Maple Ridge Museum
22520 116th Avenue
Maple Ridge, BC V2X 0S4
phone: 604.463.5311
fax: 604.463.5317
Haney House
11612 224th Street
Maple Ridge, BC V2X 5Z7
phone: 604.463.1377
Admission
$2.00 Adults
$1.00 Children
Winter Hours – Museum
September to June
Wednesday & Sunday
1:00 pm – 4:00 pm
Winter Hours – Haney House
September to June
Sunday
10:00 am – 4:00 pm
Summer Hours
July & August
Wednesday to Sunday
1:00 pm – 4:00 pm
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Frequently Asked Questions
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Full name and date of birth. Many families re-used the same names over and over so the key to the generation is birth date. If you have other details — like marriage date and partner's name — include that too. If you are looking for an obituary, date of death is essential. However, if that is one of your questions, we have resources that may provide that information.
Other associated surnames can also be useful. If your person married into a long-standing Maple Ridge family, then our information is more likely to be associated with that other surname. Sometimes the names of neighbours can help.
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Include the time period you are interested in. When did your person live in Maple Ridge? We don't need to know when they lived in Vancouver or Calgary - just Maple Ridge.
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What question are you asking? It is tempting to say, "Everything you can possibly tell me about them", but we haven't got that kind of time. Focus your attention on one or two important questions. Once you have those answers, they may lead to other questions. It is better to work through a series of questions rather than try to do everything at once. We will spend up to one hour for free on a research request but after that our research fee of $50 per hour can really add up.
Finally, please share your compiled family history with the Maple Ridge Museum & Archives. We are happy to keep these records on file, and help you connect with other researchers.
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One of the earliest European settlers in the district was John McIver, a Scot, who homesteaded the land now known as the Maple Ridge Golf Course. As his property incorporated a fine ridge topped by Maple trees, McIver called his farm "Maple Ridge".
By 1874, several small communities had sprung up, consisting of a few families each, on the north side of the Fraser River in the areas that would become Haney, Hammond, Pitt Meadows, Whonnock, Albion, Ruskin and Webster's Corners. One of the problems of small isolated communities is that they tend to stay small and isolated unless some means is found to build roads between them.
It was with this problem in mind that a group of forward-thinking men gathered at McIver's farm to discuss incorporating the whole district between the Pitt River and the Stave to allow taxation for road building. The name for the district was taken from McIver's farm and so we became "Maple Ridge" in 1874.
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When the district incorporated in 1874, the total population was about 20 families with the majority located between Hammond and Kanaka Creek. The closest thing to a centre was the area that is now the foot of Laity Street where it meets River Road. This is where the first post office was established in 1876 with the name "Maple Ridge Post Office". All settlers had to travel to this location to get their mail.
In 1885, the completion of the CPR caused the community to rethink the location of their post office. It no longer made sense to have it up on the ridge when it could be near the railway. Three new post offices were opened that year in Haney, Hammond and Whonnock. The Maple Ridge post office was closed at that point and there wasn't one of that name again until 1970 when Canada Post closed the small offices in favour of one central one in the downtown core.
The first post office located away from the river bank was opened at Webster's Corners in 1891. Post Master James Murray Webster had to walk to the Haney Station to get the mail and then carry it back to Corners. Ruskin's post office opened in 1898.
In 1907, Albion got a new name along with its post office. Formerly known as East Haney, this was not distinctive enough for the postal service and so residents were asked to come up with a new name. The last post office in the district opened in 1911 and also required the adoption of a new name. The area we know as Yennadon was formerly called South Lillooet. Its first postmaster came from Yennadon Downs in England and chose the name of his old home for his new one.
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There was a series of major controversies over postal name changes which reflect how important the old neighbourhoods were to their citizens. In the 1950's, considerable conflict arose in Hammond when residents were informed that the price of door to door delivery was the indignity of having to change their postal address to "Haney, BC" where the sorting station was located. The final solution was to change "Haney" to "Maple Ridge" as the more neutral name.
As postal districts became larger and door to door delivery from a central station more common, all the local postal addresses were gradually taken under the umbrella of "Maple Ridge". The name of the first and most short lived local postal address [which had only applied to the area around the foot of Laity Street when first established] was to be applied to the whole district as of 1970.
While "Maple Ridge" was certainly less contentious than having "Haney" imposed over the entire area, we still see the Whonnock Post Office struggling to retain its own name. Whonnock is the last rural post office in the Greater Vancouver region to retain its postmaster and original name.
