Laurier-Cascade Border Crossing
Laurier-Cascade Border Crossing | |
---|---|
US Border Inspection Station at Laurier, Washington | |
Location | |
Country | United States; Canada |
Location |
US Port: U.S. Route 395, Laurier, WA 99146 Canadian Port: 102 Highway 395, South Christina Lake BC V0H 1E0 |
Coordinates | 49°00′00″N 118°13′26″W / 49.000081°N 118.223947°W |
Details | |
Opened | 1897 |
US Phone | (509) 684-2100 |
Canadian Phone | (250) 447-9244 |
Hours | Open 8:00AM - Midnight |
Website http://www.cbp.gov/contact/ports/oroville-wa |
The Laurier-Cascade Border Crossing connects the town of Kettle Falls, Washington with Christina Lake, British Columbia. This crossing is the point at which US Route 395, the Kettle River, the Canadian Pacific Railway and the runway of the Avey Field State Airport all traverse the US-Canada border.
History
Canada has operated a border station at this crossing since 1897, when the prospecting boom was at its peak. In 1899, the Columbia and Western Railway laid tracks across the border. The mining boom ended soon after, and a series of fires (one of which destroyed 6 hotels in 1899 in the boomtown of Cascade City) hastened the departure of many. A large sawmill operated in Cascade just north of the border until the 1930s. Although the Laurier post office remains in operation, the town is gone. The Cascade post office closed in 1973, and the location where the center of town once stood is now a golf course.[1]
The US built a border inspection station at Laurier in 1933, which remains in use today. Canada replaced its 1950-era border station in 2007.
See also
References
- ↑ Greg Nesteroff (September 2, 2013). "Carson and Cascade more than just border crossings". Nelson Star. Retrieved 2015-01-04.