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Finlay Forks (also called Finlay Junction and sometimes misspelt Findlay), is the confluence of the
Finlay River The Finlay River is a 402 km long river in north-central British Columbia flowing north and thence south from Thutade Lake in the Omineca Mountains to Williston Lake, the impounded waters of the Peace River formed by the completion of the W. ...
and
Parsnip River The Parsnip River is a long river in central British Columbia, Canada. It flows generally north-westward from the Parsnip Glacier in the Hart Ranges to the Parsnip Reach of Williston Lake, formed by the impounding of the waters of the Peace Rive ...
. The Finlay Bay Recreation Site, on the southeast bank, is about southeast of the former settlement (on the earlier southeast bank) that is now submerged beneath
Williston Lake Williston Lake is a reservoir created by the W. A. C. Bennett Dam and is located in the Northern Interior of British Columbia, Canada. Geography The lake fills the basin of the upper Peace River, backing into the Rocky Mountain Trench which is ...
. Like the river, it was named after explorer John Finlay. The access road from
Mackenzie Mackenzie, Mckenzie, MacKenzie, or McKenzie may refer to: People * Mackenzie (given name), a given name (including a list of people with the name) * Mackenzie (surname), a surname (including a list of people with the name) * Clan Mackenzie, a S ...
is called the Parsnip West FSR (formerly Finlay Forks Road and Parsnip Forest Road).


History


Waterways & Trails

The first European explorers travelling through the Forks were Alexander Mackenzie in 1793, and Simon Fraser in 1805. Aboriginal trails laced the valleys for thousands of years. With the Klondike Gold Rush, the Canadian government sought to identify safe overland routes for prospectors to reach the
Yukon Yukon (; ; formerly called Yukon Territory and also referred to as the Yukon) is the smallest and westernmost of Canada's three territories. It also is the second-least populated province or territory in Canada, with a population of 43,964 as ...
from
Edmonton Edmonton ( ) is the capital city of the Canadian province of Alberta. Edmonton is situated on the North Saskatchewan River and is the centre of the Edmonton Metropolitan Region, which is surrounded by Alberta's central region. The city ancho ...
. As water transport could be expensive, these were intended as wagon trails. The initial NWMP Trail, surveyed during 1897–98 by Inspector J.D. Moodie with First Nations guides, passed along the northeast bank of the Forks. Hordes coming from the south would join the trail here. Prospectors also passed through the vicinity on their way to gold rushes at
Barkerville Barkerville was the main town of the Cariboo Gold Rush in British Columbia, Canada, and is preserved as a historic town. It is located on the north slope of the Cariboo Plateau near the Cariboo Mountains east of Quesnel. BC Highway 26, which ...
(1860s), Omineca (1871–72), and McConnell Creek (1907–08).Prince George Citizen, 17 May 1928 During the ice-free months, passenger and freight vessels regularly ran between Summit Lake and
Hudson's Hope Hudson's Hope is a district municipality in northeastern British Columbia, Canada, in the Peace River Regional District. Having been first settled along the Peace River in 1805, it is the third-oldest European-Canadian community in the province, a ...
via the Crooked River, the
Parsnip River The Parsnip River is a long river in central British Columbia, Canada. It flows generally north-westward from the Parsnip Glacier in the Hart Ranges to the Parsnip Reach of Williston Lake, formed by the impounding of the waters of the Peace Rive ...
, Finlay Forks, and the
Peace River The Peace River (french: links=no, rivière de la Paix) is a river in Canada that originates in the Rocky Mountains of northern British Columbia and flows to the northeast through northern Alberta. The Peace River joins the Athabasca River in th ...
.Fort George Herald, 9 Oct 1915 However, low water levels would shorten the navigation season. Four of the potential sites for the W. A. C. Bennett Dam were at the western end of the Peace River canyon near the Forks. Originally, the dam and powerhouse were planned for the Finlay Forks-Wicked River junction east. On drilling down 400 feet in the middle of the Peace River, the failure to reach solid rock identified an unbridgeable crevice. By the summer of 1969, the T-shaped reservoir was 80-percent full.Prince George Citizen, 7 Jul 1969 The combination of high waves and floating logs could make Williston Lake treacherous, with at least eight persons missing and believed drowned in the lake during 1970–1985. The worst area is at Finlay Forks, where the wind can come from north, south, east or west. When his 15-tonne logging truck broke through the ice in the vicinity, Brian Wykes (1956–83) drowned.


