extremely high. In late September he reported "smallpox still raging amongst the Indians".

In October a newspaper in Victoria reported an eyewitness account from Fort Kamloops, saying

"The Indians have been nearly exterminated at [Kamloops]: only sixteen have escaped out of a large settlement. Their bodies are strewing the ground in all directions."

About two-thirds of the Secwepemc died during the epidemic. In the aftermath, colonists took over traditional lands of the Secwepemc and many other indigenous groups throughout British Columbia.[10][11][12][13]

The gold rush of the 1860s and the construction of the Canadian Pacific Railway, which reached Kamloops from the West in 1885,[14] brought further growth. The City of Kamloops was incorporated in 1893 with a population of about 500.

In 1908 due to the Tuberculosis Pandemic a sanatorium was opened west of the city named King Edward Memorial Sanatorium, the sanatorium was later acquired by the provincial government in 1921, being renamed to Tranquille Sanatorium, it later closed in 1958. The Tranquille Institution reopened in 1959 to treat people with mental problems it later closed in 1983.

In 1967, Kamloops amalgamated with the Town of North Kamloops.

The logging industry of the 1970s attracted many Indo-Canadian workers to the Kamloops area. They had come mostly from the Punjab region of India. In 1973, Kamloops amalgamated with the Districts of Brocklehurst, Dufferin, the Town of Valleyview, and the Kamloops Indian Band, and the communities of Dallas, Campbell Creek, Barnhart Vale, Heffley Creek, Rayleigh, Westsyde and Knutsford. In 1976, the Kamloops Indian Band split from the City of Kamloops.

In May 2021, an anthropologist announced she had used ground-penetrating radar to find "probable" graves containing the remains of 215 children found at a former Kamloops Indian residential school, part of the Canadian Indian residential school system.[15] The story was reported around the world, and five Catholic churches in Western Canada were burned down in the weeks following, since the school was operated by a Catholic order.[16] However, this story cannot be completely confirmed until bodies are exhumed.[17][18][19]

Etymology

"Kamloops" is the anglicized version of the Shuswap word "Tk'əmlúps", meaning "meeting of the waters". Shuswap is still spoken in the area by members of the Tk'emlúps Indian Band.[20]

An alternate origin sometimes given for the name may have come from the native name's accidental similarity to the French "Camp des loups", meaning "Camp of Wolves"; many early fur traders were ethnic French.[7] There are folk stories about an attack on a traders' camp by a pack of wolves. Other legendary versions recount a huge white wolf, or a pack of wolves and other animals, that were moving overland from the Nicola Country and were repelled by a single shot by John Tod, then Chief Trader. This prevented the wolves from attacking the fort and earned Tod a great degree of respect locally.[21]

Geography

Kamloops is in the Thompson Valley and the Montane Cordillera Ecozone. The city's centre is in the valley near the confluence of the Thompson River's north and south branches. Suburbs stretch for more than a dozen kilometres along the north and south branches, as well as to the steep hillsides along the south portion of the city and lower northeast hillsides.

Robert W. Service in 1904 described Kamloops as his delightful life and wrote "Life was pleasant, and the work was light. At four o'clock we were on our horses, riding over the rolling ridges, or into spectral gulches that rose to ghostlier mountains. It was like the scenery of Mexico, weirdly desolate and aridly morose. A discouraging land, forbidding in its weariness and resigned to ruin."

Kamloops Indian Band areas begin just to the northeast of the downtown core but are not within the city limits. As a result of this placement, it is necessary to leave Kamloops' city limits and pass through the band lands before re-entering the city limits to access the northernmost communities of Rayleigh and Heffley Creek. Kamloops is surrounded by the smaller communities of Cherry Creek, Pritchard, Savona, Scotch Creek, Adams Lake, Chase, Paul Lake, Pinantan and various others.

Neighbourhoods

Officially recognized neighbourhoods within the city of Kamloops.[22]

Informally recognized sub-areas are listed beneath the neighbourhoods to which they belong:

Climate

The climate of Kamloops is semi-arid (Köppen climate classification BSk) due to its rain shadow location. Because of milder winters and aridity, the area west of Kamloops in the lower Thompson River valley falls within a desert (Köppen climate classification BWk) climate. Kamloops gets short cold snaps where temperatures can drop to around −20 °C (−4 °F) when Arctic air manages to cross the Rockies and Columbia Mountains into the Interior.

 
Kamloops in the Fraser River watershed

Kamloops has the third mildest winter of any non-coastal city in Canada, after Penticton and Kelowna.[23] The January mean temperature is −2.8 °C (27 °F).[24] That average sharply increases with an average maximum temperature of 4.3 °C (40 °F) in February. Between November and January the area experiences abundant cloud cover reducing the annual sunshine output, despite very sunny summers. The average number of days where temperatures drop below −10 °C (14 °F) per year is 19.9 as recorded by Environment Canada.[24]

Although Kamloops is above 50° north latitude, summers are warmer than in many places at lower latitudes, with prevailing dry and sunny weather. Daytime humidity sometimes drops below 20% during dry periods, which allows for substantial nighttime cooling. Occasional summer thunderstorms can create dry-lightning conditions, sometimes igniting forest fires which the area is prone to.

Kamloops lies in the rain shadow leeward of the Coast Mountains and is biogeographically connected to similar semi-desert areas in the Okanagan region, and a much larger area covering the central/eastern portions of Washington, Oregon and intermontane areas of Nevada, Utah and Idaho in the US.

These areas of relatively similar climate have many distinctive native plants and animals in common, such as ponderosa pine (Pinus ponderosa), big sagebrush (Artemisia tridentata), prickly pear cactus (Opuntia fragilis in this case), rattlesnakes, black widow spiders and Lewis's woodpecker.

The highest temperature ever recorded in Kamloops was 47.3 °C (117 °F) on 29 June 2021, which was the fourth-highest reading ever recorded in Canada, during the notorious 2021 Western North America heat wave.[25][26][27] The lowest temperature ever recorded was −38.3 °C (−37 °F) on 16 and 18 January 1950.[28]

Climate data for Kamloops Airport, 1981–2010 normals, extremes 1890–present[a]
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high humidex 15.8 17.0 23.3 31.9 36.8 48.0 40.4 40.3 38.4 31.2 22.8 15.0 48.0
Record high °C (°F) 16.1
(61.0)
17.8
(64.0)
23.3
(73.9)
33.3
(91.9)
37.8
(100.0)
47.3
(117.1)
41.7
(107.1)
40.8
(105.4)
38.3
(100.9)
31.3
(88.3)
22.8
(73.0)
16.1
(61.0)
47.3
(117.1)
Average high °C (°F) 0.4
(32.7)
4.3
(39.7)
11.0
(51.8)
16.6
(61.9)
21.5
(70.7)
25.1
(77.2)
28.9
(84.0)
28.3
(82.9)
22.3
(72.1)
13.7
(56.7)
5.6
(42.1)
0.3
(32.5)
14.8
(58.6)
Daily mean °C (°F) −2.8
(27.0)
0.1
(32.2)
5.2
(41.4)
9.9
(49.8)
14.6
(58.3)
18.4
(65.1)
21.5
(70.7)
20.9
(69.6)
15.6
(60.1)
8.5
(47.3)
2.1
(35.8)
−2.7
(27.1)
9.3
(48.7)
Average low °C (°F) −5.9
(21.4)
−4.0
(24.8)
−0.6
(30.9)
3.2
(37.8)
7.7
(45.9)
11.6
(52.9)
14.2
(57.6)
13.4
(56.1)
8.8
(47.8)
3.3
(37.9)
−1.4
(29.5)
−5.8
(21.6)
3.7
(38.7)
Record low °C (°F) −38.3
(−36.9)
−32.8
(−27.0)
−26.1
(−15.0)
−10.6
(12.9)
−5.6
(21.9)
0.6
(33.1)
3.3
(37.9)
0.6
(33.1)
−3.9
(25.0)
−17.1
(1.2)
−30.0
(−22.0)
−36.1
(−33.0)
−38.3
(−36.9)
Record low wind chill −42.0 −36.7 −33.9 −13.0 −5.2 0.0 0.0 0.0 −6.5 −23.2 −39.1 −45.1 −45.1
Average precipitation mm (inches) 21.1
(0.83)
12.4
(0.49)
12.8
(0.50)
14.2
(0.56)
27.3
(1.07)
37.4
(1.47)
31.4
(1.24)
23.7
(0.93)
29.4
(1.16)
19.4
(0.76)
23.3
(0.92)
25.4
(1.00)
277.6
(10.93)
Average rainfall mm (inches) 5.3
(0.21)
5.9
(0.23)
9.7
(0.38)
14.0
(0.55)
27.3
(1.07)
37.4
(1.47)
31.4
(1.24)
23.7
(0.93)
29.4
(1.16)
19.0
(0.75)
14.2
(0.56)
7.1
(0.28)
224.3
(8.83)
Average snowfall cm (inches) 18.7
(7.4)
8.0
(3.1)
3.5
(1.4)
0.2
(0.1)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.3
(0.1)
10.9
(4.3)
21.9
(8.6)
63.5
(25.0)
Average precipitation days (≥ 0.2 mm) 9.7 7.2 6.8 6.2 10.2 10.7 8.4 8.0 7.6 9.0 10.0 11.7 105.6
Average rainy days (≥ 0.2 mm) 3.6 3.8 5.5 6.1 10.2 10.7 8.3 8.0 7.6 8.8 7.1 3.4 83.3
Average snowy days (≥ 0.2 cm) 7.6 4.1 1.9 0.3 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.3 3.9 9.3 27.4
Average relative humidity (%) 72.6 60.0 43.0 35.6 36.2 36.4 33.5 34.4 41.4 52.9 65.9 70.9 48.6
Mean monthly sunshine hours 55.2 95.6 165.3 202.8 251.6 252.0 303.4 289.5 223.3 130.9 63.7 46.6 2,079.8
Percent possible sunshine 20.9 33.9 45.0 49.0 52.4 51.2 61.2 64.3 58.7 39.2 23.5 18.6 43.2
Source: Environment Canada[24][29][30][31]

Hottest summer Most days above 30 °C (86 °F) Driest Warmest spring Fewest fog days Most sunny days in warm months Most growing degree days Most days without precipitation
Rank among 100 largest Canadian cities 1st 1st 2nd
(next to Whitehorse)
2nd
(next to Chilliwack)
2nd
(next to Penticton)
2nd
(next to Portage la Prairie)
3rd
(next to Windsor and St. Catharines)
3rd
(next to Medicine Hat and Lethbridge)
Value 26.94 °C (80.5 °F) 29.28 278.98 mm (10.98 in) 9.65 °C (49.4 °F) 7.28 148.93 2308.61 258.12
Data is for Kamloops Airport (YKA), in the city of Kamloops, 5 NM (9.3 km; 5.8 mi) west northwest of the town.[32][4]

