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Encyclopedia > British Columbia, Canada


British Columbia
Coat of arms of British Columbia
(Flag of British Columbia) (Coat of Arms of British Columbia)
Motto: Splendor Sine Occasu (Splendour without diminishment)
Other Canadian provinces and territories
Capital Victoria
Largest city Vancouver
Premier Gordon Campbell (BC Liberal)
Lieutenant Governor Iona Campagnolo
Area 944,735 kmē (5th)
 - Land 925,186 kmē
 - Water 19,549 kmē (2.1%)
Population (2004)
 - Population 4,168,123 (3rd)
 _ Density 4.34 /kmē (7th)
Admittance into Confederation
 _ Date July 20, 1871
 - Order 7th
Time zone UTC-8 & -7
Parliamentary representation
 - House seats 34
 - Senate seats 6
Abbreviations
 - Postal BC
 - ISO 3166-2 CA-BC
Postal Code Prefix V
Web site www.gov.bc.ca


British Columbia, or simply B.C. (French: la Colombie-Britannique) is the westernmost of Canada's provinces. It was the sixth province to join the confederation of Canada (in 1871). As of 2004, the population was 4,168,123 (British Columbians).

Contents

Geography

Its capital is Victoria, at the southeast of Vancouver Island. Its most populous city is Vancouver, which is in the southwest corner of the mainland of Canada (the city is not on Vancouver Island). Other major cities include Surrey, Burnaby, Richmond, and New Westminster in the Greater Vancouver Regional District (GVRD), Nanaimo on Vancouver Island, and Canada, on the Pacific coast. It is bound on the northwest by the U.S. state of Alaska, directly north by Yukon and the Northwest Territories, on the east by Alberta, and on the south by the states of Washington, Idaho, and Montana. The southern border of British Columbia was established by the 1846 Oregon Treaty.


The Canadian Rockies and the Inside Passage's fjords provide some of British Columbia's renowned and spectacular scenery, which forms the backdrop and context for a growing outdoor adventure and ecotourism industry. The Okanagan region is one of the premier wine-growing regions in the world. The small rural towns of Penticton, Oliver, and Osoyoos have some of the warmest summer climates in Canada and provide hospitality to visitors from around the world.


Much of Vancouver Island is covered by a temperate rain forest, one of a mere handful of such ecosystems in the world (notable others being on the Olympic Peninsula of Washington and in Chile.


Parks

British Columbia contains seven of Canada's national parks:

BC also contains a large network of provincial parks, run by BC Parks (http://wlapwww.gov.bc.ca/bcparks/) of the Ministry of Water, Land and Air Protection.


Politics

BC has a 79-member elected Legislative Assembly. The members are currently elected by the First Past the Post system, but a Citizens' Assembly has recommended replacing this with a Single Transferable Vote system in 2009.


Politically, British Columbia has tended to swing between right and left, with little middle ground. Within Canada, BC is viewed much as California is in the United States, prone to unusual politics and scandals. Currently it is governed by the more conservative British Columbia Liberal Party under Gordon Campbell. However, for a decade before, it was led by the left-wing NDP. Before that, the government was led by the right-wing Social Credit Party for many years, but in the early 1990s the party collapsed due to scandal.


See also: List of British Columbia general elections


History

Main article: History of British Columbia


From 1818 to 1846, British Columbia south of 54°40′ and west of the Rocky Mountains was part of the Oregon Country. The land was under the control of the Hudson's Bay Company, and was divided into the departments of Columbia (south of the Columbia River) and New Caledonia (north of the river).


In 1846, the Oregon Treaty divided the territory along the 49th parallel to British territory. Vancouver Island became a Crown colony in 1849.


In 1858, in response to the Fraser Canyon gold rush, the mainland portion of the former Oregon Country was organized into the colony of British Columbia. The Cariboo region ("Central Interior") of British Columbia experienced a gold rush in the years 1862 to 1865. This created a rapid influx of miners and settlers, about 30,000 in all. The colonial authorities feared the gold rush might spread beyond B.C.'s northern border (54°40′ north), so the Stikine Territory was created in 1862. However, the following year this new territory was disestablished, most of its area going to B.C., whose northern limit was increased to its current location, 60° north.


This period in the province's history is acknowledged today in the Gold Rush Trail: historic and other sites along the route from Lillooet to Barkerville and beyond. Some of the towns along this route are numbered according to their distance from the end of the navigable part of the Fraser River at Lillooet. Best known of these is the town of 100 Mile House which, along with the residential hub of 108 Mile Ranch, forms a substantial trading, tourism, and population centre for this region.


After the mainland's gold rushes collapsed and the colony almost went bankrupt from building roads in its interior, the two colonies of Vancouver Island and British Columbia agreed to merge and share the debt. The merger was effected in 1866, with the name British Columbia being applied to the newly united colony.

Enlarge
Legislature Building in Victoria, BC

Several factors played in the decision of British Columbia to join the Dominion of Canada in 1871. These included fear of annexation to the United States, the overwhelming debt created by rapid population growth, the need for government-funded services to support this population, and the economic depression caused by the end of the gold rush.


The decision to join Canada was made largely because the Canadian government offered to link British Columbia to the more settled parts of Canada via the Canadian Pacific Railway and offered to pay off the $1,000,000 British Columbian debt. On July 20, 1871, British Columbia became a member of the Dominion of Canada.


The completion of the CPR was a huge boost to Vancouver, the line's terminus, and it rapidly grew to become one of Canada's largest cities. The province became a centre of fishing, mining, and especially of logging throughout the twentieth century.


In 1907, British Columbia's territory shrank somewhat after the Alaska Boundary Dispute awarded part of northwestern B.C. to the Americans.


B.C. has long taken advantage of its Pacific coast to have close relations with East Asia. This has also caused friction however with frequent feelings of animosity towards Asian immigrants. This was most manifest during the Second World War when many people of Japanese descent were interned in the interior of the province.


The post-World War II years saw Vancouver and Victoria also become cultural centres as poets and artists flocked to the beautiful scenery and warmer temperatures. Tourism also began to play an important role in the economy. The rise of Japan and other Pacific economies was a great boost to the B.C. economy.


Maps

Enlarge
British Columbia map from the Atlas of Canada

Image:Bcmap.PNG


Cities

One half of all British Columbians live in the Greater Vancouver Regional District, notably containing Vancouver, Surrey, Burnaby, Coquitlam, and Richmond.


Other cities:

See also: List of communities in British Columbia


See also









  Results from FactBites:
 
British Columbia, Canada (1866 words)
In the interior of British Columbia, shielded by the mountains, the climate is quite continental, with short, very hot summers and long, extremely cold winters; Kamloops, for example, has an average January minimum of -10°C (14°F), and an average maximum in July of 29°C (83°F).
In British Columbia too the "49th parallel" was made the border between Canada and the United States, in accordance with the terms of the Oregon Treaty.
British Columbia is one of Canada's richest provinces.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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