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Campbell River (Semiahmoo Bay)

Coordinates: 49°0′45″N 122°46′41″W / 49.01250°N 122.77806°W / 49.01250; -122.77806
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Campbell River
Footbridge over the river, at Little Campbell River Park
Campbell River (Semiahmoo Bay) is located in British Columbia
Campbell River (Semiahmoo Bay)
Mouth of Campbell River
Location
CountryCanada
ProvinceBritish Columbia
DistrictNew Westminster Land District
Physical characteristics
Source 
 • locationLower Mainland
MouthSemiahmoo Bay
 • location
Boundary Bay
 • coordinates
49°0′45″N 122°46′41″W / 49.01250°N 122.77806°W / 49.01250; -122.77806[1]
 • elevation
5 m (16 ft)[2]

The Campbell River passes through Surrey and Langley, British Columbia, Canada, entering Semiahmoo Bay at the Semiahmoo Indian Reserve, which lies between the City of White Rock and Peace Arch Park on the international boundary.

Originally labelled Campbell Creek in 1917 by the Geographic Board of Canada,[3] it was labelled Tahtaloo on International Boundary Survey sheet 2 (date not cited) (a toponym derived from Tah-tu-lo, the Semiahmoo endonym for their dialect of Straits Salish); variant spellings include Tahla too, Tah-la-loo, and Tah tu lo.[4] It was probably named after Archibald Campbell, US commissioner in the joint negotiations to locate the international boundary 1857–1862, who had his camp at the mouth of the creek.[5][6] It was identified in the field notes of Joseph Trutch's survey as Semiahmoo Creek in 1859.[7] "Ta’talu" is the name used nowadays by the Semiahmoo First Nation residing in its vicinity.[8]

Tributaries (listed from the mouth up)

[edit]
  • Fergus Creek
  • Sand Hill Creek

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Campbell River". BC Geographical Names.
  2. ^ Elevation derived from ASTER Global Digital Elevation Model, using GeoLocator, BCGNIS coordinates, and topographic maps.
  3. ^ BC place name cards, or correspondence to/from BC's Chief Geographer or BC Geographical Names Office
  4. ^ BC place name cards, or correspondence to/from BC's Chief Geographer or BC Geographical Names Office
  5. ^ BC place name cards, or correspondence to/from BC's Chief Geographer or BC Geographical Names Office
  6. ^ BC Historical Quarterly V 219, and also Canadian Geographic Journal XXXI 120
  7. ^ Provincial Archives of BC "Place Names File" compiled 1945-1950 by A.G. Harvey from various sources, with subsequent additions
  8. ^ https://www.peacearchnews.com/news/naming-schools-after-settler-historical-figure-can-be-quite-problematic-surrey-school-district/