Road & Rail Proposals

The joint Peace Pass/Finlay Forks proposals form part of the Pine Pass highway and railway developments. In 1913, Premier McBride envisaged a PGE Alaskan rail route passing through the Forks. In the late 1920s, Mr. Armishaw sought to establish a trail southwest to Manson Creek. A rail line from the Forks to the Ferguson mine in the Ingenika was proposed. Charter flights from Prince George to this mine were taking less than two hours to what had previously been a week by water and land. The 1930s survey for Route B of the proposed Alaska Highway, which was promoted as the Canadian preference, was via this locality. By 1935, the leaning was for a Prince George-Finlay Forks road via Summit Lake rather than Manson Creek, however this choice was not universal, and further surveys ensued. The latter, known as the Turgeon Highway, did not reach Manson Creek until 1939. The project required a further 40 miles of heavy construction if extended to Finlay Forks, and progress was long delayed. A PGE link to a possible Alaskan rail route continued to include Finlay Forks. In 1965, an access road north from Highway 97 reached the settlement and construction commenced on the Manson Creek link. A three-times-weekly road freight service with Prince George was soon implemented. The 1966 PGE spur covered only the to Mackenzie.


Community

Established in 1813, the location was an important
Hudson's Bay Company The Hudson's Bay Company (HBC; french: Compagnie de la Baie d'Hudson) is a Canadian retail business group. A fur trading business for much of its existence, HBC now owns and operates retail stores in Canada. The company's namesake business di ...
fur trading post and settlement. Two general stores opened in 1913.Fort George Tribune, 20 Jun 1914 That year, the residents formed a community association and petitioned the postal authorities to rename the location as ‘Finparpea’, compiled from the first three letters of the three rivers.
World War I World War I (28 July 1914 11 November 1918), often abbreviated as WWI, was one of the deadliest global conflicts in history. Belligerents included much of Europe, the Russian Empire, the United States, and the Ottoman Empire, with fightin ...
superseded any action, and few returned to their holdings after the conflict. In 1915, there were about 35 settlers, and the following year, the Fort Grahame band of
Sekani Sekani or Tse’khene are a First Nations people of the Athabaskan-speaking ethnolinguistic group in the Northern Interior of British Columbia. Their territory includes the Finlay and Parsnip River drainages of the Rocky Mountain Trench. The ne ...
established a reserve nearby. William Fox, the Hudson’s Bay factor (mercantile agent), was the inaugural postmaster 1916–18, with mail deliveries 6–8 times each year. During the 1920s, The Northern Trading Co. also operated a post, Hugh M. Gibson was a storeowner, and the population was about 12. The nucleus of a potential town comprised a few scattered cabins,Prince George Citizen, 7 Jul 1922 with Ole Johnson offering visitor accommodation. In 1912, Louis Peterson (c.1852–1933) who took up the first pre-emption at the Forks, was postmaster 1926–29, and ran a trading store until his death. The remaining storekeeper, Alan (alternatively Alex) McKinnon, was also a fur trader, postmaster 1920–25 and 1930–43, and a mine owner. Replenishing his supplies in the summer of 1940, he trucked the 50-ton load from Prince George to Summit Lake, from where it was boated to the Forks. The annual fur auction held at Finlay Forks, comprised many trappers and drew in commercial buyers. By the 1950s, the Caucasian population numbered four, two of whom were Roy (1889–1984) & Marge (1900–80) McDougall, who ran the trading post and provided visitor accommodation. Marge was also the volunteer first aid attendant for the Sekani and passing itinerants.Prince George Citizen, 27 Oct 1952 Arriving in the 1920s, the couple farmed, and Marge served as postmaster 1943–46 and 1948–58. They sold up in 1957, the post-office closed in 1959, and they left 1960/61. The school was a challenge for maintenance crews, being at the northern tip of School District 57. Catering to logging crews and Sekani, the two classrooms comprised an Atco-style singlewide structure for the primary grades, and a doublewide for the intermediate ones. The Carrier Lumber campsite provided water, power and sewer connections for the classrooms and teacherage. Operating 1968–1971, student enrolments ranged 20–27. On closure, the three portable buildings were removed. During the 1968 summer, Bud Stuart operated a coffee shop and general store from a tentPrince George Citizen, 14 Jun 1968 that evolved into permanent premises. By 1973, Bill Bloor ran the general store. The Finlay Bay Cabins, operated by Kelly Brothers, no longer exist.


