Anyox

Anyox, British Columbia, 1911

Anyox was a small company-owned mining town in British Columbia, Canada.[1] Today it is a ghost town, abandoned and largely destroyed. It is located on the shores of Granby Bay in coastal Observatory Inlet, about 60 kilometres (37 miles) southwest of (but no land link to) Stewart, British Columbia, and about 20 kilometres (12 miles), across wilderness, east of the tip of the Alaska Panhandle.

Early history

The remote valley was long a hunting and trapping area for the Nisga'a, and the name Anyox means “hidden waters” in the Nisga'a language.[2] The first Europeans in the area were the members of the Vancouver Expedition, who surveyed the inlet in 1793.

Nisga'a legends told of a mountain of gold, attracting speculators for years. In 1910, the Granby Consolidated Mining, Smelting and Power Company (Granby Consolidated) started buying land in the area. They soon found gold.[2]

Town and mines

Granby Consolidated started construction of the town in 1912. By 1914, Anyox had grown to a population of almost 3,000 residents, as the mine and smelter were put into full operation; rich lodes of copper and other precious metals were mined from the nearby mountains. Granby Consolidated moved its copper mining interests here from Greenwood, British Columbia. Copper was mined from the Hidden Creek and Bonanza deposits and smelted on site. Coal to fuel the smelter was shipped from Union Bay on Vancouver Island and Fernie in southeastern British Columbia.

Anyox had no rail nor road links to the rest of British Columbia, with all connection served by ocean steamers that traveled to Prince Rupert (145 km (90 mi) southwest)[3] and Vancouver.

The company town was a very large operation with onsite railways, machine shops, curling rink, golf course and a hospital. In the spring of 1918, Granby Consolidated built the first wooden tennis court in Canada, for additional recreation. That same year, incoming ships brought the Spanish flu epidemic to Anyox. Charles Clarkson Rhodes, the Chief Accountant for the Granby Consolidated operations in Anyox, died on October 29, 1918, while helping to treat patients in the Anyox Hospital. Dozens of workers and residents of Anyox died from that flu epidemic.

In the early 1920s, concrete pioneer and dam engineer John S. Eastwood designed a hydroelectric dam which, standing 156 feet (48 m) high, was the tallest dam in Canada for many years.[4] Anyox was almost wiped out by forest fires in 1923, but the townsite was rebuilt and mining operations continued. Acid rain from the smelter denuded the trees from the hillsides which soon became bare.

The Great Depression drove down the demand for copper, effectively the beginning of the end for Anyox. Operations continued, but were steadily scaled down while the company stockpiled 100,000,000 pounds (45,000 tonnes) of copper, three years of production, that it was unable to sell.[2] The mine shut down in 1935, and the town was abandoned. Salvage operations in the 1940s removed most machinery and steel from the town, and two forest fires, in 1942 and 1943, burned all remaining wood structures.[2][5]

During its 25 year existence, Anyox’ mines and smelters produced 140,000 ounces (4 tonnes) of gold, 8,000,000 ounces (230 tonnes) of silver and 760,000,000 pounds (340,000 tonnes) of copper.[2]

Ongoing developments

Active mineral exploration continues in the area. In the 1980s, local entrepreneurs teamed with Vancouver investors to purchase the long dormant operations from the owner of record.[5] Whenever there is a rise in the price of copper, there is speculation about the possibility of re-development though none has ever occurred.

Since 2000, the current owners have been trying to attract interest in rehabilitating the hydroelectric dam, to either supply the British Columbia grid or to attract and serve an on-site natural gas liquefaction facility.[5]

Notable residents

Former Vancouver B.C. mayor Jack Volrich was one of the 351 people born in Anyox.

Celebrated and much revered newspaper columnist Denny Boyd was born in Anyox.

Ned Rhodes, named Mr. Tennis British Columbia in 1977, was a child when his father, chief company accountant Charles Clarkson Rhodes, moved his family to Anyox. Ned started playing tennis at age 8, when the wooden tennis court was built in 1918 (see above).

References

  1. "Anyox". BC Geographical Names.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 Muir, Andrew (Writer, Director) (2018). Relics (Documentary). Canada: Straycat Media.
  3. Brycer (2018-02-28). "The Mystery of the "STOLEN" Anyox Light Bulbs!". University of Northern British Columbia. Retrieved 2018-09-14.
  4. "John Samuel Eastwood, 1857-1924 (Archived copy)". Water Resources Collections and Archives. Archived from the original on 2012-06-02. Retrieved 2018-09-15.
  5. 1 2 3 Campbell, Joanne (2015-03-27). "The Paradox of Anyox—New hope springs from old mine site". Northword Magazine. Retrieved 2018-09-15.

Coordinates: 55°25′01″N 129°49′59″W / 55.417°N 129.833°W / 55.417; -129.833

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.