Glenora, British Columbia
Glenora, also known historically as the Hudson's Bay Company's Fort Glenora[1] and during the Cassiar Gold Rush as Glenora Landing,[2] was an unincorporated settlement in the Stikine Country of northwestern British Columbia, Canada. It was located on the banks of the Stikine River, just southwest and approximately 13 miles downstream from the community of Telegraph Creek.[3]
Name origin
Helen B. Akrigg and G.P.V. Akrigg in their British Columbia Place Names ascribe the origin of the name to a combination of the Gaelic glenn for "valley" with the Spanish ora for gold.[3]
gollark: Praise the market.
gollark: > > We must ask ourselves, what value does the glorious MARKETâ„¢ pay for people mathing?> watery breadHOW watery?
gollark: We must ask ourselves, what value does the glorious MARKETâ„¢ pay for people mathing?
gollark: Maths has lots of value and without mathologists we would be much worse off. Probably with 19th century technology.
gollark: Well, you could say "without engineers, physics would have no practical value".
See also
- Grand Canyon of the Stikine
- SS Fort Glenora
References
- Index and Dictionary of Canadian History, p.133, Lawrence J. Burpee & Arthur G. Doughty, publ. Morang & Co. Ltd, Toronto 1911
- Report Upon the Customs District, Public Service, and Resources of Alaska Territory, p.44, William Gouverneur Morris, publ. Govt. Print. Off., 1879
- "Glenora". BC Geographical Names.
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