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Mount Currie, British Columbia

Mount Currie is in the Squamish-Lillooet region of southwestern British Columbia. On BC Highway 99, the locality is by road about 160 kilometres (99 mi) north of Vancouver, 39 kilometres (24 mi) northeast of Whistler, and 92 kilometres (57 mi) southwest of Lillooet.

Mount Currie
Mount Currie
Location of Mount Currie in British Columbia
Coordinates: 50°18′59″N 122°43′04″W / 50.31639°N 122.71778°W / 50.31639; -122.71778Coordinates: 50°18′59″N 122°43′04″W / 50.31639°N 122.71778°W / 50.31639; -122.71778
CountryCanada
ProvinceBritish Columbia
RegionLillooet Country
Regional DistrictSquamish-Lillooet
Area code604
Highways Hwy 99

The Lillooet Tribal Council governs the First Nations portion. The relatively smaller freehold part is an unincorporated community.[1] The latter business centre approximately encompasses an area where the Macrea Road/Highway 99 intersection forms the southwest corner and the Pemberton Portage Road/Highway 99 intersection forms the northeast corner. The First Nations reserves straddle the Birkenhead River. The eastern portion of the reserves extends north to the same latitude as the Owl Creek community but is well back from the river at that point.

First Nations

Early community

In 1846, Alexander Caulfield Anderson visited Lillooet Village (not to be confused with later named Lillooet). On a grassy island 5 kilometres (3 mi) above Lillooet Lake, the residents numbered 50 men (plus women and children). The island lies in the vicinity of the later Owl Creek general community.[2] In 1881, the government created a 2,000-hectare (5,000-acre) reserve at Mount Currie, upon which the people cultivated fine crops and orchards by the early 1900s.[3]

Fire destroyed the initial Catholic church building and a new one was erected in 1896.[4] The bell from a demolished Vancouver church was offered to the band, who transported this extremely heavy gift northward by cart and canoe. The bell hung in the Mount Currie church steeple from about 1905 until 1948, when the church burnt down and the bell tumbled. After spending 20 years in Whistler, the bell returned to now hang at the old village site in an open-air steeple, ringing on the passing of band members.[5]

By 1933, only 350 people resided on the reserve. The cemetery indicated that many never survived early childhood.[6]

Census population:
Mount Currie
Indian reserve
YearPop.±%
20011,054—    
20061,181+12.0%
20111,306+10.6%
20161,285−1.6%
20211,242−3.3%
Source: Statistics Canada
[7][8][9][10][11]

The one-room school, which opened at Mount Currie in the 1930s, was called the Pemberton Indian Day School. The two Catholic sisters, who joined the two lay teachers in 1948, took full charge a year later. In 1958, a second building was erected, which housed grades 1–7 classrooms and a residential section for staff. The 1930s building became a kindergarten.[12]

Later community

The Lil'wat First Nation, who comprise most of the Mount Currie population, are of the Interior Salish people and form part of the Upper Lillooet language group of the St'at'imc Nation. Groups to the south form the Lower Lillooet part of the nation.[5]

In the early 1970s, the school transferred to indigenous control [13] becoming the Ts̓zil Community School but is now called the Xet̓ólacw Community School. The Lil'wat language and culture are an integral part of the curriculum.[14]

The Lil'wat also operate their own gas station and grocery store.[15]

The Stl’atl’imx Tribal Police are based at Mount Currie.[16]

Name origin

The post office was called Creekside. The Creekside train station was about half a mile east of the Chilsampton one. In 1956, the post office name changed to Mount Currie as did the Chilsampton station.[17][18] The new name derives from the mountain, which recognizes John Currie of Pemberton. Ts̓zil is the original name for the mountain.[19]

Early Mount Currie general community

The meadows north of the settlement were among the first privately held land on the BC mainland. P. Smith and Co. received the first preemption.[20] John Shaw received the second one. These two properties form part of the present Mount Currie reserve.[21]

John Charles McKay was the inaugural Creekwood postmaster 1938–1945.[18]

About 1923, Bill Kiltz (of Lillooet Lake Trading Co) built the first Creekside store, a log cabin structure opposite the present church. After being lost to fire, a new store was erected near the train station. Since the building was demolished during the 1950s school expansion, this would likely be the Creekwood station. Kiltz sold groceries, hardware, basic clothing, and some pharmaceuticals. In 1946, Gerry and Florence Cowell took over. In 1950, Hector and Adele Harwood converted the store to a restaurant.[22]