Demographics

Historical population
YearPop.±%
1881200—    
18911,500+650.0%
19011,359−9.4%
19113,772+177.6%
19214,501+19.3%
19316,167+37.0%
19415,959−3.4%
19518,099+35.9%
19569,096+12.3%
196110,076+10.8%
196610,759+6.8%
197126,168+143.2%
197658,311+122.8%
198164,048+9.8%
198661,773−3.6%
199167,057+8.6%
199676,394+13.9%
200177,281+1.2%
200680,376+4.0%
201185,678+6.6%
201690,280+5.4%
202197,902+8.4%
Sources: Statistics Canada[33][34]

In the 2021 Census of Population conducted by Statistics Canada, Kamloops had a population of 97,902 living in 39,914 of its 41,619 total private dwellings, a change of 8.4% from its 2016 population of 90,280. With a land area of 297.93 km2 (115.03 sq mi), it had a population density of 328.6/km2 (851.1/sq mi) in 2021.[35]

At the census metropolitan area (CMA) level in the 2021 census, the Kamloops CMA had a population of 114,142 living in 47,102 of its 50,235 total private dwellings, a change of 10% from its 2016 population of 103,811. With a land area of 5,654.08 km2 (2,183.05 sq mi), it had a population density of 20.2/km2 (52.3/sq mi) in 2021.[36]

Religious groups

According to the 2021 census, religious groups in Kamloops included:[37]

Ethnicity

Panethnic groups in the City of Kamloops (2001−2021)
Panethnic
group
2021[37] 2016[38] 2011[39] 2006[40] 2001[41]
Pop. % Pop. % Pop. % Pop. % Pop. %
European[b] 74,430 78.71% 71,765 82.17% 71,760 85.71% 69,250 87.17% 68,305 88.92%
Indigenous 9,885 10.45% 8,600 9.85% 6,245 7.46% 5,165 6.5% 3,965 5.16%
South Asian 4,260 4.51% 2,455 2.81% 1,970 2.35% 1,540 1.94% 1,720 2.24%
East Asian[c] 2,420 2.56% 2,270 2.6% 2,135 2.55% 1,940 2.44% 1,810 2.36%
Southeast Asian[d] 1,410 1.49% 910 1.04% 740 0.88% 840 1.06% 450 0.59%
African 985 1.04% 550 0.63% 235 0.28% 215 0.27% 335 0.44%
Latin American 490 0.52% 310 0.35% 135 0.16% 195 0.25% 120 0.16%
Middle Eastern[e] 320 0.34% 250 0.29% 355 0.42% 120 0.15% 65 0.08%
Other[f] 370 0.39% 230 0.26% 145 0.17% 165 0.21% 50 0.07%
Total responses 94,560 96.59% 87,340 96.74% 83,725 97.72% 79,445 98.84% 76,815 99.4%
Total population 97,902 100% 90,280 100% 85,678 100% 80,376 100% 77,281 100%
  • Note: Totals greater than 100% due to multiple origin responses.

Chinese Canadians

Kamloops historically had a Chinatown on Victoria Street where most ethnic Chinese lived. John Stewart of the Kamloops Museum and Archives stated it was not a "true Chinatown".[42] It was established by Chinese immigrants by 1887, and by 1890 the community had up to 400 Chinese. Stewart said this was an "amazingly large" population for the rural area.[43] By the 1890s, about 33% of Kamloops were ethnic Chinese; they worked primarily on construction of the Canadian Pacific Railway.[44]

Economic changes in Kamloops resulted in many Chinese seeking work elsewhere. In addition, there were two fires in 1892 and 1893, and a 1911–1914 demolition that dismantled the Chinatown.[45] Peter Wing, the first ethnic Chinese mayor in North America, was elected in 1966 and served three terms as the Mayor of Kamloops.[44]

In the 1880s the Kamloops' Chinese Cemetery was founded in Kamloops, the only one in the province dedicated to Chinese pioneers,[44] It is one of the largest cemeteries in the province,[44] but the last interment was made there in the 1960s.[46]

In 2013 the provincial government announced it would begin a consultation process to discuss wording of a formal apology to Chinese in B.C. for past wrongs. Joe Leong, president of the Kamloops Chinese Cultural Association, said he believed that the province should build a museum to honour Chinese history in the province, as a way to recognize the contributions of the people. As Kamloops had the only cemetery dedicated to the Chinese pioneers, he felt this city would be an appropriate site for the museum.[44]

Economy

 
Royal Inland Hospital
 
Thompson Rivers University

Kamloops' economy includes healthcare, tourism, education, transportation, and natural resource extraction industries.

The Royal Inland Hospital (RIH) is the city's largest employer. RIH is the region's acute care and health facility and is one of two tertiary referral hospitals in the Southern Interior with 239 acute beds and an additional 20 more beds upon completion of the expansion in 2016.[47]

Thompson Rivers University (TRU) serves a student body of 25,754 including a diverse international contingent mainly from Asian countries.[48] Thompson Rivers University, Open Learning (TRU-OL) is the biggest distance education provider in British Columbia and one of the biggest in Canada.

Heavy industries in the Kamloops area include primary resource processing such as Domtar Kamloops Pulp Mill, Tolko-Heffley Creek Plywood and Veneer, New Gold Inc - New Afton Mine, and Highland Valley Copper Mine (in Logan Lake).

Four major highways join in Kamloops, the BC Highway 1 (Trans-Canada Highway), the Coquihalla Highway (BC highway 5 south of the city), the Yellowhead Highway (BC Highway 5 north of the city) and BC Highway 97, making it a transportation hub and a place which attracts business. There are over 50 trucking and transport companies located in Kamloops that ship across Canada and into the United States.[49] Both the Canadian Pacific Railway and the Canadian National Railway service Kamloops with both lines running through the city.[49]

Tourism

Kamloops welcomed 1.8 million visitors in 2017, a 9% increase from 2015 (1.64 million).

Tourism's economic ROI is immense. A$1.8 million destination marketing budget returned $449 million in economic benefit in 2017.The annual Direct Visitor Expenditure is estimated at $270 million, a 19% increase from 2015 ($227 million). Further, the total estimated tourism economic impact was $449 million in 2017, a 32.4% increase from 2015 ($339 million).[50]

Tourism generates many types of income for the region, including business income, wage earnings, share earnings, rates and levies. Conservation springs from industry-wide support for management, research and education initiatives that benefit everyone through responsible tourism management.

Kamloops has over 50 accommodation choices[51] from major hotels to bed and breakfasts. Accommodation occupancy rates were 61.5% in 2017, up 2.6% from 2016.

Arts and culture

 
Alley art in downtown Kamloops
 
Music in the Park at Riverside Park

Kamloops culture has grown in recent years to celebrate local talent that includes: culinary arts, sports, live entertainment, and fine art.

Kamloops hosts a range of cultural events year-round including:

  • Kamloops Wine Festival:[52] This annual festival is a fundraiser for the Kamloops Art Gallery.
  • Kamloops Film Festival:[53] Since 1997, this festival has grown to celebrate international films at Paramount Theatre for ten days in March.
  • River Beaver Classic:[54] This annual, mountain biking festival hosts four events over one weekend in April with all money raised going to local trail maintenance.
  • Brewloops[55] Brewloops is a non-profit, beer, food, and bike festival that celebrates Kamloops culture with block parties on The Shore and Downtown throughout the year.
  • Kamloops International Buskers Festival:[56] This four-day festival takes place throughout Riverside Park and showcases professional buskers from around the globe.
  • Hot Nite in the City Show 'n' Shine:[57] This weekend-long event takes place every August downtown and showcases Street Rods, Customs, American Muscle, Sport-compact, Electric Vehicles and more.
  • Kamloops Rotary Ribfest:[58] Western Canada's largest rib festival, Ribfest takes place every August at Riverside Park. By 2018, Kamloops Rotary had raised over $500,000 for local charities.
  • Salute to the Sockeye Festival:[59] This festival celebrates the return of sockeye salmon to the Adams River at Tsútswecw Provincial Park from the end of September through mid-October each year.
  • Interior Wellness Festival:[60] Since 2008, this event has promoted healthy living in BC including workshops with yogis, authors, and business experts.
  • Kamloops Comedy Fest: Canadian comedians take over the microphone for a weekend each October during Kamloops Comedy Fest.
  • Words Alive Kamloops:[61] Formerly the Kamloops Writers Festival, this annual event features Canadian authors showcasing their work through public readings and events, as well as conducting workshops on a variety of topics.

Performing and fine arts

Kamloops is home to many galleries including nationally recognized Kamloops Art Gallery,[62] Secwepemc Museum and Heritage Park; the Kamloops Museum and Archives, the Kamloops Symphony Orchestra,[63] and Western Canada Theatre.

There are 29 outdoor murals – the Back Alley Art Gallery- throughout downtown Kamloops that the Kamloops Central Business Improvement Association has spearheaded since the 2000s. Artists that have contributed to this project include: Zack Abney; Kyleen Cachelin; Evan Christina; Kelly Wright; Ken Wells; Alex Moir-Porteus; Robin Hodgson; Jack Morris; Janice Gurney, and Marianna Abutalipova.

Project X Theatre, an outdoor theatre festival located in Kamloops. The company creates a summer outdoor theatre festival in Prince Charles Park, just east of Downtown Kamloops. Established in 2006, Project X Theatre originally produced productions of Shakespeare, however, recently the company has shifted over to more family friendly shows. Randi Edmundson is the current Artistic Director. Previous artistic directors include Samantha Mcdonanld, Derek Rein, Heather Cant, Melissa purcha, and Dušan Magdolen.

The Western Canada Theatre is a professional theatre company located in Kamloops. The company manages and performs in two spaces: the 706 seat Sagebrush Theatre and the 150-seat Pavilion Theatre. James MacDonald is the current artistic director of the theatre company. Previous artistic directors include Tom Kerr (founder), Frank Glassen, David Ross, Michael Dobbin, John Cooper, Jeremy Tow, and Daryl Cloran.[64]

Attractions

Popular attractions include: the Adams River Sockeye Salmon Run;[65] Kamloops Bike Ranch; BC Wildlife Park; Kamloops Heritage Railway; Kamloops Wine Trail; Secwepemc Museum, and Tranquille Sanatorium

Since 2012, four wineries have been established in the Thompson Valley wine region[66] including: Sagewood Winery; Harper's Trail Winery; Monte Creek Ranch Winery, and Privato Vineyard and Winery. Since 2010, five micro-breweries have opened up in Kamloops including: Noble Pig Brewhouse; Red Collar Brewing, Alchemy Brewing, Bright Eye Brewing and Iron Road Brewing. Since 2020, some craft distilleries have opened up in Kamloops including: Route 1 Distillery

Food and drink

Since 2007, Chefs in the City has been established as a "celebration of culinary arts, fine wine and beer from Kamloops and the surrounding region.[67]" In 2018, 21 local restaurants will have participated, as well as 10 local wineries and breweries. This annual event is presented by the Rotary Club of Kamloops and has raised over $325,000 since 2007.

Kamloops is emerging as an award-winning wine region with a climate perfect for growing grapes. It is home to four award-winning wineries: Harper's Trail, Monte Creek Ranch, Privato and Sagewood.[68][69] Kamloops has over 120 acres under vine. The top grapes planted by local wineries are Riesling, Chardonnay, pinot gris, pinot noir, Cabernet Franc, Marechal Foch and Marquette.

