McBride, British Columbia
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Situated on the Yellowhead Highway (Highway 16), McBride is a small community in British Columbia located 131 miles (210 km) southeast of Prince George, 75 miles (120 km) west of the Alberta border, and 104 miles (166 km) west of Jasper, Alberta.
Located between the Canadian Rockies and the Cariboo Mountains, McBride lies in the Mount Robson Valley, through which the Fraser River flows.
The town got its start during the construction of the Grand Trunk Pacific Railway when settlers came into the area. Formerly known as Railway Siding 39, McBride was established in 1913, and was named in honour of the then serving premier, Richard McBride (1903-1915).
After the Second World War, the developing timber and agriculture industries attracted more people to the Robson Valley.
The current population is 741, according to municipal records. While timber and primary sawmillng industries continue to support the town, tourism is a growing source of employment for the valley. One of the primary tourist attractions is the world famous snowmobiling, Albertans taking the majority of spots on the mountain trails that ring the town. Other attractions include hunting and whitewater rafting. McBride also produces some of the worldest finest tonewoods, wood used in the production of musical instruments, and is home to several luthiers. Mcbride is located on the edge of the interior cedar hemlock rainforest, the worlds only inland temperate rainforest, created by moisture laden winds dumping rain and snow from the cariboo-chilcotin plateau against the cariboo mountains. The forests around McBride contain trees that are in excess of 1000 years old, with no evidence of disturbance. This moisture rich ecosystem supports many species of lichen which in turn support the red listed species of Caribou indigenous to the inland temperate rainforest if British Columbia.
McBride has a large percentage of Mennonites, who are attracted by inexpensive land and relative isolation to ensure there agrarian culture continues to survive. For similar reasons McBride also has a healthy population of draft dodgers from the US who settled in the late 60's and early 70's. Seventh Day Adventists also make up a large percentage of McBride.
In December of 2006 the Towns major employer McBride Forest Industries closed it's doors following the historical precedence of forest industry consolidation. It remains to be seen how the McBride economy will deal with such a blow.