The Nicomekl River springs from the ground in Langley, British Columbia and travels west through the city to Surrey's Crescent Beach, where it empties into Mud Bay, the northernmost section of the Boundary Bay of the Strait of Georgia.[1] It has a total length of 34 km, with a drainage area of 149 km2.[3]
The river was first documented in writing on December 13, 1824, when James McMillan'sHudson's Bay Company expedition used the Nicomekl River to travel inland. They went up the Nikomekl to the portage area to the Salmon River which connected to the Fraser River 50 miles inland. McMillan built the first Fort Langley at that location two and a half years later.[5] John Work, a clerk with the party, described the Nicomekl as thick with willows and with low banks "well wooded with pine, cedar, alder and some other trees." Work also noted signs of there being numerous beavers on the river.[6]
Nicomekl was more navigable than other nearby rivers making it important to Surrey pioneers.[7]
In 1911, Surrey council barred navigation up the Nicomekl and Serpentine rivers due to construction of dams to reclaim land. This ended use of the rivers by steamboats and log booms.[5]
In December 1951, high tides up the Nicomekl and Serpentine rivers combined with gale-force winds to flood 490 hectares of farmland under 1.5 metres of salt water. Repairs cost about $20,000, and the salt residue affected farm production for a few years. In the 1960s, river pollution caused the closure of thriving oyster farming businesses.[5]
^Carlson, Keith (2010). The Power of Place, the Problem of Time: Aboriginal Identity and Historical Consciousness in the Cauldron of Colonialism. University of Toronto Press. p. 97. ISBN978-0-8020-9564-0.
^ abcChuck Davis (2011). The Chuck Davis History of Metro Vancouver. Harbour Publishing.
^Bartroli, Thomas. Genesis of Vancouver City. Vancouver: (Self-Published). 1997.