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Cottonwood House

Description

Cottonwood House, located 28 kilometres east of Quesnel, BC, comprises 10.68 hectares of agricultural land in a pastoral environment adjacent to the Cottonwood River. This historic place includes ten historic structures, including wooden domestic and farm buildings, and a portion of the original Cariboo Waggon Road.

Heritage Value

Cottonwood House is valued as an excellent example of the legacy of commercial enterprise and settlement associated with travel and transportation along the Cariboo Waggon Road. The value of this place lies in its situation on the historic route of the Waggon Road, and in its various historic functions as a roadhouse, ranch, farm, telegraph station, post office, and social and commercial hub of the area. It also holds significant heritage value in its association with the Boyd family, who owned the property and conducted business here between 1874 and 1951.

The roadhouse, general store, various farm structures, and their pastoral surroundings are integral to the heritage value of this place, as they provide a tangible example of the early nonnative settlement and commerce which were driven by the nineteenth-century quest for gold in the Cariboo region of British Columbia. It is also noteworthy that Cottonwood House has survived as one of the few remaining examples of a Cariboo roadhouse which flourished after the peak of gold-rush activity.

Source: BC Heritage Branch Properties Files

Character Defining Elements

The character-defining elements of Cottonwood House include:

  • The situation of the historic place within a pastoral environment
  • The large cottonwood tree in front of the roadhouse
  • The portion of the original 1863 Cariboo Waggon Road which runs through the property
  • The cluster of original pre-1951 log buildings which comprises the core area of the historic place
  • The identifying features of the buildings such as scale, colour, detail, patina, fittings, locations and spacing, attributable to their time of construction
  • The construction methods evident in the forms and materials of the historic wooden structures
  • Evidence of historic farming and ranching activities as seen in such buildings as the double barn, horse barn, and root cellar
  • Evidence of historic commercial activities as seen in such buildings and structures as the roadhouse, general store, and telegraph poles and wires

Contact Us


Heritage Steering Committee
Suite D, 180 North Third Avenue, Williams Lake, BC V2G 2A4
Phone: 250-392-3351
Toll-Free: 1-800-665-1636
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