Communications & Air Services

Communications with Prince George were slow, because mail travelled a circuitous route east via Hudson’s Hope, Edmonton, and west toward Prince George. The residents appealed for a direct route through Summit Lake, at least during the summer months. The rivers covered with floating ice, the ballot box for an election was parachuted from a plane. The mere 13 names on the electoral roll signified an expensive exercise in democracy. The locked ballot box took 15 days to reach Hudson’s Hope, from where the mail would take a further 10 days to reach Prince George. By the 1950s, the arrival of the ballot box, containing two votes, delayed the final count. In 1936, a shortwave radiotelephone station opened, which operated in conjunction with a series of similar stations in northern BC and the Yukon. The following year, United Air Transport (UAT) inaugurated a scheduled monthly passenger/freight/mail service for nine months of the year. A half-gallon ice cream consignment was the first occasion it was served in the community. By 1938, the dominion postal inspector’s annual visit to Finlay Forks and the surrounding post-offices took five days by air, compared with the previous 40 days by boat. UAT, renamed Yukon Southern Air Transport (YSAT), scheduled a Christmas 1940 mail run. Moving under the joint control of YSAT and Canadian Airways in 1941, the passenger/mail runs continued monthly. By the 1950s, Central B.C. Airways carried the nine mail deliveries for the year, the radiotelephone station had become redundant and closed, and the community’s two-way radio was dependent upon weather conditions. When a plane crashed on making an emergency landing near Finlay Forks in 1950, the pilot and the three passengers survived. Santa would come by plane, but sometimes the weather delayed the event until after Christmas. With flight cancellations, several months of newspapers might arrive together. The
Pacific Western Airlines Pacific Western Airlines Ltd (PWA) was an airline that operated scheduled flights throughout western Canada and charter services around the world from the 1950s through the 1980s. It was headquartered at Vancouver International Airport in Ri ...
Prince George- Fort St. John run, which commenced in 1957, provided the irregular passenger, freight and mail service to the Forks. Months later, the ballot box travelled by helicopter. In 1995, when an amphibian plane crashed shortly after takeoff from Finlay Bay, the three occupants escaped uninjured. The Finlay Bay Water Aerodrome (CAK8) was later abandoned.


Law Enforcement

In 1924, Constable Muirhead became the inaugural provincial police constable in residence, and mushed over 500 miles to spend Christmas in Prince George. Although federal police questioned the adequacy of provincial policing in the area, a permanent police presence was limited to the 1920s. In 1930, Alfred (Alf) Jank (1897–1989) was appointed game warden for the Finlay River district, with his headquarters in the forestry cabin at Finlay Forks. Vic Williams replaced him the following year. Vic and a colleague rescued two men from a capsized boat in the Finlay Rapids, but a third person drowned. In 1933, he was appointed coroner in conjunction with his ten-month-each-year game warden role. During the late 1930s, Alf, and Sidney G. Copeland, held the game warden position. In 1940, Sidney apprehended Edward Bird (alias Byrde) at Deserter’s Canyon on a charge of bigamy and surrendered him to a police constable for escorting to Prince George. In 1944, after a social confrontation, Alex Prince (1921–45) murdered trappers Eugene Messmer, 33, and then Hans Pfeuffer, 43, at their cabin in the vicinity. Found in Prince’s cabin were Messmer’s gold watch, handmade briefcase, rifle, valuable cameras, film, stolen furs and fur stretchers. Based on this evidence, Game Warden Jank executed an arrest on separate charges. The coroner’s court reached an
open verdict The open verdict is an option open to a coroner's jury at an inquest in the legal system of England and Wales. The verdict means the jury confirms the death is suspicious, but is unable to reach any other verdicts open to them. Mortality studies c ...
. Alex Prince, Sekani First Nations, stood trial, but damaging inadmissible statements made by a witness prompted a mistrial. At his retrial, Prince was found guilty of murdering Messmer and a stay of proceedings was entered in a second murder charge in the death of Pfeuffer. After an unsuccessful appeal on the grounds of diminished capacity, he was hanged. In 1964 and 1965, rifle shots wounded separate members of the Poole family on the Finlay Forks reserve. In another shooting incident at a family reunion, May Egnell (1929–68) died, and another woman and boy were injured. The incident arose after a verbal exchange during an intoxicated episode. While Joe Egnell, husband of the deceased was in a physical altercation with Murphy Porter, their wives May and Mary, and Bessie Tomah, were fighting. Although May had pulled a knife, Bessie, 26, was found guilty of manslaughter and received a three-year sentence. In 1948, Joe Egnell’s father, McDonald, and youngest brother, Tony, died, the former of exposure and the latter of pneumonia. His mother trekked 80 miles in cold winter weather to bring her two children to safety. Game Warden Jank and Const. Lyle Oleson conducted the investigation, and Frank identified his father’s body. Frank Egnell, 43, shot to death Keon Pierre (1914–71) following an argument at Finlay Forks. Convicted of manslaughter, he was sentenced to two years less a day.