By 1937, A. William (Bill) Spetch, Samuel's son, moved the Owl Creek store/post office to Creekside to serve the indigenous village, but that post office soon closed. George and Adeline Williams already had a store in their home on the reserve, which continued until the early 1950s. In 1940, Bill Spetch sold the store to his brother Walter. Initially leased by Jack and Alice McKay, the couple purchased the business in 1943. Bill repurchased it in 1947. While Bill operated a logging partnership with George Walker, George McDonald ran the store. In 1955, Bill opened a dry goods store, which others ran for him. Called Penny's, then Mount Currie Dry Goods, this was the first true clothing store in the area. Bill's wife Jean managed the business by the mid-1960s. Bill built a hardware store, to which the post office moved. Initially rented out, the enterprise was sold in 1957,[23] as was the original grocery store. Down the road, Gerry Boulanger ran a taxi service to Pemberton and a small café.[24] In the 1950s, Hector Harwood ran a small café by the railway.[25]

After the church on the reserve burned, the present St. Christopher's replaced it, being built on freehold land to serve all Catholics.[26] Mount Currie held an annual parade and races in May.[27] The rodeo appeared in the CBC documentary Pemberton Valley (1957). The Trap was a movie filmed at Birkenhead Lake and Mount Currie, using indigenous extras.[28]

The community hall opened in 1968.[29]

Owl Creek general community

In 1905, a water-powered 10,000-kilogram (23,000 lb) sawmill came for a short period to produce lumber for the hatchery buildings. The main building, which was 46 by 12 metres (150 by 40 ft), had a 25-million egg capacity. The nearby two-storey boarding house was 4.9 by 7.3 metres (16 by 24 ft). Trapping fences were installed in the Birkenhead River. Prior to closure in 1936, the hatchery provided various part-time local employment.[30]

In 1908, Samuel Spetch relocated his store/post office from Birken.[31] He was the inaugural Owl Creek postmaster 1908–1929.[32] By 1918, his house was one of the few in the district with indoor plumbing.[33] At the time, he also had a water-powered sawmill at Owl Creek and another mill at Spetch Siding.[34]

During the era, the continuous forest bordering the Pemberton Portage hosted several pole and tie manufacturers.[35]

Sam Spetch's petitioning was instrumental in the creation of the Correspondence Branch of the BC Department of Education in 1919. His children were the first three students.[36]

In 1929, A.William (Bill) Spetch took over his father's store at Owl Creek, which thrived from both the hatchery and valley customer base.[37] By 1937, Bill had moved the store/post office to Creekside.[23]

Owl Creek now comprises scattered rural properties.

Transportation

Road and railway access has been similar to Pemberton. The northward advance of the Pacific Great Eastern Railway (PGE) rail head passed in November 1914.[38] The nearest train stations in 1922 were about 7.6 kilometres (4.7 mi) northeast at Spetch and 7.9 kilometres (4.9 mi) west at Pemberton. By 1947, the regular stops northeastward from Pemberton were 7.4 kilometres (4.6 mi) to Chilsampton, 1.0 kilometre (0.6 mi) to Creekside, 3.1 kilometres (1.9 mi) to Owl Creek, and 19.2 kilometres (11.9 mi) to Birken.[39] By 1959, the flag stops northeastward from Mount Currie were 8.2 kilometres (5.1 mi) to Spetch and then 15.1 kilometres (9.4 mi) to Birken.[40]

Later Mount Currie general community

The mainstays of agriculture and forestry have since been supplemented by tourism and service-based industries, where improved internet has enabled professionals to work from home. Flooding presents the greatest hazard in the area.[16]

The annual Lillooet Lake Rodeo continues to be held at Mount Currie in May.[41]