Since 1998, the Kamloops Wine Festival has taken place in the spring as a fundraiser to support the Kamloops Art Gallery. The Kamloops Wine Festival had raised over $200,000 by 2018.[70]

In 2014, Brewloops Beer Festival was established as a non-profit organization that promotes Kamloops culture across the city throughout the year. Brewloops celebrates BC craft beer, music, and entertainment with the wider Kamloops community and had donated $27,000 to community groups by 2018.[71] Bands that have performed at Brewloops include: Delhi 2 Dublin, Yukon Blonde, and at Mission Dolores.

Recreation

Kamloops is an outdoor mecca for activities like hiking and mountain biking with an extensive trail network for year-round adventure. Multiple nearby lakes offer paddling, kayaking and fishing.

Known as the Tournament Capital of Canada, Kamloops has hosted many tournaments and is home to a range of professional athletes from many sports. Kamloops has the Kamloops Sports Hall of Fame, which includes 2008 Summer Olympics bronze medallist Dylan Armstrong and the National Finalist Roma's soccer team.[72]

Fishing

With 100 lakes within an hour's drive, Kamloops has some of the best freshwater fishing in North America. Every year, the Freshwater Fisheries Society of BC stocks lakes in the Thompson-Nicola region with roughly 1,000,000 fish including rainbow trout, brook trout, and kokanee salmon.

Kamloops is known for its professional anglers including Brian Chan,[73] Jordan Oelrich,[74] and Brennan Lund.[75] Fishing guides in the Kamloops area include: DNA Fly Fishing;[76] Interior Fly Fishing; Maricle Fly Fishing; Riseform Flyfishing;[77] and Fast Action Fishing Adventures.[78]

Mountain biking

Kamloops' extensive trail network and desert-like climate creates world-class conditions for year-round mountain biking across the city. Popular parks include the Kamloops Bike Ranch,[79] Pineview Valley; Lac du Bois Grasslands Protected Area,[80] and Kenna Cartwright Park. Two time UCI Mountain Bike & Trials World Championships – Women's cross-country (2011 and 2014), gold at the 2014 Commonwealth Games and 2016 Summer Olympics bronze medallist Catharine Pendrel lives and trains in Kamloops.[81] Kamloops is home to world-famous mountain bikers such as freeride pioneers and Mountain Bike Hall of Fame members Wade Simmons, Brett Tippie, (also a former Canadian National Team member for snowboard cross and giant slalom), and Richie Schley.[82] Freeriders Matt Hunter, and Graham Agassiz also live in Kamloops.[83] Kamloops was featured in the first mountain bike film by Greg Stump, Pulp Traction, and later the first three Kranked films, which starred the original Fro Riders, Tippie, Simmons and Schley.

Ongoing trail maintenance has been spearheaded by local organizations such as the Kamloops Bike Riders Association, Kamloops Performance Cycling Centre, and Dirt Chix Kamloops.

Golf

Kamloops has highest number of golf courses (13) per capita in Canada and boasts one of Canada's most diverse golf landscapes. Golfers enjoy three seasons of golf due to the dry and hot climate of the area.[84] Several of the local golf courses have been designed by famous golf architects such as Robert Trent Jones, Graham Cooke, and Tom McBroom.[84]

The 13 courses include: Tobiano Golf Course; The Dunes, Talking Rock Golf Course; Pineridge Golf Course; Rivershore Estates; Big Horn Golf & Country Club; Kamloops Golf & Country Club; Sun Peaks Golf; Eagle Point Golf Course; Mount Paul Golf Course, and Chinook Cove Golf.[85]

Skiing

Sun Peaks Resort is a nearby ski and snowboard hill. Olympic medallist skier Nancy Greene Raine is director of skiing at Sun Peaks and the former chancellor of Thompson Rivers University. The Overlander Ski Club runs the Stake Lake cross country ski area with 50 km (31 mi) of trails.

Lacrosse teams include the Thompson Okanagan Junior Lacrosse League's Kamloops Junior B Venom, as well as the junior ice hockey team the Kamloops Storm. Also calling Kamloops home is the Canadian Junior Football League's Kamloops Broncos, and Pacific Coast Soccer League's Kamloops Excel, both of whom play at Hillside Stadium.

Other recreation

The Kamloops Rotary Skatepark at McArthur Island Park is one of Canada's largest skateboard parks.[86] Also located at McArthur Island Park is NorBrock Stadium, the McArthur Island Sports and Events Centre and the McArthur Island Curling Club. The city boasts 82 parks which are great for hiking, including Kenna Cartwright Park, the largest municipal park in British Columbia.[87]

 
Kamloops panorama

Sports

Hockey

Kamloops is home to the Western Hockey League's Kamloops Blazers who play at the Sandman Centre. Alumni of the Kamloops Blazers include Mark Recchi, Jarome Iginla, Darryl Sydor, Nolan Baumgartner, Shane Doan, Scott Niedermayer, Rudy Poeschek and Darcy Tucker (Recchi, Doan, Iginla, and Sydor are now part-owners of the club). Two-time champion coach Ken Hitchcock would later win the Stanley Cup with the Dallas Stars.

Kamloops is also the hometown of 2015 World Junior Ice Hockey Champion and current defenceman for the Detroit Red Wings, Joe Hicketts.[88]

On 6 February 2016, Kamloops hosted Hockey Day in Canada with Ron MacLean and Don Cherry.[89]

Sports tournaments

Kamloops hosted the 1993 Canada Summer Games. It co-hosted (with Vancouver and Kelowna) the IIHF World Junior Championship from 26 December 2005 to 5 January 2006. It hosted the 2006 BC Summer Games and 2018 BC Winter Games. In the summer of 2008, Kamloops, and its modern facility the Tournament Capital Centre played host to the U15 boys and girls Basketball National Championship.

Kamloops hosted the World Masters Indoor Championships in March 2010.[90]

Kamloops hosted the 2011 Western Canada Summer Games.

Kamloops hosted the 2014 Tim Hortons Brier (The Canadian Men's Curling Championships).[91]

Kamloops hosted the 2014 edition of the 4 Nations Cup.[92]

Government

Elections into the municipality in Kamloops are held with the rest of the province every four years.

Provincially, Kamloops is considered to be bellwether, having voted for the governing party in every provincial election since the introduction of parties to British Columbian elections, until 2017. By contrast, Kamloops has regularly voted against the party in power federally until the 2006 Federal election. Kamloops is represented in two provincial ridingsKamloops-South Thompson and Kamloops-North Thompson – and one federal riding – Kamloops—Thompson—Cariboo.

  • Mayor – Reid Hamer-Jackson, 2022
  • Members of the Legislative Assembly:

Federal members of parliament:

Infrastructure

Transportation

Kamloops is located at the crossroads of the Coquihalla Highway, Yellowhead Highway, and Trans-Canada Highway and is a transportation hub in the region.

The Canadian Pacific (CPR) and Canadian National (CNR) mainline routes connect Vancouver in the west with Kamloops. The two railways diverge to the north and east where they connect with the rest of Canada. Kamloops North station is served three times per week (in each direction) by Via Rail's Canadian.

The Rocky Mountaineer and the Kamloops Heritage Railway both use the Kamloops station.

Kamloops is home to Kamloops Airport (YKA). Airlines flying to Kamloops include: Air Canada Express, WestJet Encore, Canadian North, and Central Mountain Air, as well as three cargo airlines. Vancouver and Calgary are primary routes for passenger service to this regional airport. In 2018, Air Canada Rouge launched non-stop seasonal service from Kamloops to Toronto.[93]

Greyhound Canada previously connected Kamloops with Vancouver, Edmonton and Calgary, with service ending at the end of October 2018. After Greyhound's departure, several companies stepped in and commenced intercity service. Ebus and Rider Express both provide service to Vancouver and in between cities and towns, with Ebus connecting to other Interior cities like Kelowna and Vernon, and Rider Express continuing east to Calgary.[94]

Local bus service is provided by Kamloops Transit System and funded through BC Transit with 14 routes across the Kamloops area that are operated by contractor First Student Canada. In 2018, the City of Kamloops partnered with the Tk'emlúps te Secwépemc to expand its services on Tk'emlups te Secwepemc land for Route 18: Mount Paul.[95]

Education

Residential School

The Kamloops Indian Residential School, part of the Canadian Indian residential school system opened in 1893 and ran until 1977.[96] In May 2021, the possible remains of 200 children were detected in the graveyard soil by ground penetrating radar at the site of the school.[97][98] The remains were located with the assistance of ground-penetrating radar, and work was underway to determine if related records about the identities of the dead are held at the Royal British Columbia Museum.[97] In a statement released by the First Nations Health Authority, CEO Richard Jock said: "That this situation exists is sadly not a surprise and illustrates the damaging and lasting impacts that the residential school system continues to have on First Nations people, their families and communities."[98]

K-12

Public schools in Kamloops and adjacent communities are run by School District 73 Kamloops/Thompson.

Private schools include Kamloops Christian School, Our Lady of Perpetual Help School (Catholic), and St. Ann's Academy (Catholic).

The Conseil scolaire francophone de la Colombie-Britannique operates école Collines-d’or, a Francophone primary school.[99]

Post-secondary

Thompson Rivers University[100] offers a range of undergraduate and graduate degrees as well as certificate and diploma programs. It has satellite campuses in:

Thompson Rivers University also has an open-learning division. Thompson Rivers University, Open Learning (TRU-OL) is the biggest distance and online education provider in British Columbia and one of the biggest in Canada. The Thompson Rivers University WolfPack are the athletic teams that represent Thompson Rivers University.

Thompson Career College and Sprott Shaw College are private post-secondary institutions with campuses in Kamloops.

Media

The city's main daily newspaper was The Kamloops Daily News which ceased publication in 2014.[101] The city is also home to Kamloops This Week,[102] a free newspaper which publishes three times a week.

Notable people

Below is a list of people who are from Kamloops, or who lived there for an extended period.

Historical figures

Politicians

Athletes

Arts, culture and media

Other notable people

Planetary nomenclature

 
Kamloops crater on Mars

The city's name has been given to a crater on the surface of Mars. Crater Kamloops was officially adopted by the International Astronomical Union's Working Group for Planetary System Nomenclature (IAU/WGPSN) in 1991. The crater lies at 53.8° south latitude and 32.6° west longitude, with a diameter of 65 km (40 mi).[132][133]

Sister cities

In popular culture

In "Cementhead," a 1989 episode of the television series Booker, the titular detective (played by Richard Grieco) tracks a capricious professional hockey player (Stephen Shellen) back to his hometown of Kamloops.

Kamloops and surrounding areas have been used for various Hollywood films such as An Unfinished Life, The A Team, 2012, The Pledge, Shooter, Firewall, The Sisterhood of the Travelling Pants, Monster Trucks, and various others.[136]

"The Eye of Jupiter", the eleventh episode of the third season of Battlestar Galactica was filmed in Kamloops in 2006.

