Rock Creek, British Columbia

Rock Creek is an unincorporated settlement in the Boundary Country of the Southern Interior of British Columbia, Canada.[2] Located at the confluence of the Kettle River with the eponymous Rock Creek,[3] site of the Rock Creek Gold Rush of 1860, the community also lies at the junction of British Columbia Highway 33 (from Kelowna via Big White) and British Columbia Highway 3, otherwise known as the Crowsnest Highway, which runs across the south of the province.

Rock Creek
The small community of Rock Creek & the bridge over its namesake creek in the middle of the image.
Rock Creek
Location of Rock Creek in British Columbia
Coordinates: 49°03′26″N 119°00′00″W
Country Canada
Province British Columbia
Elevation603 m (1,978 ft)
Area code(s)250 / 778 / 236
Highways Hwy 3
Hwy 33

Rock Creek was one of the settlements along the Dewdney Trail in gold rush times and, though very small today, remains important as a regional service centre for the farming and mining communities of the Boundary Country and the Monashee Country, which lies northwards. It is the effective basetown for Mount Baldy Ski Area, which lies to its northwest and overlooks the Okanagan Valley town of Oliver.

Television

Rock Creek was featured on the historical television documentary series Gold Trails and Ghost Towns, Season 3, Episode 8.

gollark: *🍕 *
gollark: Unlikely.
gollark: Yes, which may be why nobody wants it.
gollark: It's a CB ice which nobody wants.
gollark: I'm debating abandoning this ice.

See also

References

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