Mining & Farming

A great deal of mining occurred in the surrounding mountains, rivers and creeks. The increasing market for produce was anticipated to expand farming in the immediate area. Larry Canty acquired 20,000 acres in 1929 for agricultural development. However, the lack of rail lines and roads hampered mining activities. The 1957 site selection for the W. A. C. Bennett Dam confirmed the flooding would submerge many mining and industrial development properties.


Forestry

By the mid-1910s, the BC forestry department maintained a headquarters at Finlay Forks, which in due course served a fire ranger role. The forest ranger station operated after
World War II World War II or the Second World War, often abbreviated as WWII or WW2, was a world war that lasted from 1939 to 1945. It involved the vast majority of the world's countries—including all of the great powers—forming two opposing ...
, and an assistant ranger station was built in 1964. In the mid-1960s, logging contracts were let for those valleys north, south and east of the Forks, which would be flooded by the dam. Donald Adems (Adams alternate spelling), a forestry service engineer on the project, had been the first Caucasian child to live at Finlay Forks. Further contracts were let for the clearing and burning of inferior timber. Several portable sawmills began operations. Carrier Lumber and Cattermole Timber adopted new ideas such as felling on the ice and sorting later.Prince George Citizen, 3 May 1985 The latter was located on the west bank of the Parsnip River, two miles south, and was accessed by an ice-bridge. Fires completely gutted its 50,000-foot capacity McLean Lake Mill, and the Courhon Sawmill on Scott Creek at mile 56 of the access road. A forest fire at Mile 43 threatened another mill. Temporary work camps were at Miles 49 and 73. The forest service established a centre of operations at Finlay Forks. Rising faster than anticipated, the dammed waters created vast logjams and half-submerged trees. In this environment, two tugboat companies and about 25 private logging contractors conducted one of the largest timber salvage operations in North America. At the Forks, Finlay Navigation operated a dispatch base, and Carrier Lumber a sawmill. Sheriffs’ sales of assets occurred to settle unpaid wages of Yarkon Industries and workers compensation liabilities of Ashlea Timber at Mile 74½. In 1969, the bush mills disappeared from the pondage area and the first log boom reached Mackenzie from the Finlay drainage. By 1971, further timber salvaging became uneconomical, and Carrier relocated all its operations from Finlay Forks to Mackenzie. On rolling his skidder, operator Vincent Broad was fatally crushed (1951–73).


Footnotes


References

* * * * *{{BCGNIS, 40773, Parsnip Reach * http://pgnewspapers.pgpl.ca/fedora/repository * Unrau, Norman (2001). Under These Waters Williston Lake: Before it Was. Self-published. . http://www.bcfs100.ca/docs/pdf/0/380.pdf
Ghost towns in British Columbia Northern Interior of British Columbia Omineca Mountains Hudson's Bay Company forts Sekani people