Kamloops was a filming location for the Netflix series Lost in Space.[137]

See also

References

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Notes

  1. ^ Climate data was recorded in the city of Kamloops from January 1890 to December 1950, and at Kamloops Airport from January 1951 to present.
  2. ^ Statistic includes all persons that did not make up part of a visible minority or an indigenous identity.
  3. ^ Statistic includes total responses of "Chinese", "Korean", and "Japanese" under visible minority section on census.
  4. ^ Statistic includes total responses of "Filipino" and "Southeast Asian" under visible minority section on census.
  5. ^ Statistic includes total responses of "West Asian" and "Arab" under visible minority section on census.
  6. ^ Statistic includes total responses of "Visible minority, n.i.e." and "Multiple visible minorities" under visible minority section on census.

External links

  • Official website  
  •   Kamloops travel guide from Wikivoyage

kamloops, this, article, about, city, british, columbia, other, uses, disambiguation, loops, city, south, central, british, columbia, canada, confluence, south, flowing, north, thompson, river, west, flowing, thompson, river, east, lake, located, thompson, nic. This article is about the city in British Columbia For other uses see Kamloops disambiguation Kamloops ˈ k ae m l uː p s KAM loops is a city in south central British Columbia Canada at the confluence of the South flowing North Thompson River and the West flowing Thompson River east of Kamloops Lake It is located in the Thompson Nicola Regional District whose district offices are based here The surrounding region is sometimes referred to as the Thompson Country Kamloops Tk emlupsCityCity of KamloopsDowntown KamloopsFlagCoat of armsLogoMotto s Salus et Opes Health and Wealth KamloopsLocation of Kamloops in British ColumbiaShow map of British ColumbiaKamloopsKamloops Canada Show map of CanadaCoordinates 50 40 33 N 120 20 22 W 50 67583 N 120 33944 W 50 67583 120 33944 1 Coordinates 50 40 33 N 120 20 22 W 50 67583 N 120 33944 W 50 67583 120 33944 1 CountryCanadaProvinceBritish ColumbiaRegionThompson CountryRegional districtThompson NicolaFounded1811 fur trading post Incorporated1893Amalgamated1973Government TypeElected city council MayorReid Hamer Jackson Governing bodyKamloops City Council MPFrank Caputo MLAsPeter MilobarTodd StoneArea 2 Land299 25 km2 115 54 sq mi Elevation 3 4 345 m 1 132 ft Population 2021 2 5 City97 902 Metro114 142DemonymKamloopsianTime zoneUTC 08 00 PST Summer DST UTC 07 00 PDT Forward sortation areaV1S V2B V2E V2HArea code s 250 778 236 672HighwaysHwy 1 TCH Hwy 5 Hwy 5A Hwy 97GNBC CodeJAFNW 6 NTS Map92I9 Kamloops 6 Websitewww wbr kamloops wbr caThe city was incorporated in 1893 with about 500 residents The Canadian Pacific Railroad was completed through downtown in 1886 and the Canadian National arrived in 1912 making Kamloops an important transportation hub With a 2021 population of 97 902 it is the twelfth largest municipality in the province 2 The Kamloops census agglomeration is ranked 36th among census metropolitan areas and agglomerations in Canada with a 2021 population of 114 142 5 Kamloops is promoted as the Tournament Capital of Canada It hosts more than 100 sporting tournaments each year hockey baseball curling etc at world class sports facilities such as the Tournament Capital Centre Kamloops Bike Ranch and Tournament Capital Ranch Logging Beef Cattle Vegetable farming Transportation Viticulture Health care tourism and education are major contributing industries to the regional economy and have grown in recent years Thompson Rivers University 25 000 students was established as Cariboo College in 1970 Contents 1 History 1 1 Etymology 2 Geography 2 1 Neighbourhoods 2 2 Climate 3 Demographics 3 1 Religious groups 3 2 Ethnicity 3 2 1 Chinese Canadians 4 Economy 4 1 Tourism 5 Arts and culture 5 1 Performing and fine arts 6 Attractions 6 1 Food and drink 6 2 Recreation 6 2 1 Fishing 6 2 2 Mountain biking 6 2 3 Golf 6 2 4 Skiing 6 2 5 Other recreation 7 Sports 7 1 Hockey 7 2 Sports tournaments 8 Government 9 Infrastructure 9 1 Transportation 10 Education 10 1 Residential School 10 2 K 12 10 3 Post secondary 11 Media 12 Notable people 12 1 Historical figures 12 2 Politicians 12 3 Athletes 12 4 Arts culture and media 12 5 Other notable people 13 Planetary nomenclature 14 Sister cities 15 In popular culture 16 See also 17 References 18 Notes 19 External linksHistory Edit Kamloops and the Thompson River 1886 Paddle steamer at Kamloops in 1887 The first European explorers arrived in 1811 David Stuart a trader sent from Fort Astoria then still a Pacific Fur Company post spent a winter with the Secwepemc people In May of the following year trader Alexander Ross established a post which was known as Fort Cumcloups The rival North West Company established Fort Shuswap nearby in the same year The two businesses merged in 1813 when the North West Company bought the operations of the Pacific Fur Company In 1821 the Hudson s Bay Company took over the North West Company and the post became known commonly as Thompson s River Post or Fort Thompson Later it was known as Fort Kamloops 7 The post s Chief Traders kept journals which document a series of inter Indian wars and personalities for the period in addition to the daily business of the fur companies and their personnel along the entire Pacific Slope Soon after the forts were founded Kwa lila chief of the main local village of the Secwepemc moved his people closer to the trading post so they could control access and gain in prestige and security After Kwa lila died his nephew and foster son Nicola became chief He later led an alliance of Syilx Okanagan and Nlaka pamux peoples in the plateau country to the south around Stump Nicola and Douglas lakes Relations between Nicola and the fur traders were often tense but Chief Nicola was recognized for his aid to colonizers during the Fraser Canyon Gold Rush of 1858 He did try to control those who had been in parties waging violence and looting on the Okanagan Trail which led from American territory to the Fraser goldfields 8 9 Throughout Kamloops was an important way station on the route of the Hudson s Bay Brigade Trail which connected Fort Astoria with Fort Alexandria and the other forts in New Caledonia to the north today s Omineca Country roughly It was integral during the onset of the Cariboo Gold Rush as the main route to the new goldfields around what was to become Barkerville The 1862 Pacific Northwest smallpox epidemic swept through the Kamloops area during the summer of that year decimating the Secwepemc Nlaka pamux and other indigenous peoples They had no acquired immunity The epidemic had started in Victoria and quickly spread throughout British Columbia especially among First Nations In June 1862 indigenous people went to Fort Kamloops seeking smallpox vaccine William Manson chief clerk at the fort vaccinated numerous persons but fatalities were extremely high In late September he reported smallpox still raging amongst the Indians In October a newspaper in Victoria reported an eyewitness account from Fort Kamloops saying The Indians have been nearly exterminated at Kamloops only sixteen have escaped out of a large settlement Their bodies are strewing the ground in all directions About two thirds of the Secwepemc died during the epidemic In the aftermath colonists took over traditional lands of the Secwepemc and many other indigenous groups throughout British Columbia 10 11 12 13 The gold rush of the 1860s and the construction of the Canadian Pacific Railway which reached Kamloops from the West in 1885 14 brought further growth The City of Kamloops was incorporated in 1893 with a population of about 500 In 1908 due to the Tuberculosis Pandemic a sanatorium was opened west of the city named King Edward Memorial Sanatorium the sanatorium was later acquired by the provincial government in 1921 being renamed to Tranquille Sanatorium it later closed in 1958 The Tranquille Institution reopened in 1959 to treat people with mental problems it later closed in 1983 In 1967 Kamloops amalgamated with the Town of North Kamloops The logging industry of the 1970s attracted many Indo Canadian workers to the Kamloops area They had come mostly from the Punjab region of India In 1973 Kamloops amalgamated with the Districts of Brocklehurst Dufferin the Town of Valleyview and the Kamloops Indian Band and the communities of Dallas Campbell Creek Barnhart Vale Heffley Creek Rayleigh Westsyde and Knutsford In 1976 the Kamloops Indian Band split from the City of Kamloops In May 2021 an anthropologist announced she had used ground penetrating radar to find probable graves containing the remains of 215 children found at a former Kamloops Indian residential school part of the Canadian Indian residential school system 15 The story was reported around the world and five Catholic churches in Western Canada were burned down in the weeks following since the school was operated by a Catholic order 16 However this story cannot be completely confirmed until bodies are exhumed 17 18 19 Etymology Edit Kamloops is the anglicized version of the Shuswap word Tk emlups meaning meeting of the waters Shuswap is still spoken in the area by members of the Tk emlups Indian Band 20 An alternate origin sometimes given for the name may have come from the native name s accidental similarity to the French Camp des loups meaning Camp of Wolves many early fur traders were ethnic French 7 There are folk stories about an attack on a traders camp by a pack of wolves Other legendary versions recount a huge white wolf or a pack of wolves and other animals that were moving overland from the Nicola Country and were repelled by a single shot by John Tod then Chief Trader This prevented the wolves from attacking the fort and earned Tod a great degree of respect locally 21 Geography EditKamloops is in the Thompson Valley and the Montane Cordillera Ecozone The city s centre is in the valley near the confluence of the Thompson River s north and south branches Suburbs stretch for more than a dozen kilometres along the north and south branches as well as to the steep hillsides along the south portion of the city and lower northeast hillsides Robert W Service in 1904 described Kamloops as his delightful life and wrote Life was pleasant and the work was light At four o clock we were on our horses riding over the rolling ridges or into spectral gulches that rose to ghostlier mountains It was like the scenery of Mexico weirdly desolate and aridly morose A discouraging land forbidding in its weariness and resigned to ruin Kamloops Indian Band areas begin just to the northeast of the downtown core but are not within the city limits As a result of this placement it is necessary to leave Kamloops city limits and pass through the band lands before re entering the city limits to access the northernmost communities of Rayleigh and Heffley Creek Kamloops is surrounded by the smaller communities of Cherry Creek Pritchard Savona Scotch Creek Adams Lake Chase Paul Lake Pinantan and various others Neighbourhoods Edit Officially recognized neighbourhoods within the city of Kamloops 22 Informally recognized sub areas are listed beneath the neighbourhoods to which they belong Aberdeen Pacific Way Barnhartvale Batchelor Heights Batchelor Hills Lac Du Bois Brocklehurst