Jump to content

Bella Coola, British Columbia

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Al guy (talk | contribs) at 01:10, 7 November 2006 (rvv by 199.216.204.210). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Location of Bella Coola, British Columbia

Bella Coola is a community of approximately 600 at the western extremity of the Bella Coola valley. Bella Coola may actually refer to the entire valley, encompassing the settlements of Bella Coola, Lower Bella Coola, Hagensborg, Saloompt, Nusatsum, Firvale and Stuie. It is also the seat of the Central Coast Regional District.

Bella Coola (the entire valley) contains a population of 2289 as of the 2001 Canadian census. This was a drop of 4.6% from the 1996 census, when the population was 2400 (exactly). However, the on-reserve native Canadian (almost entirely Nuxálk) population increased from 873 (1996) to 909 (2001), an increase from 36.4% to 39.7% of the overall population.

Geography

The primary geographical structure of the community, both in terms of physical structures and population distribution is the long, narrow Bella Coola River valley. The Alexander MacKenzie Highway (British Columbia provincial highway 20, known over most of its length as the Chilcotin Highway) stretches from the Government wharf (on the Pacific Ocean) through the extent of the populated portion of the valley before climbing to the Chilcotin Plateau, and the entire population of the community lives either on this road or very near to it.

Transport

Road

There is a 479 km mostly paved road connection by the aforementioned highway 20 to Williams Lake, which features an 18% grade, narrow and dangerous switchbacks on the climb out of Bella Coola through the coastal mountains. Once out of Bella Coola, it runs through the mountainous Tweedsmuir Provincial Park[1] full of grizzlies and black bears and then through the mostly desolate country of the Chilcotin Plateau.

Air

Bella Coola is also served by the 16 km-distant (10 miles) Bella Coola Airport (on highway 20), which has a 1,280 m-long (4,200 ft) asphalt runway. Pacific Coastal Airlines offers scheduled traffic to Vancouver and Anahim Lake. Charter flights to other destinations can be arranged.[2]

Marine ferry

Also, BC Ferries provides a vehicle/passenger service in the summer (June 5-September 3) throguh picturesque fjords and open sea to Port Hardy on the northern tip of Vancouver Island.[3]

In the rest of the year (October 1-May 17), similarly spectacular ferry service to outlying coastal communities McLoughlin Bay, Shearwater, Klemtu and Ocean Falls,[4] with available transfers at McLoughlin Bay to a ferry serving either Prince Rupert or Port Hardy, schedule depending.[5]

History

The Nuxálk people were present in the Bella Coola valley prior to any formal written history of the area. This is confirmed both by oral history that continues unbroken to present day, and by written history of some of the first European explorers of the area.

In 1793, Alexander MacKenzie arrived from the East, completing the first recorded crossing of the continent.

Immigration (non-Nuxálk) to the region was sporadic and often temporary for the next century. A Hudson's Bay fur trading post was set up at the mouth of the river (the land granted to the post forms the off-Reserve portion of the present-day "townsite"), and a handful of farmers were granted land further up the valley. The trading trails of the Nuxálk and neighbouring nations became a popular route from the Pacific Ocean to central British Columbia, particularly during the Barkerville gold rush of the 1860s. The Valley was surveyed as a potential Pacific terminus of the Canadian Pacific Railway (Port Moody, near Vancouver, was the eventual choice).

In the 1890s, a group of Norwegian Lutheran settlers were given land grants in the Valley, after their previously-existing community in Minnesota suffered an internal conflict. The land they were granted, as well as other land previously granted to individuals was, in many cases, land that had been occupied by Nuxálk communities only a few decades (or less) earlier. However, a smallpox epidemic had decimated the Nuxálk population, and the survivors had, for the most part, gathered on land close to the mouth of the river (and close to the Hudson's Bay post).

These two populations (Norwegian settlers and Nuxálk), in varying proportions, continued to make up the vast majority of the community's population for most of the next century. However, in recent years, the Norwegian population (or connection to a Norwegian identity) has declined. In 2001, 43% of the population reported "Aboriginal identity", of which the vast majority is Nuxálk, while only 10% reported Norwegian (or Norwegian-Canadian) to be their "Ethnic Origin".

Elected Representatives

The Bella Coola Valley includes Electoral Areas C, D and E of the Central Coast Regional District (CCRD)

  • Electoral Area C: Brian Lande (chair of the Board of Directors of the Regional District)
  • Electoral Area D: Kevin O'Neill
  • Electoral Area E: Barney Kern

The Bella Coola Valley is split between two Electoral Districts in the British Columbia provincial government.

  • North Coast (which includes 99.6% of the Valley's population): New Democrat Gary Coons
  • Cariboo South (includes only Stuie, at the east end of the Valley): New Democrat Charlie Wyse

The Bella Coola Valley is split between two Electoral Districts in the Canadian federal government.

References


52°22′N 126°45′W / 52.367°N 126.750°W / 52.367; -126.750