Author Archives: Swany

Stoney River

Alberta. Former unofficial name: Athabasca River drainage
Former name for Snake Indian River
53.1894 N 117.9839 W GoogleGeoHack
Not currently an official name.

Also called “Stony River.”

Hanington Creek

British Columbia. Creek: Smoky River drainage
Flows NW into Narraway River at N end of Kakwa Provincial Park
54.2706 N 120.2475 W — Map 093I08 — GoogleGeoHack
Name officially adopted in 1925
Official in BCCanada

Hanington Creek adopted in 1925, as labelled on BC-Alberta boundary sheet 39, 1924 (not Hannington Creek as mis-spelled on earlier correspondence, nor Wolf Creek as labelled on earlier maps). See Mount Hanington.

References:

Also see:

Hanington Pass

British Columbia. Pass: Smoky River drainage
NE of Jarvis Lakes and Kakwa Lake
54.1333 N 120.1 W — Map 093I01 — GoogleGeoHack
Name officially adopted in 1925
Official in BCCanada

“Hanington Pass” adopted in 1925, as labelled on BC-Alberta boundary sheet 39, 1924, not “Hannington Pass” as mis-spelled on earlier correspondence, nor Wolf Pass as labelled on earlier maps. See Mount Hanington.

References:

Hanington, Mount

British Columbia. Mount
N ofJarvis Lakes in Kakwa Provincial Park
54.1233 N 120.1672 W — Map 093I01 — GoogleGeoHack
Name officially adopted in 1925
Official in BCCanada

Edward Worrell Jarvis [1846–1894] and Charles Francis Hanington [1848–1930] made an adventurous winter journey across the Rockies in 1875. The pass through which they crossed the mountains was named Jarvis Pass by the Geographic Board of Canada in 1917; the name Jarvis is also borne by a mountain on the south side of the pass opposite Mount Hanington.

The exploration was undertaken to see if this route across the mountains would be a practicable one for the Canadian Pacific Railway. The elevation of the pass, about 1500 m, proved too high. The starting point of the journey was Quesnel, which was left on December 9, 1874, and a 1,000-mile journey, mostly on foot, occupying five and a half months was concluded at Winnipeg on May 21, 1875.

(extract from Natural Resources Canada, Ottawa, June 1927).

References:

Finlay River

British Columbia. River: Peace River drainage
Flows S into Finlay Reach, Williston Lake
56.9036 N 124.9506 W — Map 094C15 — GoogleGeoHack
Name officially adopted in 1974
Official in BCCanada

John Finlay [1774–1833] was a fur trader and explorer with the North West Company [1779–]. He is best remembered for establishing the first fur trading post in what is now British Columbia and for his exploration of the Finlay River, one of the two major rivers forming the Peace River, the other being the Parsnip River.

Finlay was born in Montreal, the son of James Finlay, who himself was a significant player in the western Canadian fur trade. Finlay was apprenticed as a clerk in the North West Company in 1789 at the age of 15. He accompanied Alexander Mackenzie [1764–1820] on his historic trip across the Rocky Mountains to the Pacific Ocean in 1792-93 becoming, with him, the first European to traverse North America. He was placed in charge of the North West Company’s Athabasca Department in 1794, and the same year established a trading post at present-day Fort St. John, called Rocky Mountain Fort. This was the first European community established in present-day British Columbia and is the province’s oldest continuously inhabited European-founded settlement.

References:

Grand Trunk Pacific Railway stations