Airport Entry Corridor Brock Centre North Kamloops West Ord Road Campbell Creek Dallas Downtown Columbia Precinct Downtown Core East End East Entry Corridor Waterfront District West Entry Corridor Dufferin Heffley Creek Iron Mask Lac Le Jeune Juniper Ridge Knutsford Lower Sahali Mission Flats Noble Creek North Kamloops 8th St Corridor Halston Corridor John Tod McDonald Park North Kamloops West North Shore Town Centre Schubert Drive Tranquille Market Tranquille South Pineview Rayleigh Rose Hill Sagebrush Southgate Thompson Rivers University TRU Tranquille Upper Sahali Valleyview Orchard s Walk West End College Heights Guerin Creek Hudson s Ridge McIntosh Heights Powers Addition Westsyde Westmount Oak Hills Climate Edit The climate of Kamloops is semi arid Koppen climate classification BSk due to its rain shadow location Because of milder winters and aridity the area west of Kamloops in the lower Thompson River valley falls within a desert Koppen climate classification BWk climate Kamloops gets short cold snaps where temperatures can drop to around 20 C 4 F when Arctic air manages to cross the Rockies and Columbia Mountains into the Interior Kamloops in the Fraser River watershed Kamloops has the third mildest winter of any non coastal city in Canada after Penticton and Kelowna 23 The January mean temperature is 2 8 C 27 F 24 That average sharply increases with an average maximum temperature of 4 3 C 40 F in February Between November and January the area experiences abundant cloud cover reducing the annual sunshine output despite very sunny summers The average number of days where temperatures drop below 10 C 14 F per year is 19 9 as recorded by Environment Canada 24 Although Kamloops is above 50 north latitude summers are warmer than in many places at lower latitudes with prevailing dry and sunny weather Daytime humidity sometimes drops below 20 during dry periods which allows for substantial nighttime cooling Occasional summer thunderstorms can create dry lightning conditions sometimes igniting forest fires which the area is prone to Kamloops lies in the rain shadow leeward of the Coast Mountains and is biogeographically connected to similar semi desert areas in the Okanagan region and a much larger area covering the central eastern portions of Washington Oregon and intermontane areas of Nevada Utah and Idaho in the US These areas of relatively similar climate have many distinctive native plants and animals in common such as ponderosa pine Pinus ponderosa big sagebrush Artemisia tridentata prickly pear cactus Opuntia fragilis in this case rattlesnakes black widow spiders and Lewis s woodpecker The highest temperature ever recorded in Kamloops was 47 3 C 117 F on 29 June 2021 which was the fourth highest reading ever recorded in Canada during the notorious 2021 Western North America heat wave 25 26 27 The lowest temperature ever recorded was 38 3 C 37 F on 16 and 18 January 1950 28 Climate data for Kamloops Airport 1981 2010 normals extremes 1890 present a Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearRecord high humidex 15 8 17 0 23 3 31 9 36 8 48 0 40 4 40 3 38 4 31 2 22 8 15 0 48 0Record high C F 16 1 61 0 17 8 64 0 23 3 73 9 33 3 91 9 37 8 100 0 47 3 117 1 41 7 107 1 40 8 105 4 38 3 100 9 31 3 88 3 22 8 73 0 16 1 61 0 47 3 117 1 Average high C F 0 4 32 7 4 3 39 7 11 0 51 8 16 6 61 9 21 5 70 7 25 1 77 2 28 9 84 0 28 3 82 9 22 3 72 1 13 7 56 7 5 6 42 1 0 3 32 5 14 8 58 6 Daily mean C F 2 8 27 0 0 1 32 2 5 2 41 4 9 9 49 8 14 6 58 3 18 4 65 1 21 5 70 7 20 9 69 6 15 6 60 1 8 5 47 3 2 1 35 8 2 7 27 1 9 3 48 7 Average low C F 5 9 21 4 4 0 24 8 0 6 30 9 3 2 37 8 7 7 45 9 11 6 52 9 14 2 57 6 13 4 56 1 8 8 47 8 3 3 37 9 1 4 29 5 5 8 21 6 3 7 38 7 Record low C F 38 3 36 9 32 8 27 0 26 1 15 0 10 6 12 9 5 6 21 9 0 6 33 1 3 3 37 9 0 6 33 1 3 9 25 0 17 1 1 2 30 0 22 0 36 1 33 0 38 3 36 9 Record low wind chill 42 0 36 7 33 9 13 0 5 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 6 5 23 2 39 1 45 1 45 1Average precipitation mm inches 21 1 0 83 12 4 0 49 12 8 0 50 14 2 0 56 27 3 1 07 37 4 1 47 31 4 1 24 23 7 0 93 29 4 1 16 19 4 0 76 23 3 0 92 25 4 1 00 277 6 10 93 Average rainfall mm inches 5 3 0 21 5 9 0 23 9 7 0 38 14 0 0 55 27 3 1 07 37 4 1 47 31 4 1 24 23 7 0 93 29 4 1 16 19 0 0 75 14 2 0 56 7 1 0 28 224 3 8 83 Average snowfall cm inches 18 7 7 4 8 0 3 1 3 5 1 4 0 2 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 1 10 9 4 3 21 9 8 6 63 5 25 0 Average precipitation days 0 2 mm 9 7 7 2 6 8 6 2 10 2 10 7 8 4 8 0 7 6 9 0 10 0 11 7 105 6Average rainy days 0 2 mm 3 6 3 8 5 5 6 1 10 2 10 7 8 3 8 0 7 6 8 8 7 1 3 4 83 3Average snowy days 0 2 cm 7 6 4 1 1 9 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 3 9 9 3 27 4Average relative humidity 72 6 60 0 43 0 35 6 36 2 36 4 33 5 34 4 41 4 52 9 65 9 70 9 48 6Mean monthly sunshine hours 55 2 95 6 165 3 202 8 251 6 252 0 303 4 289 5 223 3 130 9 63 7 46 6 2 079 8Percent possible sunshine 20 9 33 9 45 0 49 0 52 4 51 2 61 2 64 3 58 7 39 2 23 5 18 6 43 2Source Environment Canada 24 29 30 31 Hottest summer Most days above 30 C 86 F Driest Warmest spring Fewest fog days Most sunny days in warm months Most growing degree days Most days without precipitationRank among 100 largest Canadian cities 1st 1st 2nd next to Whitehorse 2nd next to Chilliwack 2nd next to Penticton 2nd next to Portage la Prairie 3rd next to Windsor and St Catharines 3rd next to Medicine Hat and Lethbridge Value 26 94 C 80 5 F 29 28 278 98 mm 10 98 in 9 65 C 49 4 F 7 28 148 93 2308 61 258 12Data is for Kamloops Airport YKA in the city of Kamloops 5 NM 9 3 km 5 8 mi west northwest of the town 32 4 Demographics EditHistorical populationYearPop 1881200 18911 500 650 0 19011 359 9 4 19113 772 177 6 19214 501 19 3 19316 167 37 0 19415 959 3 4 19518 099 35 9 19569 096 12 3 196110 076 10 8 196610 759 6 8 197126 168 143 2 197658 311 122 8 198164 048 9 8 198661 773 3 6 199167 057 8 6 199676 394 13 9 200177 281 1 2 200680 376 4 0 201185 678 6 6 201690 280 5 4 202197 902 8 4 Sources Statistics Canada 33 34 In the 2021 Census of Population conducted by Statistics Canada Kamloops had a population of 97 902 living in 39 914 of its 41 619 total private dwellings a change of 8 4 from its 2016 population of 90 280 With a land area of 297 93 km2 115 03 sq mi it had a population density of 328 6 km2 851 1 sq mi in 2021 35 At the census metropolitan area CMA level in the 2021 census the Kamloops CMA had a population of 114 142 living in 47 102 of its 50 235 total private dwellings a change of 10 from its 2016 population of 103 811 With a land area of 5 654 08 km2 2 183 05 sq mi it had a population density of 20 2 km2 52 3 sq mi in 2021 36 Religious groups Edit According to the 2021 census religious groups in Kamloops included 37 Irreligion 57 245 persons or 60 5 Christianity 31 790 persons or 33 6 Sikhism 2 005 persons or 2 1 Hinduism 995 persons or 1 1 Islam 890 persons or 0 9 Buddhism 440 persons or 0 5 Indigenous Spirituality 190 persons or 0 2 Judaism 85 persons or 0 1 Ethnicity Edit Panethnic groups in the City of Kamloops 2001 2021 Panethnicgroup 2021 37 2016 38 2011 39 2006 40 2001 41 Pop Pop Pop Pop Pop European b 74 430 78 71 71 765 82 17 71 760 85 71 69 250 87 17 68 305 88 92 Indigenous 9 885 10 45 8 600 9 85 6 245 7 46 5 165 6 5 3 965 5 16 South Asian 4 260 4 51 2 455 2 81 1 970 2 35 1 540 1 94 1 720 2 24 East Asian c 2 420 2 56 2 270 2 6 2 135 2 55 1 940 2 44 1 810 2 36 Southeast Asian d 1 410 1 49 910 1 04 740 0 88 840 1 06 450 0 59 African 985 1 04 550 0 63 235 0 28 215 0 27 335 0 44 Latin American 490 0 52 310 0 35 135 0 16 195 0 25 120 0 16 Middle Eastern e 320 0 34 250 0 29 355 0 42 120 0 15 65 0 08 Other f 370 0 39 230 0 26 145 0 17 165 0 21 50 0 07 Total responses 94 560 96 59 87 340 96 74 83 725 97 72 79 445 98 84 76 815 99 4 Total population 97 902 100 90 280 100 85 678 100 80 376 100 77 281 100 Note Totals greater than 100 due to multiple origin responses Chinese Canadians Edit Main article Chinese Canadians in British Columbia Kamloops historically had a Chinatown on Victoria Street where most ethnic Chinese lived John Stewart of the Kamloops Museum and Archives stated it was not a true Chinatown 42 It was established by Chinese immigrants by 1887 and by 1890 the community had up to 400 Chinese Stewart said this was an amazingly large population for the rural area 43 By the 1890s about 33 of Kamloops were ethnic Chinese they worked primarily on construction of the Canadian Pacific Railway 44 Economic changes in Kamloops resulted in many Chinese seeking work elsewhere In addition there were two fires in 1892 and 1893 and a 1911 1914 demolition that dismantled the Chinatown 45 Peter Wing the first ethnic Chinese mayor in North America was elected in 1966 and served three terms as the Mayor of Kamloops 44 In the 1880s the Kamloops Chinese Cemetery was founded in Kamloops the only one in the province dedicated to Chinese pioneers 44 It is one of the largest cemeteries in the province 44 but the last interment was made there in the 1960s 46 In 2013 the provincial government announced it would begin a consultation process to discuss wording of a formal apology to Chinese in B C for past wrongs Joe Leong president of the Kamloops Chinese Cultural Association said he believed that the province should build a museum to honour Chinese history in the province as a way to recognize the contributions of the people As Kamloops had the only cemetery dedicated to the Chinese pioneers he felt this city would be an appropriate site for the museum 44 Economy Edit Royal Inland Hospital Thompson Rivers University Kamloops economy includes healthcare tourism education transportation and natural resource extraction industries The Royal Inland Hospital RIH is the city s largest employer RIH is the region s acute care and health facility and is one of two tertiary referral hospitals in the Southern Interior with 239 acute beds and an additional 20 more beds upon completion of the expansion in 2016 47 Thompson Rivers University TRU serves a student body of 25 754 including a diverse international contingent mainly from Asian countries 48 Thompson Rivers University Open Learning TRU OL is the biggest distance education provider in British Columbia and one of the biggest in Canada Heavy industries in the Kamloops area include primary resource processing such as Domtar Kamloops Pulp Mill Tolko Heffley Creek Plywood and Veneer New Gold Inc New Afton Mine and Highland Valley Copper Mine in Logan Lake Four major highways join in Kamloops the BC Highway 1 Trans Canada Highway the Coquihalla Highway BC highway 5 south of the city the Yellowhead Highway BC Highway 5 north of the city and BC Highway 97 making it a transportation hub and a place which attracts business There are over 50 trucking and transport companies located in Kamloops that ship across Canada and into the United States 49 Both the Canadian Pacific Railway and the Canadian National Railway service Kamloops with both lines running through the city 49 Tourism Edit Kamloops welcomed 1 8 million visitors in 2017 a 9 increase from 2015 1 64 million Tourism s economic ROI is immense A 1 8 million destination marketing budget returned 449 million in economic benefit in 2017 The annual Direct Visitor Expenditure is estimated at 270 million a 19 increase from 2015 227 million Further the total estimated tourism economic impact was 449 million in 2017 a 32 4 increase from 2015 339 million 50 