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CANADA: Cassiar Highway, British Columbia

34 images Created 28 Aug 2019

The scenic Stewart–Cassiar Highway (Highway 37, aka Dease Lake Highway or Stikine Highway) is the northwesternmost highway in BC.

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  • Western Toad / Anaxyrus boreas. Riverside Park, Smithers, British Columbia, Canada.
    1906AK2-016.jpg
  • Stonecrop flower. For thousands of years, the Witsuwet'en First Nations people have fished for salmon where the Bulkley River plunges through Witset Canyon (formerly Moricetown), in British Columbia, Canada. Evidence of inhabitants are carbon-dated as far back as 5500 years ago, as displayed in Widzin Kwah Diyik Be Yikh (Widzin Kwah Canyon House Museum, http://tourismwitset.com). Starting in 1887, pioneer Catholic missionary Father Adrien-Gabriel Morice renamed the village as Moricetown after himself, to the admonishment of the church. The current village was built during the early 1900s. On May 5, 2018, the community officially reverted Moricetown back to the original name, Witset.
    1906AKH-0612.jpg
  • For thousands of years, the Witsuwet'en First Nations people have fished for salmon where the Bulkley River plunges through Witset Canyon (formerly Moricetown), in British Columbia, Canada. Evidence of inhabitants are carbon-dated as far back as 5500 years ago, as displayed in Widzin Kwah Diyik Be Yikh (Widzin Kwah Canyon House Museum, http://tourismwitset.com). Starting in 1887, pioneer Catholic missionary Father Adrien-Gabriel Morice renamed the village as Moricetown after himself, to the admonishment of the church. The current village was built during the early 1900s. On May 5, 2018, the community officially reverted Moricetown back to the original name, Witset.
    1906AKH-0618.jpg
  • A newly carved totem pole awaits finishing touches. The nonprofit 'Ksan Historical Village is a living museum of the Gitxsan Indigenous people, reconstructed in 1970 in the Skeena Country of Northwestern British Columbia, Canada. See impressive cultural artworks painted on longhouses and carved in totem poles. 'Ksan is near Hazelton at the confluence of the Skeena and Bulkley Rivers on Gitxsan territory. 'Ksan was founded in 1866 (before Hazelton) and was populated by the Gitxsan Indigenous people.
    1906AKH-0644.jpg
  • The nonprofit 'Ksan Historical Village is a living museum of the Gitxsan Indigenous people, reconstructed in 1970 in the Skeena Country of Northwestern British Columbia, Canada. See impressive cultural artworks painted on longhouses and carved in totem poles. 'Ksan is near Hazelton at the confluence of the Skeena and Bulkley Rivers on Gitxsan territory. 'Ksan was founded in 1866 (before Hazelton) and was populated by the Gitxsan Indigenous people.
    1906AKH-0653.jpg
  • The nonprofit 'Ksan Historical Village is a living museum of the Gitxsan Indigenous people, reconstructed in 1970 in the Skeena Country of Northwestern British Columbia, Canada. See impressive cultural artworks painted on longhouses and carved in totem poles. 'Ksan is near Hazelton at the confluence of the Skeena and Bulkley Rivers on Gitxsan territory. 'Ksan was founded in 1866 (before Hazelton) and was populated by the Gitxsan Indigenous people.
    1906AKH-0659.jpg
  • Eagle House. The nonprofit 'Ksan Historical Village is a living museum of the Gitxsan Indigenous people, reconstructed in 1970 in the Skeena Country of Northwestern British Columbia, Canada. See impressive cultural artworks painted on longhouses and carved in totem poles. 'Ksan is near Hazelton at the confluence of the Skeena and Bulkley Rivers on Gitxsan territory. 'Ksan was founded in 1866 (before Hazelton) and was populated by the Gitxsan Indigenous people.
    1906AKH-0662.jpg
  • Eagle House is on the right. The nonprofit 'Ksan Historical Village is a living museum of the Gitxsan Indigenous people, reconstructed in 1970 in the Skeena Country of Northwestern British Columbia, Canada. See impressive cultural artworks painted on longhouses and carved in totem poles. 'Ksan is near Hazelton at the confluence of the Skeena and Bulkley Rivers on Gitxsan territory. 'Ksan was founded in 1866 (before Hazelton) and was populated by the Gitxsan Indigenous people.
