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Lake Living - History
Early History
Prior to European settlement, Christina Lake was part of
the region inhabited by the Sinixt First Nations group. Also known as
the Arrow Lakes People, the Sinixt were an Interior Salish people whose
territory stretched roughly from the Monashees to Kootenay Lake, from
Revelstoke to north-east Washington. Christina Lake was an important fishing
ground, as was the Kettle River around Cascade. Pictographs
located at various points along the north-east lakeshore are evidence
of these first inhabitants, and offer a tantalizing glimpse into a past
that remains largely unspoken.
The lake was named after Christina McDonald, daughter of
the fur trader Angus McDonald, who ran the Hudson's Bay Company station
at Fort Colville from 1852-71. Fort Colville was established in 1825,
and until its closure in 1871 it was a central fixture of the area. In
1865, the extension of the Dewdney Trail from Rock Creek to Wild Horse
Creek provided early pioneers with the first route into the Christina
Lake region that didn't require travelling through American territory.
However, settlement of the Boundary didn't really begin until the late
1880s and early 1890s.
1890s
By the early 1890s prospecting had spilled over from Rossland into the
Christina Lake region. The Lake's original white residents were prospectors,
trappers, or both. McRae Creek and Sutherland Creek are among the many
local landmarks named for these pioneer prospectors. In 1896, around the
time settlement began at Cascade, F.A. Heinze, owner of the Trail smelter,
chartered the Columbia & Western Railway. In 1898 the CPR bought out
the C&W and
began construction in Castlegar. The C&W railway was completed as
far as Grand Forks by September of 1899, and reached Midway the following
year. The rail lines were crucial to the success of the mining, smelting
and lumber industries that were propelling the region's economic growth.
The arrival of the railroad brought more permanent settlement to the region,
and by the turn of the century Christina Lake had multiple townsites,
with a total of at least five hotels. Christina Lake first became a recreational
area for day-trippers from Grand Forks and Phoenix, who were able to make
use of the new railroad to visit the lake. Dominion Day was a favourite
holiday, with special excursion trains running from Grand Forks to Christina
Lake.
By the late 1890s Cascade City was a bustling community
of approximately 1000 residents, with its own newspaper, The Cascade Record.
The Cascade Water Power & Light Co. Ltd. was incorporated in 1898,
and started building its dam across
the Kettle River. The powerhouse at Cascade would provide electric power
to Grand Forks, Phoenix and Greenwood, as well as to various local mines
and smelters. However, this prosperity was to be short-lived; on September
30, 1899 Cascade was hit by the first in a series of devastating fires.
The business district of the town was severely affected, and the second
major fire, in the summer of 1901, caused further damage, leaving only
one store and one hotel standing. A town which had boasted over a dozen
hotels only a few years earlier was on its way to becoming a ghost town.
Today, the magnificent gorge can be seen from the bridge on Highway 395
or by following trails that lead to closer vantage points.
Image Courtesy of BC Archives - Source
from Call Number B-09285
1900-1945
Beginning in the first decades of the twentieth century, Christina Lake
provided summer cottages, fishing, swimming
and other entertainment to residents of Grand Forks and the Boundary region.
The 1920s saw further growth of Christina Lake as a recreational community
and tourism destination. The completion of the Cascade-Rossland highway
in 1922 provided vacationers from Rossland and Trail with a direct route
to the Boundary for the first time. In the 1920s, Prohibition in the United
States encouraged an influx of visitors from north-east Washington, who
were attracted by the Lake's saloons and dance halls. Even during the
depression of the 1930s Christina Lake attracted a number of tourists,
mostly vacationers from Rossland, Trail and the Grand Forks area.
A summer resort hotel was built on English Point in 1928-9,
and was run by George Brown and subsequent owners until 1942, when the
hotel and its surrounding cabins were used to house Japanese families
interred away from the coast for the duration of WWII. A few families
remained in the area after the last of the restrictions were lifted in
1949, others settled elsewhere.
1945-PRESENT
The years following WWII saw Christina Lake become well established as
a recreational community. In the early 1960s the highway connecting Castlegar
to Christina Lake was completed, saving vacationers from the Kootenays
and Alberta hours of travel time as they no longer had to follow the old
Cascade-Rossland highway to reach the lake. In 1963 the Christina Lake
Golf Club opened a 9-hole course at Cascade, and in 1986 the course was
expanded to a full, immaculately landscaped 18-hole course that is now
one of the lake's premier attractions.
Certainly, as you drive through on the highway today, Christina Lake
appears quiet and secluded. The frantic energy of the prospecting era
and the expansive optimism of the years surrounding the turn of the century
may be hidden behind today's laid-back community, but the legacy of the
lake's early residents lives on in the entrepreneurial spirit of the lake's
booming tourism sector. And glimpses of the old days remain for those
who care to look. Christina Lake remains one of British Columbia's best
kept secrets. Come and explore the region for yourself - who knows what
you may uncover!
Download an expanded version of the history
of Christina Lake as a PDF file
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Barlee, N.L. Gold Creeks and Ghost Towns.
Boundary Historical Society (ed). Boundary Historical Reports, No. 1,4,6.
Grand Forks. 1958, 1964, 1971.
Glanville, A. & J. Grand Forks: Where the Kettle River Flows. Kelowna:
Blue Moose Publications, 1997.
Sandner, L. Christina Lake: An illustrated History. Merritt: Sonotek
Publishing Ltd, 1994.
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