The Kootenay Rockies is also home to some of BC’s most lovingly preserved historic sites, including the world’s oldest intact passenger sternwheeler, the SS Moyie, dry docked at Kaslo; the Underground Mining Railway in Kimberley; and the intriguing railway museums in Cranbrook, Three Valley Gap, and Revelstoke. At Fort Steele Heritage Town, interpreters bring to life an 1890s boomtown, while the Native Interpretive Centre at the St. Eugene Resort, a former residential school, explores the history of the local Ktunaxa First Nation.
In this region of small towns, each community has its own flavour. Nelson, for example, set idyllically on the western arm of Kootenay Lake, is so rich with heritage buildings and cultural life it’s been dubbed Canada’s best small arts town.