    1906AKH-0682.jpg
  • Eagle House. The nonprofit 'Ksan Historical Village is a living museum of the Gitxsan Indigenous people, reconstructed in 1970 in the Skeena Country of Northwestern British Columbia, Canada. See impressive cultural artworks painted on longhouses and carved in totem poles. 'Ksan is near Hazelton at the confluence of the Skeena and Bulkley Rivers on Gitxsan territory. 'Ksan was founded in 1866 (before Hazelton) and was populated by the Gitxsan Indigenous people.
    1906AKH-0687.jpg
  • Eagle House. The nonprofit 'Ksan Historical Village is a living museum of the Gitxsan Indigenous people, reconstructed in 1970 in the Skeena Country of Northwestern British Columbia, Canada. See impressive cultural artworks painted on longhouses and carved in totem poles. 'Ksan is near Hazelton at the confluence of the Skeena and Bulkley Rivers on Gitxsan territory. 'Ksan was founded in 1866 (before Hazelton) and was populated by the Gitxsan Indigenous people.
    1906AKH-0693.jpg
  • Eagle House. The nonprofit 'Ksan Historical Village is a living museum of the Gitxsan Indigenous people, reconstructed in 1970 in the Skeena Country of Northwestern British Columbia, Canada. See impressive cultural artworks painted on longhouses and carved in totem poles. 'Ksan is near Hazelton at the confluence of the Skeena and Bulkley Rivers on Gitxsan territory. 'Ksan was founded in 1866 (before Hazelton) and was populated by the Gitxsan Indigenous people.
    1906AKH-0714.jpg
  • Hazleton Mountains. The nonprofit 'Ksan Historical Village is a living museum of the Gitxsan Indigenous people, reconstructed in 1970 in the Skeena Country of Northwestern British Columbia, Canada. See impressive cultural artworks painted on longhouses and carved in totem poles. 'Ksan is near Hazelton at the confluence of the Skeena and Bulkley Rivers on Gitxsan territory. 'Ksan was founded in 1866 (before Hazelton) and was populated by the Gitxsan Indigenous people. This image was stitched from multiple overlapping photos.
    1906AKH-0740-p1-Pano.jpg
  • Hagwilget Canyon Bridge over Bulkley River lets Highway 62 reach Hazelton and 'Ksan Historical Village. The nonprofit 'Ksan Historical Village is a living museum of the Gitxsan Indigenous people, reconstructed in 1970 in the Skeena Country of Northwestern British Columbia, Canada. See impressive cultural artworks painted on longhouses and carved in totem poles. 'Ksan is near Hazelton at the confluence of the Skeena and Bulkley Rivers on Gitxsan territory. 'Ksan was founded in 1866 (before Hazelton) and was populated by the Gitxsan Indigenous people.
    1906AKH-0743.jpg
  • 1882 St. Paul's Anglican (Episcopal) Church, in Kitwanga or Gitwangak (or Gitwangax, "people of the place of rabbits" in the Gitxsan language), in British Columbia, Canada. Kitwanga is at the southern end of the scenic Stewart–Cassiar Highway (Highway 37, aka Dease Lake Highway or Stikine Highway, the northwesternmost highway in BC), just 4 km north of the Yellowhead Highway (Hwy 16). A long-standing village before contact, Kitwanga is within Gitwangak Indian Reserve No. 1.
    1906AKH-0752.jpg
  • 1882 St. Paul's Anglican (Episcopal) Church, in Kitwanga or Gitwangak (or Gitwangax, "people of the place of rabbits" in the Gitxsan language), in British Columbia, Canada. Kitwanga is at the southern end of the scenic Stewart–Cassiar Highway (Highway 37, aka Dease Lake Highway or Stikine Highway, the northwesternmost highway in BC), just 4 km north of the Yellowhead Highway (Hwy 16). A long-standing village before contact, Kitwanga is within Gitwangak Indian Reserve No. 1.
    1906AKH-0762.jpg
  • 1882 St. Paul's Anglican (Episcopal) Church, in Kitwanga or Gitwangak (or Gitwangax, "people of the place of rabbits" in the Gitxsan language), in British Columbia, Canada. Kitwanga is at the southern end of the scenic Stewart–Cassiar Highway (Highway 37, aka Dease Lake Highway or Stikine Highway, the northwesternmost highway in BC), just 4 km north of the Yellowhead Highway (Hwy 16). A long-standing village before contact, Kitwanga is within Gitwangak Indian Reserve No. 1.