Footnotes

  1. ^ "Mount Currie (community)". BC Geographical Names.
  2. ^ Decker, Fougberg & Ronayne 1978, pp. 47–49.
  3. ^ Decker, Fougberg & Ronayne 1978, p. 20.
  4. ^ Decker, Fougberg & Ronayne 1978, p. 25.
  5. ^ a b "Pique News". www.piquenewsmagazine.com. 11 Feb 2005.
  6. ^ Decker, Fougberg & Ronayne 1978, p. 22.
  7. ^ "2001 Census". www12.statcan.gc.ca.
  8. ^ "2006 Census". www12.statcan.gc.ca.
  9. ^ "2011 Census". www12.statcan.gc.ca.
  10. ^ "2016 Census". www12.statcan.gc.ca.
  11. ^ "2021 Census". www12.statcan.gc.ca.
  12. ^ Decker, Fougberg & Ronayne 1978, pp. 27, 154.
  13. ^ "The Mt. Currie Indian Community School: Innovation and Endurance (abstract)". www.jstor.org. 1985.
  14. ^ "Mt. Currie Schools–Saving Lil'wat Language and Culture". www.pembertonmuseum.org.
  15. ^ "Mount Currie". www.ourbc.com.
  16. ^ a b "Community Risk Assessment: Squamish-Lillooet Regional District" (PDF). www.slrd.bc.ca. Jan 2021. pp. 42, 47 (41, 46).
  17. ^ Decker, Fougberg & Ronayne 1978, p. 21.
  18. ^ a b "Postmasters: Mt. Currie". www.bac-lac.gc.ca.
  19. ^ "Mount Currie (mount)". BC Geographical Names.
  20. ^ Decker, Fougberg & Ronayne 1978, p. 55.
  21. ^ Decker, Fougberg & Ronayne 1978, p. 56.
  22. ^ Decker, Fougberg & Ronayne 1978, pp. 23–24, 185.
  23. ^ a b Decker, Fougberg & Ronayne 1978, p. 23.
  24. ^ Decker, Fougberg & Ronayne 1978, p. 24.
  25. ^ Decker, Fougberg & Ronayne 1978, p. 226.
  26. ^ Decker, Fougberg & Ronayne 1978, p. 27.
  27. ^ Decker, Fougberg & Ronayne 1978, p. 41.
  28. ^ Decker, Fougberg & Ronayne 1978, p. 263.
  29. ^ Decker, Fougberg & Ronayne 1978, p. 45.
  30. ^ Decker, Fougberg & Ronayne 1978, pp. 83, 106–107, 109, 166–167.
  31. ^ Decker, Fougberg & Ronayne 1978, p. 86.
  32. ^ "Postmasters: Owl Creek". www.bac-lac.gc.ca.
  33. ^ Decker, Fougberg & Ronayne 1978, p. 174.
  34. ^ Decker, Fougberg & Ronayne 1978, p. 167.
  35. ^ Decker, Fougberg & Ronayne 1978, pp. 167–168.
  36. ^ Decker, Fougberg & Ronayne 1978, p. 149.
  37. ^ Decker, Fougberg & Ronayne 1978, p. 185.
  38. ^ "Prospector". library.ubc.ca. 27 Nov 1914. p. 1.
  39. ^ "Timetable" (PDF). www.streamlinermemories.info. Jul 1947. p. 43.
  40. ^ Timetable. 15 Feb 1959
  41. ^ "Mount Currie". www.britishcolumbia.com.

References

  • Decker, Frances; Fougberg, Margaret; Ronayne, Mary (1978). Pemberton: The History of a Settlement, rev. ed. Pemberton Pioneer Women.

