Fort Nelson

Fort Nelson is a town of about 3,400 people (2016) and stopping point along the Alaska Highway in British Columbia's Northern Rockies. It is located within Northern Rockies Regional Municipality.

WARNING: Wildfires has forced evacuations for many residents in the area. Be prepared to be evacuated at a moment's notice.
(Information last updated 14 May 2024)

Understand

The Fort Nelson area has served a number of roles. In the early 1800s, there was a fur-trading post. It was an important staging point for the building of the Alaska Highway and subsequently became a servicing center along the road. Resource extraction — forestry, oil and gas — have been the economic mainstays of the community, with tourism becoming more important.

  • 🌍 Fort Nelson Visitor Information Center, 5500 Alaska Highway, +1 250-774-6400. M-F 8:30AM-4:30PM. Information on local attractions, restaurants and places to stay. Has free Wifi, a children's play area and a gift shop with crafts from local artisans and First Nations.

History

Fort Nelson, named in honour of the British naval hero Horatio Nelson, was established by the Northwest Trading Company in 1805 as a fur-trading post. Due to fires, floods and feuds, Fort Nelson is in its fifth location.

The Fort Nelson Airport was also a valuable asset for allied military forces in World War II, as it served as an airbase for the United States Air Force and for the Royal Canadian Air Force. Contrary to popular belief that the construction of the Alaska Highway commenced in Dawson Creek, Fort Nelson was the original mile 0 on the Alaska Highway because of the existence of a previously constructed road from Fort Saint John to Fort Nelson.

The United States Army built perhaps the most notable historical artifact in the area, the Alaska Highway. Construction began in 1942 out of a firm belief that Alaska faced significant threat of Japanese invasion. Initial highway construction was performed by over 11,000 U.S. soldiers. After approximately nine lengthy and strenuous months, the highway was finally completed, making Fort Nelson a bustling service-center along the famous road. After the Japanese surrender of 1945, the U.S. Army ceded the Canadian portion of the highway to the Canadian government, which opened it to the public in 1948.

In the years following World War II, the construction of the Alaska Highway, and the construction of the Fort Nelson Airport, Fort Nelson grew considerably as a community. In the early 1950s the first five acres were sold to locals, which marked the start of the community as a separate entity from the military. Oil- and gas-exploration in the early 1950s provided Fort Nelson with the industrial sector that it required to jump-start expansion of the community into what would eventually become the village of Fort Nelson in 1971. After the completion of BC Hydro's natural-gas power plant to provide electricity to the region, Fort Nelson experienced growth. A railway was built by the Pacific Great Eastern up to Fort Nelson in 1971 which allowed efficient transportation of the local industry's major products (lumber, oil, and gas) to larger markets in the south.

Climate

Winters, except when dry chinook winds blow from the Pacific Ocean, tend to be severely cold and generally dry with snow depth of only 0.5 metres (19.7 in) typical owing to the dryness of the 1.77 metres (69.69 in) snowfall, while summers are warm and occasionally rainy, though spells of hot weather are rare.

Fort Nelson is colder than anywhere else in British Columbia from November through February, but the mean average temperature during the summer is warmer than coastal areas even far south such as Victoria and comparable to Vancouver.

Get in

By car

The town is Mile 300 of Highway 97 (Alaska Highway). It is roughly 450 km north of Fort St. John and 600 km southeast of Watson Lake in the Yukon. In the Yukon the highway is numbered Highway 1.

About 27 km west of Fort Nelson on Highway 97, it intersects with Highway 77, which travels south from the Northwest Territories.

Airport

Airlines

Airline operating to Fort Nelson :

By bus

  • BC Bus North, +1-844-564-7494. Weekly service between Dawson Creek and Fort Nelson with stops in Taylor and Fort St. John. This service provider also operates a route that provides twice per week bus service between Prince George and Fort St. John. Travel time to Fort Nelson from Dawson Creek is 6.5 hours and from Fort St. John is 5.25 hours. Fare is $49.