Tourism generates many types of income for the region including business income wage earnings share earnings rates and levies Conservation springs from industry wide support for management research and education initiatives that benefit everyone through responsible tourism management Kamloops has over 50 accommodation choices 51 from major hotels to bed and breakfasts Accommodation occupancy rates were 61 5 in 2017 up 2 6 from 2016 Arts and culture Edit Alley art in downtown Kamloops Music in the Park at Riverside Park Kamloops culture has grown in recent years to celebrate local talent that includes culinary arts sports live entertainment and fine art Kamloops hosts a range of cultural events year round including Kamloops Wine Festival 52 This annual festival is a fundraiser for the Kamloops Art Gallery Kamloops Film Festival 53 Since 1997 this festival has grown to celebrate international films at Paramount Theatre for ten days in March River Beaver Classic 54 This annual mountain biking festival hosts four events over one weekend in April with all money raised going to local trail maintenance Brewloops 55 Brewloops is a non profit beer food and bike festival that celebrates Kamloops culture with block parties on The Shore and Downtown throughout the year Kamloops International Buskers Festival 56 This four day festival takes place throughout Riverside Park and showcases professional buskers from around the globe Hot Nite in the City Show n Shine 57 This weekend long event takes place every August downtown and showcases Street Rods Customs American Muscle Sport compact Electric Vehicles and more Kamloops Rotary Ribfest 58 Western Canada s largest rib festival Ribfest takes place every August at Riverside Park By 2018 Kamloops Rotary had raised over 500 000 for local charities Salute to the Sockeye Festival 59 This festival celebrates the return of sockeye salmon to the Adams River at Tsutswecw Provincial Park from the end of September through mid October each year Interior Wellness Festival 60 Since 2008 this event has promoted healthy living in BC including workshops with yogis authors and business experts Kamloops Comedy Fest Canadian comedians take over the microphone for a weekend each October during Kamloops Comedy Fest Words Alive Kamloops 61 Formerly the Kamloops Writers Festival this annual event features Canadian authors showcasing their work through public readings and events as well as conducting workshops on a variety of topics Performing and fine arts Edit Kamloops is home to many galleries including nationally recognized Kamloops Art Gallery 62 Secwepemc Museum and Heritage Park the Kamloops Museum and Archives the Kamloops Symphony Orchestra 63 and Western Canada Theatre There are 29 outdoor murals the Back Alley Art Gallery throughout downtown Kamloops that the Kamloops Central Business Improvement Association has spearheaded since the 2000s Artists that have contributed to this project include Zack Abney Kyleen Cachelin Evan Christina Kelly Wright Ken Wells Alex Moir Porteus Robin Hodgson Jack Morris Janice Gurney and Marianna Abutalipova Project X Theatre an outdoor theatre festival located in Kamloops The company creates a summer outdoor theatre festival in Prince Charles Park just east of Downtown Kamloops Established in 2006 Project X Theatre originally produced productions of Shakespeare however recently the company has shifted over to more family friendly shows Randi Edmundson is the current Artistic Director Previous artistic directors include Samantha Mcdonanld Derek Rein Heather Cant Melissa purcha and Dusan Magdolen The Western Canada Theatre is a professional theatre company located in Kamloops The company manages and performs in two spaces the 706 seat Sagebrush Theatre and the 150 seat Pavilion Theatre James MacDonald is the current artistic director of the theatre company Previous artistic directors include Tom Kerr founder Frank Glassen David Ross Michael Dobbin John Cooper Jeremy Tow and Daryl Cloran 64 Attractions EditPopular attractions include the Adams River Sockeye Salmon Run 65 Kamloops Bike Ranch BC Wildlife Park Kamloops Heritage Railway Kamloops Wine Trail Secwepemc Museum and Tranquille SanatoriumSince 2012 four wineries have been established in the Thompson Valley wine region 66 including Sagewood Winery Harper s Trail Winery Monte Creek Ranch Winery and Privato Vineyard and Winery Since 2010 five micro breweries have opened up in Kamloops including Noble Pig Brewhouse Red Collar Brewing Alchemy Brewing Bright Eye Brewing and Iron Road Brewing Since 2020 some craft distilleries have opened up in Kamloops including Route 1 Distillery Food and drink Edit Since 2007 Chefs in the City has been established as a celebration of culinary arts fine wine and beer from Kamloops and the surrounding region 67 In 2018 21 local restaurants will have participated as well as 10 local wineries and breweries This annual event is presented by the Rotary Club of Kamloops and has raised over 325 000 since 2007 Kamloops is emerging as an award winning wine region with a climate perfect for growing grapes It is home to four award winning wineries Harper s Trail Monte Creek Ranch Privato and Sagewood 68 69 Kamloops has over 120 acres under vine The top grapes planted by local wineries are Riesling Chardonnay pinot gris pinot noir Cabernet Franc Marechal Foch and Marquette Since 1998 the Kamloops Wine Festival has taken place in the spring as a fundraiser to support the Kamloops Art Gallery The Kamloops Wine Festival had raised over 200 000 by 2018 70 In 2014 Brewloops Beer Festival was established as a non profit organization that promotes Kamloops culture across the city throughout the year Brewloops celebrates BC craft beer music and entertainment with the wider Kamloops community and had donated 27 000 to community groups by 2018 71 Bands that have performed at Brewloops include Delhi 2 Dublin Yukon Blonde and at Mission Dolores Recreation Edit Tournament Capital Centre Kamloops is an outdoor mecca for activities like hiking and mountain biking with an extensive trail network for year round adventure Multiple nearby lakes offer paddling kayaking and fishing Known as the Tournament Capital of Canada Kamloops has hosted many tournaments and is home to a range of professional athletes from many sports Kamloops has the Kamloops Sports Hall of Fame which includes 2008 Summer Olympics bronze medallist Dylan Armstrong and the National Finalist Roma s soccer team 72 Fishing Edit With 100 lakes within an hour s drive Kamloops has some of the best freshwater fishing in North America Every year the Freshwater Fisheries Society of BC stocks lakes in the Thompson Nicola region with roughly 1 000 000 fish including rainbow trout brook trout and kokanee salmon Kamloops is known for its professional anglers including Brian Chan 73 Jordan Oelrich 74 and Brennan Lund 75 Fishing guides in the Kamloops area include DNA Fly Fishing 76 Interior Fly Fishing Maricle Fly Fishing Riseform Flyfishing 77 and Fast Action Fishing Adventures 78 Mountain biking Edit Kamloops extensive trail network and desert like climate creates world class conditions for year round mountain biking across the city Popular parks include the Kamloops Bike Ranch 79 Pineview Valley Lac du Bois Grasslands Protected Area 80 and Kenna Cartwright Park Two time UCI Mountain Bike amp Trials World Championships Women s cross country 2011 and 2014 gold at the 2014 Commonwealth Games and 2016 Summer Olympics bronze medallist Catharine Pendrel lives and trains in Kamloops 81 Kamloops is home to world famous mountain bikers such as freeride pioneers and Mountain Bike Hall of Fame members Wade Simmons Brett Tippie also a former Canadian National Team member for snowboard cross and giant slalom and Richie Schley 82 Freeriders Matt Hunter and Graham Agassiz also live in Kamloops 83 Kamloops was featured in the first mountain bike film by Greg Stump Pulp Traction and later the first three Kranked films which starred the original Fro Riders Tippie Simmons and Schley Ongoing trail maintenance has been spearheaded by local organizations such as the Kamloops Bike Riders Association Kamloops Performance Cycling Centre and Dirt Chix Kamloops Golf Edit Kamloops has highest number of golf courses 13 per capita in Canada and boasts one of Canada s most diverse golf landscapes Golfers enjoy three seasons of golf due to the dry and hot climate of the area 84 Several of the local golf courses have been designed by famous golf architects such as Robert Trent Jones Graham Cooke and Tom McBroom 84 The 13 courses include Tobiano Golf Course The Dunes Talking Rock Golf Course Pineridge Golf Course Rivershore Estates Big Horn Golf amp Country Club Kamloops Golf amp Country Club Sun Peaks Golf Eagle Point Golf Course Mount Paul Golf Course and Chinook Cove Golf 85 Skiing Edit Sun Peaks Resort is a nearby ski and snowboard hill Olympic medallist skier Nancy Greene Raine is director of skiing at Sun Peaks and the former chancellor of Thompson Rivers University The Overlander Ski Club runs the Stake Lake cross country ski area with 50 km 31 mi of trails Lacrosse teams include the Thompson Okanagan Junior Lacrosse League s Kamloops Junior B Venom as well as the junior ice hockey team the Kamloops Storm Also calling Kamloops home is the Canadian Junior Football League s Kamloops Broncos and Pacific Coast Soccer League s Kamloops Excel both of whom play at Hillside Stadium Other recreation Edit The Kamloops Rotary Skatepark at McArthur Island Park is one of Canada s largest skateboard parks 86 Also located at McArthur Island Park is NorBrock Stadium the McArthur Island Sports and Events Centre and the McArthur Island Curling Club The city boasts 82 parks which are great for hiking including Kenna Cartwright Park the largest municipal park in British Columbia 87 Kamloops panoramaSports EditHockey Edit Kamloops is home to the Western Hockey League s Kamloops Blazers who play at the Sandman Centre Alumni of the Kamloops Blazers include Mark Recchi Jarome Iginla Darryl Sydor Nolan Baumgartner Shane Doan Scott Niedermayer Rudy Poeschek and Darcy Tucker Recchi Doan Iginla and Sydor are now part owners of the club Two time champion coach Ken Hitchcock would later win the Stanley Cup with the Dallas Stars Kamloops is also the hometown of 2015 World Junior Ice Hockey Champion and current defenceman for the Detroit Red Wings Joe Hicketts 88 On 6 February 2016 Kamloops hosted Hockey Day in Canada with Ron MacLean and Don Cherry 89 Sports tournaments Edit Kamloops hosted the 1993 Canada Summer Games It co hosted with Vancouver and Kelowna the IIHF World Junior Championship from 26 December 2005 to 5 January 2006 It hosted the 2006 BC Summer Games and 2018 BC Winter Games In the summer of 2008 Kamloops and its modern facility the Tournament Capital Centre played host to the U15 boys and girls Basketball National Championship Kamloops hosted the World Masters Indoor Championships in March 2010 90 Kamloops hosted the 2011 Western Canada Summer Games Kamloops hosted the 2014 Tim Hortons Brier The Canadian Men s Curling Championships 91 Kamloops hosted the 2014 edition of the 4 Nations Cup 92 Government EditElections into the municipality in Kamloops are held with the rest of the province every four years Provincially Kamloops is considered to be bellwether having voted for the governing party in every provincial election