
We know
who was here first, but little evidence remains in Salmon Arm
bay or valley of the aboriginal peoples' semi-nomadic life. They
recorded events orally and only recently have we come to share
and value their side of the story. The head of the lake, with
its abundant wildlife, was a source of food, clothing and later
furs for trading, but it was probably too densely treed and
mosquito-ridden for permanent habitation. South-facing sites
such as Sunnybrae or the more arid and open region of the South
Thompson were preferred for winter quarters. On-going white
contact resulted from fur-gathering; the Hudson's Bay Company is
believed to have had a small post at Kault, while the late Max
Bedford made strong case for the presence of another, perhaps
earlier, trading post at Pierre's Point, run by a man named
Snass.
When the Europe concept of
individual land ownership was arbitrarily introduced in the 1880
s, the original inhabitants were relegated to a reserve
existence scattered sites west of town, offering little or no
fertile land.
The first geographical reference to this
area appeared on the Map of the
North-West Territory of the Province of Canada,
compiled in 1813-14 by explorer David Thompson but details are
vague and inconclusive.
As far as
a cultural settlement is concerned, Salmon Arm was one of the
cities in the southern interior to be "opened up." Spallumcheen,
Coldstream and Grande Prairie lay on or near the Bay's old
Brigade Trail and were sparsely settled by stockmen as early as
the 1860s. A wagon road followed, giving the Okanagan Valley a
reliable connection to Kamloops beyond.
During the short-lived
gold rush on the Columbia River in 1865, the main force of
miners and hangers-on- traveled to the trailhead at Seymour Arm
(Ogden City) via Thompson River and Shuswap Lake, but Salmon
Arm's lakefront lay virtually ignored. After the gold petered
out, years elapsed before water transport picked up again, when
farmers in the Spallumcheen sought an outlet for produce.
Vessels such as the
Lady Dufferin
plied the waterway between Fortune’s Landing (Enderby) and
Kamloops and even after the railway arrived, a succession of
steamboats served remote parts of Shuswap Lake right up to the
1930’s. However, until the mid-1800’s, there was still no reason
to call here. But by delivering CPR construction materials to “Schickmouse”
Narrows, the colourful marine fleet brought about its own demise
and indirectly aided the founding of Salmon Arm.
Accounts of exploration around Salmon Arm
in pre-railway days are rare. One is found in
Blazing the Trail through the Rockies
which contains a mention of Walter Moberly’s trip along the
south of Salmon Arm and across by raft to Tappen Bay. Rumors
that the CPR would bridge the lake from Engineer’s Point to
Sunnybrae influenced T.H. Hatherly and his son James to
homestead on the north side in 1885; thus they became the first
white settlers in this area.
Although
apparently nothing came of it here, one fleeting contact by
Overlander A.L. Fortune as he neared the end of an amazing
odyssey is worthy of mention. Fortune, the North Okanagan’s
first white settler (Fortune’s Landing, Enderby) participated in
the Caribou gold search and 1866 found him prospecting on the
Big Bend. He left the Columbia when spring high water flooded
the gravel bars.
Leonard Norris, writing in the
Sixth Report of the Okanagan Historical
Society, 1935 included parts
of the Fortune memoirs in an article on the pioneer’s four-year
journey from Quebec to Spallumcheen. This is what Fortune had to
say about his explorations around Shuswap Lake: “Our good friend
J.A. Mara kept store at Seymour City, with him we had entrusted
some provisions and a cane. Mr. Mara kindly delivered all to us.
Thus fitted we started exploring and prospecting, first Seymour
Arm and creeks, then about Cape Horn, after that mostly on
creeks and rocks on the west shore, going by Sicamous although
we did not see that point until later.”
“We found
our way by Arm to mouth of Salmon River, all the creeks we
ascended and washed in them pans of gravel, sunk a few holes,
none deep, found no gold, but in one place a few light colours.
Some Indians, on Techaskett, tried to explain where he saw shiny
sand and gravel on the shore of the lake a distance off,
southeast from Salmon Arm. Our curiosity led us to search for
the place. We followed the arm of the lake to Sicamous."
