Revelstoke, British Columbia

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Revelstoke was also the name of a well-known Canadian chain of hardware and home improvement stores, now known as Rona.

Revelstoke

Downtown Revelstoke

Location of Revelstoke within the Columbia-Shuswap District in British Columbia, Canada
City of Revelstoke
Location of Revelstoke within the Columbia-Shuswap District in British Columbia, Canada
Area 30.72 km²
Population 7,827 (2001)
Pop'n density 254.8 /km²
Location 51°0′36″N, 118°12′51″W
Altitude 450 metres
Incorporation 1880 (founded)
1899 (incorporated)
Province British Columbia
Regional District Columbia-Shuswap
MP Jim Abbott (Cons-Kootenay/Columbia)
MLA Norm Macdonald (NDP-Columbia/Revelstoke)
Mayor mark mckee
Governing Body Revelstoke City Council
Time zone PST (UTC-8)
Postal code V0E
Area Code +1-250
City of Revelstoke.com


Revelstoke (population 7,500 municipal est. 2005) is a city in southeastern British Columbia, Canada. It is located 641 kilometers (398 miles) east of Vancouver, and 415 kilometers (258 miles) west of Calgary, Alberta.

Revelstoke was founded in the 1880s when the Canadian Pacific Railway(CPR) was built through the area; mining was an important early industry. The construction of the Trans-Canada Highway in 1962 further eased access to the region, and since then tourism has been an important feature of the local economy, with skiing having emerged as the most prominent attraction. Mount Revelstoke National Park is just north of the town.

The city is situated on the banks of the Columbia River just south of the Revelstoke Dam and near its confluence with the Illecillewaet River. East of Revelstoke are the Selkirk Mountains and Glacier National Park, penetrated by Rogers Pass used by the Trans-Canada Highway and the Canadian Pacific Railway. South of the community down the Columbia River are the Arrow Lakes and the road to the Kootenays. West of the city is Eagle Pass through the Gold Range of the Monashee Mountains and the route to Shuswap Lake and points west.

The city was named by the Canadian Pacific Railway in appreciate to Lord Revelstoke, the head of Baring & Glyn, a UK banking firm that saved the Canadian Pacific Railway from bankruptcy in the summer of 1885 by buying the company's bonds just as the railway was nearing completion. The city was known before that as Farwell, after a local land owner and surveyor. In yet earlier days, the spot was called the Second Crossing, to differentiate it from the first crossing of the Columbia River by the Canadian Pacific Railway near Golden.

Revelstoke, which is the site of a railway museum well known throughout Canada, is situated at 51 ° 0' North latitude and 118 ° 12' West longitude.

It is also the site and namesake of the 1965 impact of a meteorite [1], which, though resulting in only a few small pieces that could be found, made a splendorous fireball track across the sky. This meteorite was a carbonaceous chondrite, an especially primitive and friable type. That fact, plus the rather flat trajectory (allowing a long air path) accounts for the paucity of surviving fragments - most or the meteorite evaporated, burnt up, or broke into dust.

Contents

[edit] Economy

Revelstoke's economy has traditionally been tied to the Canadian Pacific Railway (CPR) and it still maintains a strong connection to that industry. However, mining, forestry and, most importantly, tourism played an increasingly important role in Revelstoke's success as the prominence of the CPR declined over the last century.

Revelstoke is also the location of the Revelstoke Dam which was contructed on the Columbia River, and completed in 1984.

In 1986, to offset the economic affects of the completed hydroelectric project and the temporary closure of the local sawmill, the City of Revelstoke undertook a downtown revitalization program and it was completed with marked success.

[edit] Climate

Wintertime
Enlarge
Wintertime

Revelstoke has a temperate climate and nearby mountain ranges are of an alpine climate.

Annual snowfall averages roughly 320 centimeters, although this can range widely from year to year.

[edit] Sports Trivia

Revelstoke has produced some talented atheletes in winter sports, notably ice hockey.

Revelstoke is the home town of former Vancouver Canuck Bruce Holloway.

The former local BCJHL team, the Revelstoke Bruins, had a number of future NHLers on its roster in the 1970's and 80's, including Bruce Holloway, Ron E. Flockhart, Rudy Poeschek, Rob Flockhart, Daryl Stanley and goaltender Mark Fitzpatrick. The current Revelstoke KIJHL team is the Revelstoke Grizzlies.

The Revelstoke Ski Club, founded in British Columbia in 1891, appears to have been the first formal ski organization in Canada, according to the Canadian Olympic Committee (COC).

It was not far from Revelstoke, on January 20, 2003 that Craig Kelly (snowboarder), the renowned snowboarding champion, died in an avalanche while assisting a group of skiers and snowboarders through some rough terrain.

[edit] Brushes with Hollywood

Some scenes in the 1999 thriller Double Jeopardy starring Ashley Judd and Tommy Lee Jones were filmed in Revelstoke, notably the historic courthouse.

The 1937 British movie The Great Barrier starring Lilli Palmer depicted the building of the Canadian Pacific Railway and featured location shooting from Revelstoke.

The Barber (2001) starring Malcolm McDowell was almost entirely filmed in Revelstoke, BC, and featured the town name displaced as Revelstoke, Alaska.

[edit] References

[edit] External links

Coordinates: 51°0′36″N, 118°12′51″W

In other languages