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| Location | Start Date | End Date | Notes |
| Maple Ridge#1 | 01/01/1876 | 05/01/1886 | closed when Port Haney opened |
| Port Haney | 05/01/1884 | 11/05/1945 | |
| Port Hammond | 04/01/1885 | 1963 | |
| Whonnock | 08/01/1885 | Over their dead bodies | |
| Webster's Corners | 10/01/1891 | 06/01/1968 | final date likely wrong |
| Ruskin | 01/01/1898 | 10/11/1969 | |
| Albion | 10/01/1907 | 1966 | |
| Yennadon | 09/01/1911 | 31/08/1923 | |
| Allco; | 12/10/1923 | 04/11/1929 | |
| Haney | 04/01/1936 | 04/01/1970 | |
| Maple Ridge#2 | 23/10/196 |
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| 1874-1875 | Wellington J. Harris |
| 1876-1878 | Henry Dawson |
| 1879 | John McKenney |
| 1880-1881 | Daniel Docksteader |
| 1882 | George Howison |
| 1883-1884 | Henry Dawson |
| 1885-1886 | George Howison |
| 1887 | Wellington J. Harris |
| 1888 | Hector Ferguson |
| 1889 | Robert Blackstock |
| 1890 | Wellington J. Harris |
| 1891 | Hector Ferguson |
| 1892-1893 | John Laity |
| 1894 | Joseph Stephens |
| 1895-1896 | Hector Ferguson |
| 1897-1899 | Robert Blackstock |
| 1900-1901 | Hector Ferguson |
| 1902 | W .H. Ansell |
| 1903 | John Blaney |
| 1904 | Hector Ferguson |
| 1905-1906 | John Blaney |
| 1907 | John Carleton |
| 1908-1909 | John Laity |
| 1910 | James Selkirk |
| 1910-1913 | J.C. McFarlane |
| 1914-1916 | N.S. Lougheed |
| 1917-1920 | W .H. Ansell |
| 1921-1924 | John A. Mclver |
| 1925-1929 | J.B. Martyn |
| 1930-1934 | Solomon Mussallem |
| 1935 | W. Hope |
| 1936-1943 | Solomon Mussallem |
| 1944-1945 | H.F. Cunningham |
| 1946-1953 | Solomon Mussallem |
| 1954-1971 | Peter Jenewein |
| 1972-1973 | Gerry Trerise |
| 1974-1975 | Betty Dube |
| 1976-1981 | Norm Jacobsen |
| 1982-1983 | Austin Pelton |
| 1984-1987 | Danny Griffin |
| 1988-1990 | Bill Hartley |
| 1991-1993 | Belle Morse |
| 1994-1999 | Carl Durksen |
| 2000-2002 | Al Hogarth |
| 2003-2005 | Kathy Morse |
| 2006-2008 | Gordy Robson |
| 2009- ? | Ernie Daykin |
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| Old Name | New Name |
| Bailey Road | 277 Street |
| Bellevue Avenue | 121 Avenue |
| Bend Road | 221 Street |
| Burrage Street | 212 Street |
| Brage Road | 130 Avenue |
| Braidwood Hill | 236 Street |
| Bristol Road | 126 Avenue |
| Britton Road | 125 Avenue |
| Cedar Road | 118 Avenue |
| Cedar Lane | 226 Street |
| Cherry Place | 123 Avenue |
| Dewdney Trunk Road | 132 Avenue, 128 Avenue, 210 Street |
| Fairview Road | 206 Street |
| Gawsworth Street | 206 Street |
| Gilker Hill Road | 236 Street |
| Gordon Avenue | 202 Street |
| Haney Street | 116 Avenue |
| Kearsley Road | 284 Street |
| Linda Road | 116 Avenue |
| Malcolm Avenue | 122 Avenue |
| Malta Avenue | 221 Street |
| Maplewood Avenue | 220 Street |
| Marc Road | 284 Street |
| Martyn Road | 121 Avenue |
| Metcalf Road | 121 Avenue |
| McNutt Road | 273 Street |
| Moss Lane | 226 Street |
| Mountainview Cresc. | 121 Avenue |
| Neaves Road | 208 Street |
| Parkwood Avenue | 208 Street |
| Powerline Road | Dewdney Trunk Road |
| Richmond Street | 113 Avenue |
| Robinwood Crescent | 208 Street |
| Rosemont Road | 261 Street |
| Ross Road | 117 Avenue |
| Royal Crescent | 226 Street |
| Stanton Street | 114 Avenue |
| Spring Crescent | 125 Avenue |
| Thomas Street | 117 Avenue |
| Thornhill Road | 212 Street |
| Volker Avenue | 122 Avenue |
| Walnut Place | 220 Street |
| Waugh Street | 205 Street |
| 1st Avenue | 203 Street |
| 2nd Avenue | 207 Street |
| 3rd Avenue | Laity Street |
| 4th Avenue | 216 Street |
| 5th Avenue | 222 Street |
| 6th Avenue | Hillside Street |
| 6A Avenue | 223 Street |
| 7th Avenue | 224 Street |
| 8th Avenue | Fraser Street |
| 9th Avenue | 225 Street |
| 9½ Avenue | Edge Street |
| 10th Avenue | 227 Street |
| 10½ Avenue | Fletcher Street |
| 11th Avenue | 228 Street |
| 12th Avenue | Burnett Street |
| 12½ Avenue | 229 Street |
| 13th Avenue | 230 Street |
| 13½ Avenue | Stevens Street |
| 14th Avenue | 232 Street |
| 14½ Avenue | Glenhurst Street |
| 15th Avenue | 236 Street |
| 16th Avenue | 237 Street |
| 16½ Avenue | 238 Street |
| 17th Avenue | 240 Street |
| 18th Avenue | 241 Street |
| 19th Avenue | 244 Street |
| 20th Avenue | 246 Street |
| 21st Avenue | 248 Street |
| 22nd Avenue | 250 Street |
| 23rd Avenue | 252 Street |
| 24th Avenue | 254 Street |
| 25th Avenue | Palmer Rolph Street |
| 25½ Avenue | 260 Street |
| 26th Street | 262 Street |
| 27th Avenue | 264 Street |
| 28th Avenue | 267 Street |
| 29th Avenue | 269 Street |
| 30th Avenue | 272 Street |
| 30½ Avenue | Odell Street |
| 30½ Avenue | Hynes Street |
| 31st Avenue | 276 Street |
| 32nd Avenue | 280 Street |
| 33rd Avenue | 284 Street |
| 34th Avenue | 287 Street |
| 1st Road | 96th Avenue |
| 1½ Road | Acorn Avenue |
| 2nd Road | 97 Avenue |
| 3rd Road | 98 Avenue |
| 4th Road | 98 Avenue |
| 5th Road | Bell Avenue |
| 6th Road | 99 Ave, 100 Ave, 102 Ave |
| 8th Road | 102 Avenue |
| 9th Road | 104 Avenue |
| 12th Road | 108 Avenue |
