The Daily Courier

Osoyoos turns 75 – ‘very friendly, very small’

- By DALE BOYD Local Journalism Initiative Reporter Osoyoos Times-Chronicle

On Jan. 14, 1946 the small village of Osoyoos became a municipali­ty. The first council meeting of the Village of Osoyoos was held at the Canadian Pacific Railway station a few weeks later and William Andrews was elected chairman of the board, Gordon Kelly and Joseph Armstrong were elected village commission­ers.

In the early days of the village severe flooding in the area led to the channeliza­tion of the Okanagan River. Houses in East Osoyoos were surrounded by water during the flood of 1948, one of George G. Fraser's earliest memories. When he was eight years old, there was a week when he and other students had to hop on a boat on their journey to school in Oliver.

“We lived on the east side, and the bridge that is there now is a replacemen­t of a couple of earlier ones and it’s considerab­ly higher than what was there in 1948. So for just about a week I had to take a boat from where we lived over to town a catch the school bus there. Because at that point, we were being bused to Oliver,” said Fraser.

Fraser, who is still an Osoyoos resident, is the grandson of George J. Fraser, who authored “The Story of Osoyoos: September 1811 to December 1952.”

George J., originally from Alberta, came to Osoyoos in 1917 when the population “jumped from 13 to 17,” Fraser joked. A combinatio­n of goings on in the town, historical events and personal history, George J.'s book would become one of the earliest documentat­ions of activities in what would eventually become the Town of Osoyoos.

“I think because he had been here so early, and a great part of the changes that took place, I think he felt it important to document it,” Fraser said.

Aside from taking a boat over flood waters to get to school, Fraser recalls Osoyoos as a village that was “very friendly, very small” in the early days.

The Canadian Pacific Railway would come to Osoyoos in 1944.

The population of the small village would continue to grow, with 899 people living in Osoyoos in 1951 around the time Gayle Cornish and her family moved from Port Coquitlam. Her earliest memory of Osoyoos includes former landmark water towers which no longer exist.

"We lived in a small house on Highway 97 and the first day I went to school I got lost very far from where we lived, just close to where the water towers were at that time. So that’s one of my first memories," she said with a chuckle. “But the water tower was always kind of a landmark.”

She recalls Osoyoos as a lovely small village where “everyone knew everyone” and celebratio­ns for Christmas as well as the annual Osoyoos Cherry Carnival, known today as the Osoyoos Cherry Fiesta.

“It was a really good community and we have a lot of good memories from July 1, which has always been celebrated. At that time, it was the Osoyoos Cherry Carnival and it was a very special day for all the kids in town.”

When a group of Osoyoos residents got together in the spring of 1949 to plan the first Cherry Carnival, the idea was to hold an aquatic sports day to raise money for park developmen­t. Cornish recalls swimming and raft races.

“There was a children’s parade, which started first, so a lot of children decorate their bikes and wagons and so forth. And I remember, we made a covered wagon, a chuckwagon, and put our wagon in the parade. I guess I was in Grade 2 or 3 at the time. And then everybody went down to the community hall and it was just a great day.”

Cornish recalls many students she went to school with worked on their families’ farms.

“One thing I remember … is there was two packing houses in town and everyone had a connection to the packing house. Everyone worked there. When I was 13, I worked at the packing house sorting cherries,” Cornish said. “Nowadays that wouldn’t be allowed.”

The main packing house was located where the Watermark Resort stands today at the end of Main Street. It was in operation until the 1980s and the building remained vacant through most of the 1990s.

“The train station and the train tracks were right there coming to the packing house so fruit and everything could be shipped out quite easily,” said Kara Burton, executive director of the Osoyoos Museum and Archives.

“The orchards were prominent then,” Cornish recalled. "And now of course, it has switched around and vineyards have been taking over for the last 50 years. So it’s quite a change in the landscape.”

Prior to the Osoyoos Secondary School opening in 1979, there was only one high school serving the Oliver and Osoyoos area. Much like the rest of the world, Osoyoos was not immune to racism. Chief Clarence Louie of the Osoyoos Indian Band recalls drop-out rates were higher with Indigenous students at that time.

"Most of the band members would quit school because they couldn't put up with the racism and it’s not that they were scared of white people. I always say that the white kids had a deep respect for the kids from the Osoyoos Indian Reserve because they know if they picked on the Rez kids the Rez kids would beat them up,” Louie said.

“There can be quiet racism where you know you’re not included and you know you’re not welcome. The drop-out rate was pretty high back then. Kids know when they’re not welcome.”

Louie said he didn’t personally experience much direct racism and touts sports for being a great way to bridge the cultural gaps, but he said he doesn’t see as many intercommu­nity leagues today.

“When I was going to school there in the ’70s there was what I would call just Indians and whites. I never got picked on, I didn’t notice any racism because I was involved in sports,” Louie said.

“A lot of racism can be broken down through sports.”

The Osoyoos Indian Band has been celebrated for its business successes in the past few decades.

“Even though we had 4,000 acres of our best land stolen, we still had land from which to work with. Even though most of our reserve land is hills and mountains and rocks, we still had some decent land from which to work with,” Louie said. “A majority of my people want to work for a living and they want good developmen­t that provides jobs, an income for the band. It’s no different than the mayor and council (of Osoyoos)."

Today the economies of the OIB, Osoyoos and Oliver are greatly intertwine­d.

Louie said, and people from outside of the OIB are enrolling students in the Sen’Pok’Chin School on OIB land, building homes and working on the Osoyoos reserve.

“They're even bringing their kids to our daycare on the reserve and bringing their kids to our Rez school on the reserve that started in the 1990s,” Louie said.

“We have a health clinic here now too and it's the first time I’ve ever seen in my life where Oliver people are coming to the reserve not only for pre-school and schooling now, but they are even coming to the reserve to see the doctor at our health clinic.”

 ?? Osoyoos and District Museum and Archive ?? One of historian George C. Fraser’s earliest memories of Osoyoos is the great flood of 1948, in which students took a boat to get to school.
Osoyoos and District Museum and Archive One of historian George C. Fraser’s earliest memories of Osoyoos is the great flood of 1948, in which students took a boat to get to school.

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