(Fortune wrote his story years after the fact, when modern place
names had been adopted).
Track
layers passed through Salmon Arm the first week of September
1885 and now the city was accessible to the world. Some pioneers
couldn't wait for the beginning of rail service. A. J. Palmer
was said to have beaten the train by making the journey from
Calgary on foot through the mountains on the CPR grade. With no
bridges, yet crossing gullies and streams, his progress was
dangerous and prolonged. Palmer established himself at Salmon
Arm West, as did most of the farming vanguard. Soon, names like
A. J. Hedgman -- first to claim residency west of the railway
station -- Carlin, Settle, Dalton, McGuire, Fraser, Shaw and
Lund turned up in local affairs.
Old CPR station (on north side of tracks) pre - 1917
Salmon Arm officially began in 1890, when
residents successfully petitioned the federal government for a
post office. William's
Directory for 1890 lists
Salmon Arm as being "a station on the main line of the CPR, 319
miles east of Vancouver and 33 miles east of Shuswap. Mails
daily "Bradstreet's Report of
the Dominion of Canada, 1893”,
pegged the local population at 28.
The early settlers
preferred the rich valley bottom land to the higher benches,
which they deemed worthless without irrigation. When fruit
growing started to attract widespread interest in the BC
interior, most of the initial planting was done in the valley.
However, the trees weren't happy there and as fruit production
assumed larger importance, the well-drained benches came into
their own. Berries and vegetables were also tried in the valley,
but dairying and mixed farming gradually became dominant.
Until outstanding timber
claims, Native land allotments and other matters were dealt
with, the first farmers only had squatters' rights to the land
they selected. After Indian reserves were laid out in 1884-85,
followed by initials township surveys at West Salmon Arm 1887,
the hunt for homesteads started in earnest. The one factor which
characterized land activities here was a relatively small land
base, as compared to the large, easily cleared tracts so loved
by the early development companies and readily obtainable in the
Okanagan Valley.
In 1890
the province sent a man to oversee construction of a road from
the Valley to the CPR station and a bridge of the Salmon River,
with authority to spend up to $500. The funds ran out before the
project was completed, but volunteers closed the gap with a
corduroy section just west of the village. Next came a southern
branch, starting from Hedgemans Corner (30th Street SW or
Harbell Road), followed by the Gleneden road in 1896. An 1898
geological survey map traces the Gleneden route and also shows
Foothill Road already in use. The Old Enderby Road was
voluntarily built from Larch Hill corner to Gardner’s Lake in
1986, mainly to ease the procurement of flour and feed. Getting
to Kamloops entailed a precipitous climb over Kault Hill and
time-consuming trip over the old Skimiken trail, along Chase
Creek and down to Shuswap. The other choice was to take the
train, or make the roundabout trek to Silver Creek, where the
trail led to the Vernon-Grande Prairie-Kamloops wagon trail.
Signs of
an emerging permanent community began with a school at Hedgman’s
Corner (August 1890) and the following year Thomas Shaw opened a
general store to compete with the McGuires. Estimated
population: 200. First Hotel, Cameron House, afterwards called
Coronation was erected by J.D. Cameron in 1895.
The year 1894 is
remembered for flood and fire. During the spring runoff Shuswap
Lake inundated at least half the valley, covered the railway
east and west of town and created a miniature lake between
Alexander Avenue and Ross Street. Then in July a fire broke away
from a smouldering slash pile at the base of Mount Ida and swept
through the valley, destroying livestock, crops and buildings.