    1906AKH-0764.jpg
  • 1882 St. Paul's Anglican (Episcopal) Church, in Kitwanga or Gitwangak (or Gitwangax, "people of the place of rabbits" in the Gitxsan language), in British Columbia, Canada. Kitwanga is at the southern end of the scenic Stewart–Cassiar Highway (Highway 37, aka Dease Lake Highway or Stikine Highway, the northwesternmost highway in BC), just 4 km north of the Yellowhead Highway (Hwy 16). A long-standing village before contact, Kitwanga is within Gitwangak Indian Reserve No. 1.
    1906AKH-0766.jpg
  • 1882 St. Paul's Anglican (Episcopal) Church, in Kitwanga or Gitwangak (or Gitwangax, "people of the place of rabbits" in the Gitxsan language), in British Columbia, Canada. Kitwanga is at the southern end of the scenic Stewart–Cassiar Highway (Highway 37, aka Dease Lake Highway or Stikine Highway, the northwesternmost highway in BC), just 4 km north of the Yellowhead Highway (Hwy 16). A long-standing village before contact, Kitwanga is within Gitwangak Indian Reserve No. 1.
    1906AKH-0772.jpg
  • Gitwangak Battle Hill is a National Historic Site of Canada, in Kitwanga village (or Gitwangax, "people of the place of rabbits" in the Gitxsan language), British Columbia. Battle Hill (Daa'ootsip) was a fortified village occupied in the late 1700s and early 1800s by the Gitwangak, a local First Nations people. Kitwanga is sited where the Kitwanga River flows into the Skeena River, at the crossroads of the old "grease trail" trade in eulachon (candlefish) oil, a staple among tribes of the Coast and Interior. Kitwanga is at the southern end of the scenic Stewart–Cassiar Highway (Highway 37, aka Dease Lake Highway or Stikine Highway, the northwesternmost highway in BC), just 4 km north of the Yellowhead Highway (Hwy 16). A long-standing village before contact, Kitwanga is within Gitwangak Indian Reserve No. 1.
    1906AKH-0795.jpg
  • Gitanyow Totem Poles, on the Kitwanga River in British Columbia, Canada. Listed as a National Historic Site of Canada, Gitanyow (formerly Kitwancool) village is a First Nations reserve community of about 400 Gitxsan people. Posted 1967 BC sign: "These stately monuments in cedar proclaim the owner's clan status and inherited family traditions, but were never associated with religion. Clan crests portrayed mythical creatures, sometimes in human form, from the legendary history of the clan." The word totem derives from the Algonquian word odoodem meaning "(his) kinship group". Gitanyow is on a short side loop off the scenic Stewart–Cassiar Highway (Highway 37, aka Dease Lake Highway), just 24 km north of the junction with Yellowhead Highway (Hwy 16).
    1906AKH-0846.jpg
  • Gitanyow Totem Poles, on the Kitwanga River in British Columbia, Canada. Listed as a National Historic Site of Canada, Gitanyow (formerly Kitwancool) village is a First Nations reserve community of about 400 Gitxsan people. Posted 1967 BC sign: "These stately monuments in cedar proclaim the owner's clan status and inherited family traditions, but were never associated with religion. Clan crests portrayed mythical creatures, sometimes in human form, from the legendary history of the clan." The word totem derives from the Algonquian word odoodem meaning "(his) kinship group". Gitanyow is on a short side loop off the scenic Stewart–Cassiar Highway (Highway 37, aka Dease Lake Highway), just 24 km north of the junction with Yellowhead Highway (Hwy 16).
    1906AKH-0853.jpg
  • Gitanyow Totem Poles, on the Kitwanga River in British Columbia, Canada. Listed as a National Historic Site of Canada, Gitanyow (formerly Kitwancool) village is a First Nations reserve community of about 400 Gitxsan people. Posted 1967 BC sign: "These stately monuments in cedar proclaim the owner's clan status and inherited family traditions, but were never associated with religion. Clan crests portrayed mythical creatures, sometimes in human form, from the legendary history of the clan." The word totem derives from the Algonquian word odoodem meaning "(his) kinship group". Gitanyow is on a short side loop off the scenic Stewart–Cassiar Highway (Highway 37, aka Dease Lake Highway), just 24 km north of the junction with Yellowhead Highway (Hwy 16).
