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Seattle,
a city (1990 pop. 516,259), seat of King co., W Wash., built on seven
hills, between Elliott Bay of Puget Sound and Lake Washington; inc. 1869.
Seattle, the largest city in the Pacific Northwest, is the region's
commercial, financial, transportation, and industrial hub and a major port
of entry, important in both East Asian and Alaskan trade. A center of
aircraft manufacturing and shipbuilding since World War II, the city is a
major center for the Boeing Company, which employs a significant number of
residents, as does the Microsoft Corp. in nearby Redmond.
There are also major electronics, banking, insurance, biomedical,
food-processing, and lumber industries. Steel, textiles, clothing, metal
and glass products, and beer are among the products manufactured in the
city, which has an international airport.
Settled in 1851–52, Seattle
remained a small lumber town until the coming of the Great Northern
Railway in 1893. Despite strikes, anti-Chinese riots, and a fire in 1889,
growth was rapid. The city became a boomtown with the 1897 Alaska gold
rush and developed into the nation's chief link with Alaska. It grew
further with the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition (1909), the opening of
the Panama Canal (1914), and the completion (1917) of a canal and locks
making the city both a saltwater and a freshwater port. Aiding its
industrial growth was the presence of coal in the area and the development
of hydroelectric power. Long a center of radical labor movements, Seattle
was the scene of a major general strike (1919) led by the Industrial
Workers of the World. During the 1960s, Seattle's port expanded
enormously; it now has numerous major terminals, a 600-boat commercial
fishing terminal, and a huge marina for private boats. In 2001 an
earthquake did significant damage to the city, mainly in the historic
Pioneer Square area.
Situated between the majestic
Cascade and Olympic mountain ranges, with Mt. Rainier to the southeast and
Mt. Baker to the northeast, Seattle is not far from many national and
state parks and recreation areas. The city is a cultural center with
numerous museums and art galleries, including a Frank Gehry–designed
rock music museum; a variety of theater and musical organizations; and an
arboretum, a zoo, and the Central Library (2004, by Rem Koolhaas). Its
symphony orchestra plays in Benaroya Hall (1998) and its opera and ballet
in McCaw Hall (2003). The city's professional sports teams include the
Mariners (American League baseball), SuperSonics (National Basketball
League), and Seahawks (National Football League). It is the seat of the
Univ. of Washington, Seattle Univ., and Seattle Pacific Univ. Seattle was
the site of the 1962 world's fair. That fair's symbol—a 600-ft (183-m)
Space Needle—is a skyline landmark. Also remaining from the fair are the
Pacific Science Center and a cultural and recreational park; the first
publicly operated U.S. monorail connects the park with the downtown.
British
Columbia, province (2001 pop. 3,907,738), 366,255 sq mi (948,600 sq
km), including 6,976 sq mi (18,068 sq km) of water surface, W Canada.Geography
British Columbia, the
westernmost province of Canada, is bounded on the E by Alberta, on the S
by Montana, Idaho, and Washington, on the W by the Pacific Ocean, on the
NW by Alaska, and on the N by the Yukon Territory and the Northwest
Territories. Along its deeply indented Pacific coast lie many islands,
notably Vancouver
Island (c.280 mi/450 km long) and the sparsely inhabited Queen
Charlotte Islands. The province is almost wholly mountainous, with the
Rocky Mts. in the southeast, the Coast Mts. along the Pacific, and the
Stikine Mts. in the northwest.
Chief of the many rivers is
the Fraser, which, with its tributaries, drains much of central and S
British Columbia as it flows to the Pacific. Other rivers in that region
include the upper Columbia and the Kootenay. In the north are the Peace,
the Stikine, the Nass, and the Skeena. Hydroelectric resources in British
Columbia are highly developed; large plants along the rivers operate pulp
and paper mills. The station at Kemano on the Nechako River serves one of
the biggest aluminum plants in the world, at Kitimat. Long, narrow lakes
are found throughout the interior, supplying vast backwaters for dams;
Williston Lake, on the Peace River, is the largest of these.
British Columbia attracts
millions of visitors annually, and the land is a hunting and fishing
paradise. There are four national parks—Glacier, Mt. Revelstoke, Yoho,
and Kootenay—and hundreds of provincial parks and camping grounds. The
climate along the west coast, tempered by the warm Japan Current, has made
that area, especially Vancouver
and Victoria,
very attractive to tourists.
Large areas of central and N
British Columbia are sparsely settled; almost three fourths of the
population is crowded into the southwest coastal tip in the Georgia Strait
region. Victoria is the capital. The largest city and chief port is
Vancouver, which grew rapidly throughout the 1980s, experiencing a real
estate boom and heavy immigration from China and Hong Kong. Other
population centers include Richmond, Kelowna,
New
Westminster, North
Vancouver, Nanaimo,
Kamloops,
and Prince
George.
Economy
and Higher Education
Less than 10% of the
province's land can be used for grazing or cultivation, while nearly three
fourths is covered with forests. British Columbia's evergreens make up
about half of all of Canada's timber. Lumbering and related enterprises
(such as pulp and paper manufacturing) are the province's major
industries. During the 1990s, however, the provincial tree harvest dropped
some 25%, as concerns over clear-cutting and old-growth logging were
pressed by environmentalists, tour operators, indigenous peoples, and
others. Mining is also important; British Columbia is rich in mineral
resources. Copper, mined principally at Kamloops, Princeton, and Brittania,
and coal are the province's two largest mineral resources. Also important
are natural gas, oil, zinc, gold, silver, nickel, and iron. The mine at
Kimberley, one of the world's largest, is known for its silver, lead, and
zinc. However, pollution generated by natural-resource industries is a
major environmental concern in British Columbia.