since the introduction of parties to British Columbian elections until 2017 By contrast Kamloops has regularly voted against the party in power federally until the 2006 Federal election Kamloops is represented in two provincial ridings Kamloops South Thompson and Kamloops North Thompson and one federal riding Kamloops Thompson Cariboo Mayor Reid Hamer Jackson 2022 Members of the Legislative Assembly Todd Stone Kamloops South Thompson Peter Milobar Kamloops North ThompsonFederal members of parliament Cathy McLeod 2008 present Conservative Party of Canada Betty Hinton 2000 2008 Canadian Alliance and Conservative Party of Canada Nelson Riis 1980 2000 New Democratic Party Don Cameron 1979 1980 Progressive Conservative Party of Canada Leonard Marchand 1968 1979 Liberal Party of CanadaInfrastructure EditTransportation Edit Kamloops is located at the crossroads of the Coquihalla Highway Yellowhead Highway and Trans Canada Highway and is a transportation hub in the region The Canadian Pacific CPR and Canadian National CNR mainline routes connect Vancouver in the west with Kamloops The two railways diverge to the north and east where they connect with the rest of Canada Kamloops North station is served three times per week in each direction by Via Rail s Canadian The Rocky Mountaineer and the Kamloops Heritage Railway both use the Kamloops station Kamloops is home to Kamloops Airport YKA Airlines flying to Kamloops include Air Canada Express WestJet Encore Canadian North and Central Mountain Air as well as three cargo airlines Vancouver and Calgary are primary routes for passenger service to this regional airport In 2018 Air Canada Rouge launched non stop seasonal service from Kamloops to Toronto 93 Greyhound Canada previously connected Kamloops with Vancouver Edmonton and Calgary with service ending at the end of October 2018 After Greyhound s departure several companies stepped in and commenced intercity service Ebus and Rider Express both provide service to Vancouver and in between cities and towns with Ebus connecting to other Interior cities like Kelowna and Vernon and Rider Express continuing east to Calgary 94 Local bus service is provided by Kamloops Transit System and funded through BC Transit with 14 routes across the Kamloops area that are operated by contractor First Student Canada In 2018 the City of Kamloops partnered with the Tk emlups te Secwepemc to expand its services on Tk emlups te Secwepemc land for Route 18 Mount Paul 95 Education EditResidential School Edit The Kamloops Indian Residential School part of the Canadian Indian residential school system opened in 1893 and ran until 1977 96 In May 2021 the possible remains of 200 children were detected in the graveyard soil by ground penetrating radar at the site of the school 97 98 The remains were located with the assistance of ground penetrating radar and work was underway to determine if related records about the identities of the dead are held at the Royal British Columbia Museum 97 In a statement released by the First Nations Health Authority CEO Richard Jock said That this situation exists is sadly not a surprise and illustrates the damaging and lasting impacts that the residential school system continues to have on First Nations people their families and communities 98 K 12 Edit Public schools in Kamloops and adjacent communities are run by School District 73 Kamloops Thompson Private schools include Kamloops Christian School Our Lady of Perpetual Help School Catholic and St Ann s Academy Catholic The Conseil scolaire francophone de la Colombie Britannique operates ecole Collines d or a Francophone primary school 99 Post secondary Edit Thompson Rivers University 100 offers a range of undergraduate and graduate degrees as well as certificate and diploma programs It has satellite campuses in Clearwater Barriere Chase Williams Lake 100 Mile House Cache Creek Ashcroft Lillooet Thompson Rivers University also has an open learning division Thompson Rivers University Open Learning TRU OL is the biggest distance and online education provider in British Columbia and one of the biggest in Canada The Thompson Rivers University WolfPack are the athletic teams that represent Thompson Rivers University Thompson Career College and Sprott Shaw College are private post secondary institutions with campuses in Kamloops Media EditMain article Media in Kamloops The city s main daily newspaper was The Kamloops Daily News which ceased publication in 2014 101 The city is also home to Kamloops This Week 102 a free newspaper which publishes three times a week Notable people EditMain page Category People from Kamloops Below is a list of people who are from Kamloops or who lived there for an extended period Historical figures Edit Edward Bellew recipient of the Victoria Cross Jim Chamberlin aerodynamicist who contributed to the design of the Canadian Avro Arrow NASA s Project Mercury Project Gemini and the Apollo program Kanao Inouye the notorious Kamloops Kid the first of the two Canadians ever convicted of war crimes Allan McLean son of Donald McLean and leader of the outlaw gang known as the Wild McLean Boys Donald McLean former Chief Trader of Fort Kamloops and one of the casualties of the Chilcotin War Frank Robert Miller former deputy minister of the National Defence Chief Nicola conjoint chief of the Nicolas and the Kamloops Secwepemc during the fur trade and gold rush eras Johnny Ussher settler provincial magistrate and gold commissioner killed by Allan McLean Mark Sweeten Wade medical doctor newspaperman and historian Politicians Edit Jack Davis politician who was elected to both the Parliament of Canada and Legislative Assembly of British Columbia Jodie Emery marijuana activist and politician John L Frazer politician member of the House of Commons of Canada from 1993 to 1997 103 Davie Fulton politician member of the Canadian House of Commons from 1945 to 1963 and 1965 to 1968 Son of Frederick John Fulton 104 Frederick John Fulton British born politician and lawyer father of Davie Fulton Phil Gaglardi aka Flying Phil former Provincial Minister of Highways and Mayor of the city Leonard Marchand QPC CM the first person of First Nations ethnicity to serve in the federal cabinet and the first Status Indian to serve as a member of parliament 105 106 Nelson Riis former Kamloops Teacher Professor alderman and Director of the Thompson Nicola Regional District longtime federal MP for Kamloops Peter Wing North America s first elected mayor of Chinese descent elected in 1966 and served three terms in Kamloops 107 Athletes Edit Graham Agassiz freeride mountain biker bronze medal at Red Bull Rampage 2015 Dylan Armstrong Olympic shot putter who finished 4th in the 2008 Olympics but subsequently was awarded the bronze medal in 2015 after the 3rd place putter Andrei Mikhnevich from Belarus tested positive for drugs post 2008 Olympics Don Ashby former National Hockey League NHL ice hockey player 108 Murray Baron former NHL ice hockey player 109 Mitch Berger former National Football League NFL player 110 Rick Boh former NHL ice hockey player 111 Corryn Brown Canadian curler skip of the 2013 Canadian Junior Curling Championships winning rink 2012 Winter Youth Olympics bronze medallist 112 Jim Cotter Canadian curler 2013 Olympic Trials runner up 2014 Tim Hortons Brier silver medallist 113 Craig Endean former NHL ice hockey player 114 Todd Esselmont ice and roller hockey player Erin Gammel is a swimmer who competed at the 2004 Summer Olympics Stu Grimson former NHL ice hockey player 115 Don Hay former NHL head coach 116 Jessica Hewitt short track speed skater silver medallist at the 2014 Sochi Olympics Joe Hicketts 2015 World Junior Ice Hockey Champion Detroit Red Wings defenceman 88 Murray Kennett is a former World Hockey Association WHA ice hockey player 117 Doug Lidster former NHL ice hockey player 118 John Ludvig professional ice hockey player 119 Bert Marshall former NHL ice hockey player 120 Spencer McLennan Former Canadian Football League CFL player Don Moen Former CFL football player Josie Morrison Canadian speedskater 2018 Winter Olympian 121 Bob Mowat former WHA ice hockey player 122 Brendon Nash former NHL ice hockey player Riley Nash Toronto Maple Leafs NHL hockey player Shane Niemi is a Canadian sprinter Kelly Olynyk Miami Heat and Canada international basketball player Paul Osbaldiston former CFL football player Catharine Pendrel cross country mountain biker 2016 Olympic bronze medalist 2011 and 2014 World Champion 81 Rudy Poeschek former NHL player Kevin Powell former CFL football player Nancy Greene Raine named Canada s Athlete of the Century in 1999 Olympic skier who won gold for Canada in 1968 and 13 World Cups the Canadian record for a total of 17 Canadian Title Championships 123 Mark Recchi former NHL ice hockey player three time Stanley Cup champion 1991 2006 2011 and member of the Hockey Hall of Fame 124 Justin Ring former CFL football player Peter Soberlak former American Hockey League AHL professional ice hockey player 125 Dave Vankoughnett former CFL football player Tim Watters former NHL ice hockey player 126 Arts culture and media Edit Benjamin Ayres actor born in Kamloops Dan Bremnes Christian musician born in Kamloops Steven Galloway novelist was raised in Kamloops Elise Gatien actress Boris Karloff actor joined the Jeanne Russell theatre company in Kamloops in September 1911 Chris Masuak punk rock singer songwriter inducted into the ARIA Hall of Fame born in Kamloops lived in Brocklehurst North Kamloops in the 1960s Now resides in Spain John Pozer award winning filmmaker Robert W Service poet and writer known for his ballads depicting the Klondike Gold Rush of 1897 he worked at Kamloops branch of the Canadian Bank of Commerce from July to December 1904 before being transferred to Whitehorse 127 Michael Shanks actor born in Vancouver but grew up in Kamloops 128 Lawrence Paul Yuxweluptun First Nations painter Lil Woodie Wood Music Producer Rapper Entrepreneur 129 Melissa Endean country music artist born and raised in Kamloops 130 Other notable people Edit Nadine Caron first female First Nations surgeon Andrew Collier Commander of the Royal Canadian Navy Patrick Crawford tech entrepreneur and NASA research collaborator 131 Vivian Dowding leading birth control activist Mildred Gottfriedson first First Nations individual inducted into the Order of Canada and founding member of the B C Native Women s Society Lesra Martin resident lawyer who helped with Rubin The Hurricane Carter s prison release Lt Col J R O Vicars 1855 1929 172nd Battalion Rocky Mountain Rangers Canadian Expeditionary Force Land Surveyor civil servant R H Bob Allan 1914 1984 Rocky Mountain Rangers North Nova Scotia Highlanders fly fisherman naturalist amp Fireman Planetary nomenclature Edit Kamloops crater on Mars The city s name has been given to a crater on the surface of Mars Crater Kamloops was officially adopted by the International Astronomical Union s Working Group for Planetary System Nomenclature IAU WGPSN in 1991 The crater lies at 53 8 south latitude and 32 6 west longitude with a diameter of 65 km 40 mi 132 133 Sister cities EditUji Kyoto Prefecture Japan 134 Bacolod Negros Occidental Philippines 135 In popular culture EditIn Cementhead a 1989 episode of the television series Booker the titular detective played by Richard Grieco tracks a capricious professional hockey player Stephen Shellen back to his