Salmon Arm attracted serious attention as a fruit-growing city
as early as 1904, when the farmers’ institute sponsored well
received exhibits at both Kamloops and New Westminster. Hudson’s
Bay Company capped the effort by displaying the entire local
display in the windows of its Vancouver store. Producer
interests had been partially served since 1896 by a farmers’
association, and by a local fruit growers’ organization formed
in 1897, with 32 members. Thanks to A.J. Palmer, who was
credited with the originating the practice of displaying produce
and stock, the first horticultural exhibition held in Salmon
Arm. 1897 was a smashing success. A proposal was made to form a
processing and marketing facility in 1904, but it took another
three years before Salmon Arm Farmers’ Exchange was ready for
business. The men largely responsible for getting it off the
ground were L.B. Pangman, F.B. Howarth and J.W. McCallum
First
commercial orchard planting (1891). Taken 1903 in original
McGuire orchard.
Through good times and bad the Exchange
held sway as "the greatest farmers' commercial organization in
this city," Ernest Doe wrote in his
History of Salmon Arm.
Efforts to establish a
local creamery failed to generate much enthusiasm when the idea
was first proposed in 1907, not surprising considering the
volume of fluid milk shipped from Salmon Arm at the time. The
large shippers had developed a ready market for raw milk and
were not easily persuaded that better returns could be had from
local butter manufacturing.
By 1915 enough small
dairymen had settled in the Valley to tip the scales in favours
of forming Salmon Arm Co-operative Creamery Association, which
lost no time building a processing plant. Output in the first
year was 28,000 pounds of butter, rising to 480,000 pounds in
1944.
Formal
local government came May 15,1905 with the proclamation of
Salmon Arm Municipality, after a majority of residents signed a
petition advocating incorporation. All members of the first
council, including Reeve J.H. Harbell, were elected by
acclamation. Better and more roads topped the wish list of
persons who favoured incorporation, not to mention a policy for
controlling noxious weeds. W.J. Kew had charge of all roads west
of Sam McGuire's store and W.W. Currie was responsible for roads
east of that point. The following year Mrs. Agnes McGuire
created the first town site subdivision on 12 acres.
At the end of year one
ward system was adopted by council and in so doing it created a
climate of factional rivalry, mostly over allocation of tax
revenues. Breakaway movements hindered councils for years to
come and ultimately charges the town site was continually
receiving more than its share of public works money led to
formation of the City of Salmon 1912.
City incorporation was
also hastened by agitation for electricity and a water system,
while ratepayers outside the town continued to complain about
bad roads, some even considering a return to provincial status.
The dispute reached boiling point when it was proposed to borrow
$75,000 for road improvement and $25,000 for town water system.
Wrangling over expenditures ward-by-ward and further calls for
secession convinced city proponents their time had come. The
committee struck to investigate pros and cons of urban status
gave thumbs up to the movement and after a petition with the
required number of signatures had been gathered, provincial
approval was granted March 12, 1912. R. K. Scales won election
as the first mayor--unopposed.
Was it all worth it?
Ernest Doe concluded it was the only way: "An alternative
scheme, the local improvement city, was suggested, but even if a
law to borrow sufficient money received the consent of
taxpayers, much disagreement as to distribution of funds would
have ensued........The rosy picture painted by the fervent
supporters of incorporation was not realized, partly owing to
conditions beyond their control and the estimated cost of
running the city was set too low. Still (setting up
independently) gave them the utilities it desired."
After the major growth
spurt of 1905-12, Salmon Arm's economic health suffered a
setback with the general downturn of 1913 and subsequent start
of WW1. Bereft of incoming capital and settlers, the community
marked time until just after the second half of the century.
In retrospect it has been
argued the early promise of carefree fruit ranching contained
hopes which could never be fulfilled. "Non Irrigated" didn't
always mean sufficient moisture and the advertised loamy soil
often turned out to be sand, too rocky or unrelenting clay with
a thin band of fertile soil on top. Quarter-section homesteads
were subdivided and re-subdivided, as promoters predicted a
comfortable living could be had from as few as five acres "of
the right sort." In reality, it usually turned out to be nothing
more than subsistence agriculture.