mount, currie, british, columbia, mount, currie, squamish, lillooet, region, southwestern, british, columbia, highway, locality, road, about, kilometres, north, vancouver, kilometres, northeast, whistler, kilometres, southwest, lillooet, mount, curriemount, cu. Mount Currie is in the Squamish Lillooet region of southwestern British Columbia On BC Highway 99 the locality is by road about 160 kilometres 99 mi north of Vancouver 39 kilometres 24 mi northeast of Whistler and 92 kilometres 57 mi southwest of Lillooet Mount CurrieMount CurrieLocation of Mount Currie in British ColumbiaCoordinates 50 18 59 N 122 43 04 W 50 31639 N 122 71778 W 50 31639 122 71778 Coordinates 50 18 59 N 122 43 04 W 50 31639 N 122 71778 W 50 31639 122 71778CountryCanadaProvinceBritish ColumbiaRegionLillooet CountryRegional DistrictSquamish LillooetArea code604HighwaysHwy 99The Lillooet Tribal Council governs the First Nations portion The relatively smaller freehold part is an unincorporated community 1 The latter business centre approximately encompasses an area where the Macrea Road Highway 99 intersection forms the southwest corner and the Pemberton Portage Road Highway 99 intersection forms the northeast corner The First Nations reserves straddle the Birkenhead River The eastern portion of the reserves extends north to the same latitude as the Owl Creek community but is well back from the river at that point Contents 1 First Nations 1 1 Early community 1 2 Later community 2 Name origin 3 Early Mount Currie general community 4 Owl Creek general community 5 Transportation 6 Later Mount Currie general community 7 Footnotes 8 ReferencesFirst Nations EditEarly community Edit In 1846 Alexander Caulfield Anderson visited Lillooet Village not to be confused with later named Lillooet On a grassy island 5 kilometres 3 mi above Lillooet Lake the residents numbered 50 men plus women and children The island lies in the vicinity of the later Owl Creek general community 2 In 1881 the government created a 2 000 hectare 5 000 acre reserve at Mount Currie upon which the people cultivated fine crops and orchards by the early 1900s 3 Fire destroyed the initial Catholic church building and a new one was erected in 1896 4 The bell from a demolished Vancouver church was offered to the band who transported this extremely heavy gift northward by cart and canoe The bell hung in the Mount Currie church steeple from about 1905 until 1948 when the church burnt down and the bell tumbled After spending 20 years in Whistler the bell returned to now hang at the old village site in an open air steeple ringing on the passing of band members 5 By 1933 only 350 people resided on the reserve The cemetery indicated that many never survived early childhood 6 Census population Mount CurrieIndian reserveYearPop 20011 054 20061 181 12 0 20111 306 10 6 20161 285 1 6 20211 242 3 3 Source Statistics Canada 7 8 9 10 11 The one room school which opened at Mount Currie in the 1930s was called the Pemberton Indian Day School The two Catholic sisters who joined the two lay teachers in 1948 took full charge a year later In 1958 a second building was erected which housed grades 1 7 classrooms and a residential section for staff The 1930s building became a kindergarten 12 Later community Edit The Lil wat First Nation who comprise most of the Mount Currie population are of the Interior Salish people and form part of the Upper Lillooet language group of the St at imc Nation Groups to the south form the Lower Lillooet part of the nation 5 In the early 1970s the school transferred to indigenous control 13 becoming the Ts zil Community School but is now called the Xet olacw Community School The Lil wat language and culture are an integral part of the curriculum 14 The Lil wat also operate their own gas station and grocery store 15 The Stl atl imx Tribal Police are based at Mount Currie 16 Name origin EditThe post office was called Creekside The Creekside train station was about half a mile east of the Chilsampton one In 1956 the post office name changed to Mount Currie as did the Chilsampton station 17 18 The new name derives from the mountain which recognizes John Currie of Pemberton Ts zil is the original name for the mountain 19 Early Mount Currie general community EditThe meadows north of the settlement were among the first privately held land on the BC mainland P Smith and Co received the first preemption 20 John Shaw received the second one These two properties form part of the present Mount Currie reserve 21 John Charles McKay was the inaugural Creekwood postmaster 1938 1945 18 About 1923 Bill Kiltz of Lillooet Lake Trading Co built the first Creekside store a log cabin structure opposite the present church After being lost to fire a new store was erected near the train station Since the building was demolished during the 1950s school expansion this would likely be the Creekwood station Kiltz sold groceries hardware basic clothing and some pharmaceuticals In 1946 Gerry and Florence Cowell took over In 1950 Hector and Adele Harwood converted the store to a restaurant 22 By 1937 A William Bill Spetch Samuel s son moved the Owl Creek store post office to Creekside to serve the indigenous village but that post office soon closed George and Adeline Williams already had a store in their home on the reserve which continued until the early 1950s In 1940 Bill Spetch sold the store to his brother Walter Initially leased by Jack and Alice McKay the