hometown of Kamloops Kamloops and surrounding areas have been used for various Hollywood films such as An Unfinished Life The A Team 2012 The Pledge Shooter Firewall The Sisterhood of the Travelling Pants Monster Trucks and various others 136 The Eye of Jupiter the eleventh episode of the third season of Battlestar Galactica was filmed in Kamloops in 2006 Kamloops was a filming location for the Netflix series Lost in Space 137 See also EditList of place names in Canada of Indigenous origin Kamloops Indian Residential SchoolReferences Edit Kamloops Geographical Names Data Base Natural Resources Canada a b c Population and dwelling counts for Canada provinces and territories and census subdivisions municipalities 2016 and 2011 censuses 100 data Statistics Canada 20 February 2019 Retrieved 5 August 2020 Elevation at the airport a b Canada Flight Supplement Effective 0901Z 16 July 2020 to 0901Z 10 September 2020 a b Population and dwelling counts for census agglomerations 2016 and 2011 censuses 100 data Statistics Canada 20 February 2019 Retrieved 5 August 2020 a b Natural Resources Canada Mapping Services permanent dead link a b Kamloops BC Geographical Names Fort Kamloops Journals various authors traders primary source History of the Okanagan Chiefs in James Teit The Shuswap People vol XII of the Papers of the Jesup North Pacific Expedition Favholdt Ken 12 January 2021 Kamloops History The Smallpox Epidemic of 1862 Kamloops This Week Retrieved 14 February 2021 Furniss Elizabeth 2011 The Burden of History Colonialism and the Frontier Myth in a Rural Canadian Community University of British Columbia Press p 33 ISBN 978 0 7748 4218 1 Retrieved 14 February 2021 Ignace Marianne Ignace Ronald Eric 2017 Secwepemc People Land and Laws Yeri7 re Stsq ey s kucw McGill Queen s University Press p 445 ISBN 978 0 7735 5203 6 Retrieved 14 February 2021 Van Rijn Kiran 2006 Lo The poor Indian Colonial Responses to the 1862 63 Smallpox Epidemic in British Columbia and Vancouver Island Canadian Bulletin of Medical History 23 2 541 560 doi 10 3138 cbmh 23 2 541 PMID 17214129 City of Kamloops History of Kamloops Remains of 215 children found at former Kamloops B C residential school Retrieved 3 June 2021 Canadian Indigenous leaders call for end of targeting of churches Pruden Jana G Hager Mike 15 July 2021 Anthropologist explains how she concluded 200 children were buried at the Kamloops Residential School The Globe and Mail In Kamloops Not One Body Has Been Found Barbara Kay What we don t know about unmarked graves at residential schools Tk emlups Indian Band Tk emlups History 2011 Accessed 1 June 2011 Fur and Gold Stories Tales and Legends of British Columbia John Pearson undated S K Press Holdings undated White Rock B C Kamloops CityMap Mildest Winters Environment Canada Archived from the original on 25 November 2011 Retrieved 25 October 2019 a b c Kamloops A Canadian Climate Normals 1981 2010 Environment Canada 25 September 2013 Climate ID 1163780 Retrieved 20 November 2018 Kamloops sets another new all time heat record Retrieved 27 December 2021 Daily Data Report for July 1939 Environment Canada 31 October 2011 Retrieved 13 February 2013 Daily Data Report for July 1941 Environment Canada 31 October 2011 Retrieved 13 February 2013 Daily Data Report for January 1950 Environment Canada 31 October 2011 Retrieved 23 April 2016 Kamloops Environment Canada 31 October 2011 Retrieved 23 April 2016 Daily Data Report for August 2018 Canadian Climate Data Environment Canada 31 October 2011 Retrieved 16 August 2018 Daily Data Report for June 2021 Environment Canada 31 October 2011 Retrieved 27 June 2021 WeatherStats Weather Winners Belshaw John 2009 Becoming British Columbia A Population History ISBN 9780774815451 British Columbia Municipal Census Populations 1921 2011 BC Stats Archived from the original on 21 September 2013 Retrieved 9 May 2013 Population and dwelling counts Canada provinces and territories and census subdivisions municipalities British Columbia Statistics Canada 9 February 2022 Retrieved 20 February 2022 Population and dwelling counts Canada provinces and territories census metropolitan areas and census agglomerations Statistics Canada 9 February 2022 Retrieved 28 March 2022 a b Government of Canada Statistics Canada 26 October 2022 Census Profile 2021 Census of Population www12 statcan gc ca Retrieved 9 November 2022 Government of Canada Statistics Canada 27 October 2021 Census Profile 2016 Census www12 statcan gc ca Retrieved 26 November 2022 Government of Canada Statistics Canada 27 November 2015 NHS Profile www12 statcan gc ca Retrieved 26 November 2022 Government of Canada Statistics Canada 20 August 2019 2006 Community Profiles www12 statcan gc ca Retrieved 26 November 2022 Government of Canada Statistics Canada 2 July 2019 2001 Community Profiles www12 statcan gc ca Retrieved 26 November 2022 Stewart John Kamloops Museum amp Archives Chinatown in Kamloops Archive City of Kamloops p 1 Retrieved on 26 January 2015 Stewart John Kamloops Museum amp Archives Chinatown in Kamloops Archive City of Kamloops p 4 Retrieved on 26 January 2015 a b c d e Hewlett Jason Chinese museum would right historical wrongs Kamloops group says Archive Times Colonist 31 October 2013 Retrieved on 26 January 2015 Stewart John Kamloops Museum amp Archives Chinatown in Kamloops Archive City of Kamloops p 5 Retrieved on 26 January 2015 Stewart John Kamloops Museum amp Archives Chinatown in Kamloops Archive City of Kamloops p 3 Retrieved on 26 January 2015 Healthcare Venture Kamloops Economic Development for the City of Kamloops venturekamloops com Retrieved 9 October 2018 Facts and Figures Thompson Rivers University a b Transportation amp Logistics Venture Kamloops Economic Development for the City of Kamloops venturekamloops com Retrieved 9 October 2018 2017 Tourism Kamloops Annual Report PDF Accommodation Tourism Kamloops Kamloops Wine Festival Kamloops Film Festival River Beaver Classic Brewloops Kamloops International Buskers Festival Hot Nite in the City Show n Shine Kamloops Rotary Ribfest Salute to the Sockeye Festival Interior Wellness Festival WORDS ALIVE KAMLOOPS WORDS ALIVE KAMLOOPS Retrieved 3 January 2020 Kamloops Art Gallery Kamloops Symphony Orchestra Western Canada Theatre History retrieved 20 November 2018 Adams River Sockeye Salmon Run Thompson Valley Wines of British Columbia Chefs in the City Info Kamloops Wine Trail Our Wines CFJC News Kamloops Wine Festival About Brewloops Facebook Kamloops Sports Council Recipients PDF Brian Chan Jordan Oelrich Brennan Lund DNA Fly Fishing Riseform Flyfishing Fast Action Fishing Adventures Kamloops Bike Ranch Lac du Bois Grasslands Protected Area a b Catharine Pendrel Canadian Olympic Team Official Website 19 November 2018 retrieved 19 November 2018 Hall of Fame Inductees Fro Riders Santa Cruz Sentinel a b Kamloops Golf Courses BC Golf Vacations British Columbia Golf in British Columbia Retrieved 25 September 2018 Tourism Kamloops Golf Kamloops Rotary Skatepark Tourism Venture Kamloops Economic Development for the City of Kamloops venturekamloops com Retrieved 9 October 2018 a b 2015 World Junior Championship 19 November 2018 retrieved 19 November 2018 Kamloops BC to Host 2016 Scotiabank Hockey Day in Canada World Masters Athletics Kamloops awarded 2014 Tim Hortons Brier 19 November 2018 retrieved 19 November 2018 2014 4 Nations Cup 18 September 2018 retrieved 25 September 2018 YKA YYZ YKA Flight Schedules Vancouver Calgary Rider Express Retrieved 11 May 2022 KTW Route 18 Mount Paul Kamloops Indian Residential School a b Remains of 215 children found at former Kamloops residential school Globe amp Mail 28 May 2021 Retrieved 28 May 2021 a b Remains of 215 children found buried at former B C residential school First Nation says CBC News 28 May 2021 Retrieved 28 May 2021 Carte des ecoles Conseil scolaire francophone de la Colombie Britanique Retrieved on 22 January 2015 Thompson Rivers University Kamloops Daily News Kamloops This Week PARLINFO Parliamentarian File Federal Experience FRAZER John L Jack O M M M S C C D PARLINFO Parliamentarian File Federal Experience FULTON The Hon Edmund Davie P C O C Q C LL B LL D Leonard Marchand The first Status Indian elected to Canada s Parliament Archived 29 October 2007 at the Wayback Machine Federal Political Biography from the Library of Parliament Former Kamloops mayor dies at 93 Times Colonist 31 December 2007 Archived from the original on 3 November 2012 Retrieved 16 April 2008 Don Ashby hockey statistics amp profile at hockeydb com The Bear is back Baron still loves hockey Mitch Berger Rick Boh hockey statistics amp profile at hockeydb com Corryn Brown retrieved 20 November 2018 Award winners all stars at 2014 Tim Hortons Brier 9 March 2014 retrieved 20 November 2018 Craig Endean hockey statistics amp profile at hockeydb com NHL Player Search Player Stu Grimson Legends of Hockey Retrieved 15 June 2013 Don Hay hockey statistics amp profile at hockeydb com Murray Kennett hockey statistics amp profile at hockeydb com Doug Lidster hockey statistics amp profile at hockeydb com John Ludvig Elite Prospects Retrieved 21 June 2021 Bert Marshall hockey statistics amp profile at hockeydb com Josie Morrison retrieved 20 November 2018 Bob Mowat hockey statistics amp profile at hockeydb com Official Web Site of Nancy Greene Canadian Olympic Champion Skier Nancy Greene Retrieved 15 June 2013 Mark Recchi Stats and News NHL com Retrieved 3 August 2017 Peter Soberlak hockey statistics amp profile at hockeydb com Tim Watters hockey statistics amp profile at hockeydb com Sam Holloway Robert Service and Destiny The Yukoner Magazine Web Accessed 2008 11 19 Michael Shanks Biography 1 Lil Woodie Wood s Spotify Country singer heading to Cash s cabin studio https www seti org press release nasa haughton mars project new partnership mars drone application research bare URL IAU USGS WGPSN Planetary Feature Nomenclature Database USGS Branch of Astrogeology Flagstaff Arizona USGS Martian Quadrangle Map MC 26 showing crater KAMLOOPS just beneath crater GALLE and on the Eastern edge of ARGYRE Planitia Uji Japan Sister City City of Kamloops DAILY STAR Business www visayandailystar com Archived from the original on 21 October 2006 Retrieved 11 January 2022 Past Productions Archived from the original on 17 July 2011 Retrieved 25 March 2011 Lost in Space 2018 2021 Filming amp Production IMDb Retrieved 5 December 2021 Notes Edit Climate data was recorded in the city of Kamloops from January 1890 to December 1950 and at Kamloops Airport from January 1951 to present Statistic includes all persons that did not make up part of a visible minority or an indigenous identity Statistic includes total responses of Chinese Korean and Japanese under visible minority section on census Statistic includes total responses of Filipino and Southeast Asian under visible minority section on census Statistic includes total responses of West Asian and Arab under visible minority section on census Statistic includes total responses of Visible minority n i e and Multiple visible minorities under visible minority section on census External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Kamloops Official website Kamloops travel guide from Wikivoyage Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kamloops amp oldid 1128988470, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, 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