Super Camping British Columbia
Super Camping British Columbia

Super Camping
British Columbia
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Looking for spring RVing?   Know Before You Travel in British Columbia. 

Fort St James National Historic Site Photo Kim Walker

Fort St. James

Fort St. James is a small community in Northern British Columbia built around the National Historic Site of the Hudson’s Bay Company post. This site was one of the largest group of original wooden buildings representing the fur trade with the First Nations in Canada. The site has since been fully restored to commemorate that partnership. There are numerous historic structures to be explored, as well as exhibits depicting the trade that took place there.

The region is also home to a stunning natural landscape with many hiking trails where you can see some of the rich wildlife that calls Northern British Columbia home.

Location

Located on Stuart Lake, Fort St. James is 62 km (37 mi) north of Vanderhoof along Highway 27. South and west, 84 km (52 mi) is the small community of Fort FraserPrince George is 160  km (100 mi) south and east on Highways 27 and the Yellowhead Highway 16.

A Step Back in Time

Fort St James was originally founded in 1806 as a Northwest Trading Company post by the Explorer Simon Fraser. It was only when the Northwest Trading Company merged with the Hudson’s Bay Company in 1821, that the site became a Hudson’s Bay Trading post. It had previously been known as the Stuarts Lake post, due to its close proximity to Stuarts Lake. The site continued to operate as a trading post up until its closure in 1952.

The site was later determined to be a National Historic Site of Canada, was rebuilt, and is maintained to this day. Many of the buildings there are from structures from the 1880s.

Stuarts Lake and the Stuart river are named after Simon Fraser’s assistant John Stuart.

Camping Lodging

The Super Camping / Select Lodging Guide

First Published in 1989

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