British Columbia ranks first
among the provinces in fishing; the most important catches are salmon,
halibut, and herring. As with logging, however, the effects of
overharvesting are now being felt, exacerbated by disputes with the states
of Washington and Alaska over salmon catches. Beef is also an important
product, especially along the Fraser River, which is known for its
sprawling ranches. Other industries include food processing and the
manufacture of transportation equipment, machinery, chemicals, furniture,
and electrical items. Tourism and outdoor recreation are increasingly
important to British Columbia, and Vancouver is a center for Pacific Rim
business.
Institutions of higher
learning include Simon Fraser Univ., at Burnaby; the Univ. of British
Columbia, at Vancouver; and the Univ. of Victoria, at Victoria.
History
and PoliticsEarly
History
The earliest known inhabitants
of the province are indigenous peoples of the Pacific Northwest (widely
known for their totem poles and potlatches);
carbon dating has confirmed their occupation of some sites 6,000 to 8,000
years ago. Juan Peréz was probably the first European to sail (1774)
along the coast, but he did not make a landing. In 1778, Capt. James Cook,
on his last voyage, explored the coast in his search for the Pacific
entrance to the elusive Northwest Passage and claimed the area for Great
Britain.
Rival British and Spanish
claims for the area were partly resolved by the Nootka Conventions of
1790–92 (see Nootka
Sound), which gave both equal trading rights but did not resolve
ownership. The British sent George Vancouver to take possession of the
land, and in 1792–94 he explored and mapped the coast from Oregon to
Alaska. In 1793, Sir Alexander Mackenzie reached the Pacific overland; he
was followed early in the 19th cent. by fur traders and explorers of the North
West Company who crossed the mountains to establish posts in New
Caledonia, as the region was then called.
The
Hudson's Bay Company Era
After the Hudson's
Bay Company (HBC) absorbed the North West Company in 1821, the region
became a preserve of the new company. In 1843, Fort Victoria was
established by James Douglas
as an HBC trading post. Rival British and American claims to the area were
settled three years later when the boundary was set at the 49th parallel
(see Oregon,
state), but further controversy led to the San
Juan Boundary Dispute. Partly as protection against American
expansion, Vancouver Island was ceded (1849) to Britain by the HBC and
became a crown colony.
In 1858 gold was discovered in
the sandbars and tributaries of the Fraser River. The gold rushes that
resulted brought profound changes. Fort Victoria boomed as a supply base
for miners, and a town sprang up around it. Officials of the crown were
dispatched to keep order and to supervise government projects and the
building of roads. Some 30,000 miners moved into what was then unorganized
territory; this led to the creation (1858) of a new colony on the
mainland, called British Columbia, and the end of the HBC's supremacy. In
1863 the newly settled territory about the Stikine River was added to
British Columbia.
Confederation
In 1866, Vancouver Island and
British Columbia were merged, and in 1871 the united British Columbia,
lured by promises of financial aid and the building of a transcontinental
railroad that would link it to the rest of Canada, voted to join the new
Canadian confederation. The Canadian Pacific Railway finally reached the
coast in 1885, and a new era began. By providing access to new markets,
the railroad furthered agriculture, mining, and lumbering; steamship
service with Asia was inaugurated, and Vancouver grew as a busy port,
serving many provinces. The opening (1914) of the Panama Canal further
boosted trade and commerce. A long dispute with the United States over the
Alaska boundary was finally settled by the Alaska Boundary Commission in
1903.
The
Twentieth Century
The Conservatives and Liberals
alternated in power from 1903 (when the national parties were first
introduced into local politics) until 1941, when a wartime coalition was
formed. The Social
Credit party came into power in 1952, under the leadership of W. A. C.
Bennett, and retained control until 1972, when the New Democratic party,
led by David Barrett, won a majority. The Social Credit party regained
control in 1975 under Premier William Richards Bennett, who was succeeded
in 1986 by William Vander Zalm. The New Democratic party again took power
in 1991, with Michael Harcourt as premier, succeeded in 1996 by Glen
Clark, in 1999 by Dan Miller, and in 2000 by Ujjal Dosanjh (Canada's first
nonwhite provincial premier). In 2001, however, the Liberals, led by
Gordon Campbell, won a landslide victory; they were returned to power in
2005, albeit with a narrower majority.
This fastest growing of
Canada's provinces increased its national political clout in 1995 when it
was given its own veto power over constitutional amendments rather than
being subsumed under the western regional vote. By the end of the 1990s,
metropolitan Vancouver had become one of the Pacific Rim's most dynamic
cities, with a population c.10% Chinese and c.7% Asian Indian. At the same
time, land claims by indigenous peoples, claims that could return much of
the province to aboriginal ownership, had become a significant political
and economic issue in the province. British Columbia, unlike Canada's
other provinces, largely did not have signed treaties with most indigenous
peoples, despite a 1763 Crown directive requiring such treaties. As a
result, the provincial and federal governments began negotiating with the
native tribes in the 1990s to sign treaties with them.
British Columbia sends 6
senators and 32 representatives to the national parliament.
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