Why this road along Vaseux Lake was a popular spot for early photographs

The Vaseux Lake bluffs provided lots of camera fodder for pioneer motorists.

The large outcropping with a corner blasted out along the edge of Vaseux Lake must have epitomized area roads to pioneer Okanagan motorists, as it was a popular stopping place for those hardy enough to use the road in the early 1900s.

Okanagan Archives Trust Society archivist Brian Wilson shared recently a photo of the bluffs taken in 1913.

Wilson says the story behind the photo involves four Okanagan brothers named Shatford, who were likely on an investment tour of the south Okanagan out of the historic mining community of Fairview in 1913.

“Fairview was a leading Okanagan community at the time. It was a gold mining town located in the hills west of Oliver,” Wilson says.

The men in the photo were probably conducting business on behalf of the South Okanagan Land Company, which was owned by the Shatford brothers.

“They bought and sold many large Okanagan properties. One brother started the first orchard in the Okanagan, one started a general store in Hedley and one was mayor of Vernon, in addition to having business interests there,” Wilson says.

“I assume they were going to the south Okanagan to look at some land,” Wilson says.

The Vaseux Lake bluffs were a popular spot for photographs back in the early pioneer days of the Okanagan.This photo was also taken in 1913. | Credit: SUBMITTED / Penticton Museum and Archives | Photographer:

The famous piece of roadway at Vaseux Lake owed its beginnings to a survey conducted by the Columbia and Western Railway work crews out of Spokane who blasted the rock while surveying out a potential rail line to Penticton.

“When they blasted, just one piece came out. They couldn’t get the rest of the rock to come down, so they just left it,” Wilson says.

The rock overhang was removed, over years of highway reconstruction, but the bluff remains and a dangerously sharp corner still exists at the location on Highway 97 today.

The Vaseux Lake bluffs were a popular photo spot even during horse and buggy days. | Credit: SUBMITTED / Penticton Museum and Archives


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Steve Arstad

I have been looking for news in the South Okanagan - SImilkameen for 20 years, having turned a part time lifelong interest into a full time profession. After five years publishing a local newsletter, several years working as a correspondent / stringer for several local newspapers and seven years as editor of a Similkameen weekly newspaper, I joined iNFOnews.ca in 2014. My goal in the news industry has always been to deliver accurate and interesting articles about local people and places. My interest in the profession is life long - from my earliest memories of grade school, I have enjoyed writing.
As an airborne geophysical surveyor I travelled extensively around the globe, conducting helicopter borne mineral surveys.
I also spent several years at an Okanagan Falls based lumber mill, producing glued-wood laminated products.
As a member of the Kaleden community, I have been involved in the Kaleden Volunteer Fire Department for 22 years, and also serve as a trustee on the Kaleden Irrigation District board.
I am currently married to my wife Judy, of 26 years. We are empty-nesters who enjoy living in Kaleden with our Welsh Terrier, Angus, and cat, Tibbs.
Our two daughters, Meagan and Hayley, reside in Richmond and Victoria, respectively.

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