couple purchased the business in 1943 Bill repurchased it in 1947 While Bill operated a logging partnership with George Walker George McDonald ran the store In 1955 Bill opened a dry goods store which others ran for him Called Penny s then Mount Currie Dry Goods this was the first true clothing store in the area Bill s wife Jean managed the business by the mid 1960s Bill built a hardware store to which the post office moved Initially rented out the enterprise was sold in 1957 23 as was the original grocery store Down the road Gerry Boulanger ran a taxi service to Pemberton and a small cafe 24 In the 1950s Hector Harwood ran a small cafe by the railway 25 After the church on the reserve burned the present St Christopher s replaced it being built on freehold land to serve all Catholics 26 Mount Currie held an annual parade and races in May 27 The rodeo appeared in the CBC documentary Pemberton Valley 1957 The Trap was a movie filmed at Birkenhead Lake and Mount Currie using indigenous extras 28 The community hall opened in 1968 29 Owl Creek general community EditIn 1905 a water powered 10 000 kilogram 23 000 lb sawmill came for a short period to produce lumber for the hatchery buildings The main building which was 46 by 12 metres 150 by 40 ft had a 25 million egg capacity The nearby two storey boarding house was 4 9 by 7 3 metres 16 by 24 ft Trapping fences were installed in the Birkenhead River Prior to closure in 1936 the hatchery provided various part time local employment 30 In 1908 Samuel Spetch relocated his store post office from Birken 31 He was the inaugural Owl Creek postmaster 1908 1929 32 By 1918 his house was one of the few in the district with indoor plumbing 33 At the time he also had a water powered sawmill at Owl Creek and another mill at Spetch Siding 34 During the era the continuous forest bordering the Pemberton Portage hosted several pole and tie manufacturers 35 Sam Spetch s petitioning was instrumental in the creation of the Correspondence Branch of the BC Department of Education in 1919 His children were the first three students 36 In 1929 A William Bill Spetch took over his father s store at Owl Creek which thrived from both the hatchery and valley customer base 37 By 1937 Bill had moved the store post office to Creekside 23 Owl Creek now comprises scattered rural properties Transportation EditRoad and railway access has been similar to Pemberton The northward advance of the Pacific Great Eastern Railway PGE rail head passed in November 1914 38 The nearest train stations in 1922 were about 7 6 kilometres 4 7 mi northeast at Spetch and 7 9 kilometres 4 9 mi west at Pemberton By 1947 the regular stops northeastward from Pemberton were 7 4 kilometres 4 6 mi to Chilsampton 1 0 kilometre 0 6 mi to Creekside 3 1 kilometres 1 9 mi to Owl Creek and 19 2 kilometres 11 9 mi to Birken 39 By 1959 the flag stops northeastward from Mount Currie were 8 2 kilometres 5 1 mi to Spetch and then 15 1 kilometres 9 4 mi to Birken 40 Later Mount Currie general community EditThe mainstays of agriculture and forestry have since been supplemented by tourism and service based industries where improved internet has enabled professionals to work from home Flooding presents the greatest hazard in the area 16 The annual Lillooet Lake Rodeo continues to be held at Mount Currie in May 41 Footnotes Edit Mount Currie community BC Geographical Names Decker Fougberg amp Ronayne 1978 pp 47 49 Decker Fougberg amp Ronayne 1978 p 20 Decker Fougberg amp Ronayne 1978 p 25 a b Pique News www piquenewsmagazine com 11 Feb 2005 Decker Fougberg amp Ronayne 1978 p 22 2001 Census www12 statcan gc ca 2006 Census www12 statcan gc ca 2011 Census www12 statcan gc ca 2016 Census www12 statcan gc ca 2021 Census www12 statcan gc ca Decker Fougberg amp Ronayne 1978 pp 27 154 The Mt Currie Indian Community School Innovation and Endurance abstract www jstor org 1985 Mt Currie Schools Saving Lil wat Language and Culture www pembertonmuseum org Mount Currie www ourbc com a b Community Risk Assessment Squamish Lillooet Regional District PDF www slrd bc ca Jan 2021 pp 42 47 41 46 Decker Fougberg amp Ronayne 1978 p 21 a b Postmasters Mt Currie www bac lac gc ca Mount Currie mount BC Geographical Names Decker Fougberg amp Ronayne 1978 p 55 Decker Fougberg amp Ronayne 1978 p 56 Decker Fougberg amp Ronayne 1978 pp 23 24 185 a b Decker Fougberg amp Ronayne 1978 p 23 Decker Fougberg amp Ronayne 1978 p 24 Decker Fougberg amp Ronayne 1978 p 226 Decker Fougberg amp Ronayne 1978 p 27 Decker Fougberg amp Ronayne 1978 p 41 Decker Fougberg amp Ronayne 1978 p 263 Decker Fougberg amp Ronayne 1978 p 45 Decker Fougberg amp Ronayne 1978 pp 83 106 107 109 166 167 Decker Fougberg amp Ronayne 1978 p 86 Postmasters Owl Creek www bac lac gc ca Decker Fougberg amp Ronayne 1978 p 174 Decker Fougberg amp Ronayne 1978 p 167 Decker Fougberg amp Ronayne 1978 pp 167 168 Decker Fougberg amp Ronayne 1978 p 149 Decker Fougberg amp Ronayne 1978 p 185 Prospector library ubc ca 27 Nov 1914 p 1 Timetable PDF www streamlinermemories info Jul 1947 p 43 Timetable 15 Feb 1959 Mount Currie www britishcolumbia com References EditDecker Frances Fougberg Margaret Ronayne Mary 1978 Pemberton The History of a Settlement rev ed Pemberton Pioneer Women Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mount Currie British Columbia amp oldid 1095298167, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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