| 14th Road | Tamarack Lane |
| 15th Road | 112 Avenue |
| 16th Road | Gilley Avenue |
| 17th Road | Camwood Avenue |
| 18th Road | 118 Avenue |
| 20th Road | 122 Avenue |
| 21st Road | 123 Avenue |
| 22nd Road | 124 Avenue |
| 23rd Road | 125 Avenue |
| 26th Road | 126 Avenue |
| 27th Road | 128 Avenue |
| 29th Road | 129 Avenue |
| 30th Road | 130 Avenue |
| 31st Road | 131 Avenue |
| 32nd Road | 132 Avenue |
| 33rd Road | 133 Avenue |
| 34th Road | 138 Avenue |
| 37th Road | 141 Avenue |
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Ontario Street
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John McIver
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December 1953
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Maple Ridge Park on the Alouette
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Brick maker
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Home for the brickyard manager's family.
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Hampton and Laity
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The Milkhouse
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A dude ranch.
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Dr. Garnet Morse
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None. There was no pre-existing roadway that the Lougheed replaced.
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Solomon Mussallem
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1896
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State of the art use of a railway to log virgin territory.
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Sam Edge
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South Lillooet
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Samuel Robertson in 1858.
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One
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Because it sounds like Lillooet.
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St. John the Divine Anglican.
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St. John the Divine Anglican.
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Bank of Montreal.
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Sturgeon
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Japanese
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MacLean High in 1922
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Maple Ridge High School
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The Finns
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Ruskin
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Train robbery
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Strawberries
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Japanese families were moved to the interior during WWII.
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Drainage tile
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On the Port Haney Wharf
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1885
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New Westminster
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Foot of Laity Street at River Road
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1901
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Houston's Pub
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Japanese kindergarten
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1878 to 1979 — 101 years
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At the original Municipal Hall on Callaghan Street.
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Daniel Callaghan, Anne Haney's father.
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1874
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William Justus Howison
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The Women's Institute
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The Women's Institute
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Paddlewheeler
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1910
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Katzie and Kwantlen
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Yellow cedar found there made good barrel staves.
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Salmon
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Eulachon
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Drum
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Elizabeth Trethewey
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The original Catholic Church at the foot of 224th and the brick Presbyterian Church on 116th.
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We gratefully acknowledge the financial support of the Province of British Columbia through BC150,
a Ministry of Tourism, Culture and the Arts initiative, BC Gaming, and the Heritage Legacy Fund of British Columbia.
Copyright © 2009 Maple Ridge Museum & Community Archives. All Rights Reserved. Site designed by Andrea Lister
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