Whereas the Valley
generally attracted practical, experienced farming types not
afraid to roll up their sleeves, the notion of fruit ranching
often took hold in the imaginary mind of Englishmen serving the
Empire in such faraway outposts as Manchuria and India. Some
sons daughters of the moneyed class thought life in the
Canadians West struck just the right balance between work and
play. Perhaps it was so for a few, but most were ruled by hail,
heat, insects, plant diseases, unscrupulous middlemen, the CPR
and the dispassionate market. Then, just when rising economic
hopes seemed justified, the Great Depression spread over the
land. No matter what their bank account said, the English
expatriates stuck together trying to approximate life in the Old
Country as closely as possible. Many homed in on South Canoe it
was soon dubbed Little England by “the other half."
The electric age dawned here in l913 with the start-up of a
city-owned plant utilizing a diesel motor considered a lower
cost option to a coal-fired systems. A unique feature of the
service was free use of one veranda light for the next eight
years. Salmon Arm became art of the West Canadian Hydro Electric
Company grid in the fall of 1928. On January 13, 1914, Mayor
Scales presided at a valve-turning ceremony for a new city water
system. A few months later a rare show of city-city co-operation
resulted in service being made available to 20 homes on the
Limit (Broadview). A comprehensive joint system would not be
realized for another 33 years.
Coupled to hopes for a
city-wide water systems were various schemes to provide
irrigation for agriculture. Despite boasting Salmon Arm’s
non-irrigated apples had superior taste, local growers cast
envious eyes at Okanagan production records utilizing impounded
water. In some cases the yield was double that of trees here.
Beginning in 1920s, city council and growers often times at
odds, looked at several irrigation proposals, such as a scheme
to tap Hunters Range, and another to construct a canal system
from Mara Meadows, via (Gardom) Lake to the east Canoe Creek
valley, possibly using the golf club flats for storage. West
Canadian Electric was also said to have quoted a favourable rate
for pumping from Shuswap River to Loon Lake (considered
insurance for times of peak demand). The best chance for success
came near the end of WWII, when provincial and federal
governments were asked to include an irrigation project in
postwar rehabilitation plans.
In the summer of 1945 the
province conducted a survey, which resulted in a suggestion
local domestic and irrigation interests merge. It also proposed
water pumped from Shuswap Lake combined with gravity supplies to
fill both irrigation ditches and household pipes. Elated fruit
growers immediately formed a water city and the sitting joint
water committee stood down in favour of the new body. While
consideration was being given to the Hunters Range scheme, a
well as to a proposal to seek funds under the provisions of the
Prairie Farm Rehabilitation Act, interests favouring only a
domestic system succeeded in strangling the more ambitious
undertaking. Within three years every resident in the city was
able to enjoy a reliable source of water. Only the orchards went
thirsty.
As it happened, nothing
could save the apple industry. In 1946 the pack topped 400,000
boxes and remained fairly steady until the winter of 1949-50
when unprecedented freezing temperatures delivered a knockout
blow to fruit operations throughout the city. Production
plummeted next season by 75 per cent. It was the final act for
most growers, although the Exchange managed to keep one packing
house operating until 1958. Today only Hanna, Peterson and Ruth
brothers run orchards of any consequence.
The 1950 saw lumber and plywood manufacturing take up some
slack in the local economy, as former fruit-lands yielded to
small holdings and residential subdivisions. Tourism was
starting to take off and Salmon Arm was becoming known as a
desirable retirement centre. The school distract also emerged as
a major employer.
Local politics faced two
more upheavals. In 1958 the city reverted to a village for more
favourable treatment under the Municipal Act, while in 1970,
village and city voted to unite as a city municipality. The
merger had simmered for 15 years, after Reeve E.T. Turner jolted
a 1955 council meeting by calling for joint talks on the subject
with the city administration. Mayor W.K. Smith, he said, had
already agreed to consider the proposal.
Combined Salmon Arm
population 40 years ago was 3700.
It has always been hard to
put a finger on Salmon Arm's economic mainstays, in light of
there being few major employers over the last 100 years. Mayor
Harold Scales probably put it best when he told interviewer in
1945, "Oh, we all take in each other's laundry."
Used with permission from the Book:
Salmon Arm's Historic Routes and the
people behind the names
Credits: Okanagan
Historical Society,
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