Yarrow, British Columbia

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Yarrow is a village located 90 kilometres east of Vancouver and 18 km west of downtown Chilliwack, in British Columbia, Canada. Yarrow has a picturesque setting in the Fraser Valley with a panorama of mountain and valley views. The village was first settled by Mennonites in the late 1920s, following the draining of Sumas Lake.

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[edit] Geography

Yarrow is in the Fraser Valley, which traverses the Lower Mainland, of British Columbia. The Lower Mainland Ecoregion is part of the Pacific Maritime Ecozone. The village of Yarrow lies between Vedder Mountain to the south and the Vedder River to the north. The climate is temperate with most of the precipitation falling in the winter months as rain. The summer is warm and relatively dry. The fertile upper Fraser Valley supports the growth of many varieties of fruit, vegetables and herbs.

[edit] History

The property that was to later become the village of Yarrow was first owned by Volkert Vedder, who "alienated" it from Crown land in 1858. The townsite was built on land reclaimed, in part, from Sumas Lake. In the early 1920s, the provincial government built dykes to channel the Vedder River through the Vedder Canal to the Fraser River. This dyking project, which was completed in 1924, opened 12,000 acres of land for agriculture to the west of Yarrow. By 1928, a new Mennonite Colony of Dutch-Prussian-Russian-Mennonites, was established.

[edit] References

  • Klassen, Agatha. E. (1976). Yarrow: A Portrait in Mosaic. Clearbrook, B.C.: Klassen
  • Yarrow Research Committee (2002). Yarrow, British Columbia: Mennonite Promise
— Volume I, Before We Were the Land’s.
— Volume II, Village of Unsettled Yearnings.


[edit] External links