    1906AKH-0855.jpg
  • Gitanyow Totem Poles, on the Kitwanga River in British Columbia, Canada. Listed as a National Historic Site of Canada, Gitanyow (formerly Kitwancool) village is a First Nations reserve community of about 400 Gitxsan people. Posted 1967 BC sign: "These stately monuments in cedar proclaim the owner's clan status and inherited family traditions, but were never associated with religion. Clan crests portrayed mythical creatures, sometimes in human form, from the legendary history of the clan." The word totem derives from the Algonquian word odoodem meaning "(his) kinship group". Gitanyow is on a short side loop off the scenic Stewart–Cassiar Highway (Highway 37, aka Dease Lake Highway), just 24 km north of the junction with Yellowhead Highway (Hwy 16).
    1906AKH-0865.jpg
  • The flag of British Columbia is based upon the shield of the provincial arms of British Columbia. At the top of the flag is the Royal Union Flag centered by a crown. The setting sun represents BC's location in western Canada. The four wavy white and three wavy blue lines symbolize being located between the Rocky Mountains and the Pacific Ocean.  Photo is from Meziadin Lake Provincial Park, in British Columbia, Canada. It sits 40 miles (64 km) east of Stewart; inland from Bear Pass. A beautiful mountain lake, surrounded by forest, it is also defined to the west by a ridge a tall mountains of the Coast Range. The scenic Stewart–Cassiar Highway (Highway 37, aka Dease Lake Highway or Stikine Highway) is the northwesternmost highway in BC.
    1906AKH-0872_BC-flag.jpg
  • Bear Glacier seen from Highway 37A, near Stewart, British Columbia, Canada. Bear Glacier Provincial Park is halfway between Meziadin Junction and Stewart.
    1906AKH-0882.jpg
  • Bear Glacier seen from Highway 37A, near Stewart, British Columbia, Canada. Bear Glacier Provincial Park is halfway between Meziadin Junction and Stewart.
    1906AKH-0883.jpg
  • Salmon Glacier, British Columbia, Canada. Salmon Glacier is the world's largest glacier accessible via road and the fifth largest in Canada. Salmon Glacier is a 37km (23 mile) drive from Stewart, past Hyder and beyond the Bear viewing platform, along Salmon Glacier Road, built to connect Stewart to mining interests.
    1906AKH-0887.jpg
  • Portland Canal at Stewart, British Columbia, Canada. The Portland Canal is an arm of Portland Inlet, a fjord extending 114 kilometres (71 mi) inland on the British Columbia Coast to Stewart, British Columbia and Hyder, Alaska. The Portland Canal forms part of the border between southeastern Alaska and British Columbia. George Vancouver named Portland Canal in 1793, in honour of William Cavendish-Bentinck, 3rd Duke of Portland. The use of the word canal (meaning channel) to name inlets on the BC Coast and Alaska Panhandle is a legacy of Spanish exploration in the 1700s. The placement of the international boundary in the Portland Canal was a major issue during the negotiations over the Alaska Boundary Dispute, which heated up as a result of the Klondike Gold Rush and ended by arbitration in 1903.
    1906AKH-0893.jpg
  • Bear Glacier seen from Highway 37A, near Stewart, British Columbia, Canada. Bear Glacier Provincial Park is halfway between Meziadin Junction and Stewart.
    1906AKH-0929.jpg
  • Nautilus fossils. Cassiar Mountain Jade Store, Jade City, British Columbia, Canada. The scenic Stewart–Cassiar Highway (Highway 37, aka Dease Lake Highway or Stikine Highway) is the northwesternmost highway in BC.
    1906AKH-0944.jpg
  • Cassiar Mountain Jade Store, Jade City, British Columbia, Canada. The scenic Stewart–Cassiar Highway (Highway 37, aka Dease Lake Highway or Stikine Highway) is the northwesternmost highway in BC. To license this Copyright photo, please inquire at PhotoSeek.com.
    1906AKH-0952.jpg
  • Cassiar Mountain Jade Store, Jade City, British Columbia, Canada. The scenic Stewart–Cassiar Highway (Highway 37, aka Dease Lake Highway or Stikine Highway) is the northwesternmost highway in BC.
    1906AKH-0954.jpg
  • Stone cutting saw. Cassiar Mountain Jade Store, Jade City, British Columbia, Canada. The scenic Stewart–Cassiar Highway (Highway 37, aka Dease Lake Highway or Stikine Highway) is the northwesternmost highway in BC.
    1906AKH-0959.jpg
  • From May 27-July 3, 2019, we drove our new RV about 6200 miles from Seattle to Denali National Park via Cassiar Highway, Klondike Highway, and Alaska Highway; then looped back via Parks Highway, Glenn Highway, Alaska Highway, Jasper National Park, and Mt Robson.
    1906-AKMap2_Seattle-to-Alaska.jpg
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