North Bend, British Columbia
History
North Bend was founded during the construction of the Canadian Pacific Railway in the 1880s and was the site of various Canadian Pacific Railway company offices and housing. Equipped with a small railway hotel, Fraser Canyon House, aka the North Bend Hotel or the CPR Hotel, and another, larger hotel, the Mountain Hotel, and within a few hours' range of Vancouver by rail, the town prospered until the era of highway travel, when it became isolated. It was connected to Boston Bar and the Trans-Canada Highway for many years by the Boston Bar Ferry, an aerial cable ferry which has since been replaced by a bridge built to expedite logging operations on the east bank of the Fraser in that area. North Bend today is part of the general Boston Bar-area community and shares community services with it.
It was originally named Yankee Flats or Yankee Town.
References
- ^ "Census Profile, 2016 Census - North Bend, Unincorporated place [Designated place], British Columbia and British Columbia [Province]". Statistics Canada. Government of Canada. February 8, 2017. Retrieved September 30, 2020.
- ^ "North Bend" (Canada). Maplandia.com. Accessed May 2010.
- ^ Akrigg, G.P.V.; Akrigg, Helen B. (1986), British Columbia Place Names (3rd, 1997 ed.), Vancouver: UBC Press, ISBN 0-7748-0636-2