Get around

By taxi

See

  • 🌍 Fort Nelson Heritage Museum, 5553 Alaska Highway, +1 250-774-3536. Mid-May to mid-Sep: daily 8AM-7PM; off-seadon by appointment. A sprawling collection of antique cars and trucks, local history, the story of the Alaska Highway, historic local buildings and more. Tours are frequently available from the curator (a local resident), who brings insight and character to the stories of the community and the highway. Adult $7, senior or youth $5, off-season $3.
  • 🌍 The Phoenix Theater, 5319 50th Avenue South, +1 250-774-2241.

Further away

  • 🌍 Sikanni Chief Falls Protected Area (From Airport Dr at Highway 97 in Fort Nelson, drive south on Highway 97 for 184 km, turn right at Mile 171 road, turn left at the intersection after 14 km, then 2 km. It is an 800 m walk to the waterfalls viewpoing from there in each direction.). Offers a scenic view of the Sikanni Chief waterfalls, which travel over a steep 30 m cliff in the forest.

Do

Event

  • Heritage Days. Late February. Entertainment, the working displays. Free bannock and tea in the Trapper's Cabin as well as live entertainment. Free admission to the museum and a bake sale both days.
  • Trappers' Rendezvous. Annual Fort Nelson Trappers Rendezvous celebration first weekend in March. Events at the museum and around town. Trappers Rendezvous Dog Pull takes place on the museum grounds on the Saturday.
  • Culture Fest, +1 250-774-4415. Organized by Fort Nelson Community Literacy Society. Held in October.

Learn

Buy

Eat

  • 🌍 ONE Restaurant & 1 Lounge, 3995-50th Avenue South, +1 250-774-6669. M-F 6-9AM, daily 5-10PM.
  • 🌍 Down To Earth, 5003 51st Avenue West, +1 250-774-7203. M-W Sa 8AM-6PM, Th F 8AM-9PM, Su 1PM-5PM. Health food store and cafe.
  • 🌍 Simply Savoury, 5201 Simpson Trail (Northern Lights College campus), +1 250-321-0509. M-F 9AM-2PM.

Drink

  • 🌍 Dan's Neighbourhood Pub & Beer, Wine Store, 4204 50th Ave N, +1 250-774-3929. Su-Th 11AM-midnight, F Sa 11AM-2AM.

Sleep

  • 🌍 Lakeview Inns & Suites, 4507 50th Avenue S, +1 250-233-5001, toll-free: +1 877 355-3500. Check-in: 3PM, check-out: 11AM. Hotel with mix of standard hotel rooms and suites. The Guest rooms have two queen beds, microwaves, small fridges and in-room coffee. The suites have more space, one or two bedrooms, and some have full kitchens and jacuzzis. Amenities include an exercise room and free Wifi. $115-158.
  • 🌍 Woodlands Inn & Suites, 3995-50th Ave S, +1 250-774-6669, toll-free: +1 866 966-3466, . Standard rooms have two queen beds and in-room coffee. Executive rooms and suites have two queen beds or one king, and fridge and microwave. All rooms include free Wifi and there is a fitness center on site. Long-term and monthly rates also available. $139-299.
  • 🌍 Kacee's Northern Suites, 4807 50th Ave S, +1 250-233-4800. Check-in: 2PM, check-out: 11:30AM. Free WiFi throughout the property, pet-friendly accommodation. Free private parking is available on site. Every room at this motel is air conditioned and features a flat-screen TV with satellite channels. The rooms are equipped with a private bathroom. From $89.

Cope

Newspaper

Hospital

Go next

  • Muncho Lake Provincial Park — Hiking, camping, boating, wildlife and some beautiful scenery, 200 km west of Fort Nelson on the Alaska Highway. Nearby are the Liard Hot Springs, a natural hot spring in the forest of the Northern Rocky Mountains, and Stone Mountain Provincial Park.
Routes through Fort Nelson
Whitehorse Muncho Lake Prov. Park  N  S  Fort St. John Dawson Creek


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