Port Alberni and the West Coast of Vancouver Island have been populated by the people of
Tseshaht First Nation,
Hupacasath First Nation, and the
Nuu-chah-nulth people for thousands of years. Many place names in Port Alberni have a
Nuu-chah-nulth origin, such as Somass (washing), Kitsuksis (log across mouth of creek), Pacheena (foamy), and Nootka (go around). Ancient petroglyph carvings can be found at
Sproat Lake. The City of Port Alberni is named for Captain
Don Pedro de Alberní, a
Spanish officer, who commanded
Fort San Miguel at
Nootka Sound on
Vancouver Island's west coast from 1790 to 1792. Sproat Lake was named after Gilbert Sproat and Stamp Falls and Stamp River were named after Edward Stamp. Rogers Creek, which flows through the centre of Port Alberni, is named after Jeremiah Rogers who was the head logger for the British company Anderson, Anderson & Co. In March 1787, Captain
Charles William Barkley of the
Imperial Eagle, explored
Barkley Sound, which now bears his name. Barkley travelled with his 17-year-old bride,
Frances Barkley, the first European woman to visit what is now British Columbia.
Frances Barkley is also the name of one of the two vessels that makes trips down the Alberni Inlet from Port Alberni to
Bamfield and
Ucluelet. The other, since retired, was the MV
Lady Rose. In 1849, the British established the
Colony of Vancouver Island under Governor
James Douglas. The island had been claimed by both Spain and Great Britain, but a treaty was made between them designating the island as British territory. The island colony was later merged with the Colony of British Columbia, which joined Canada in 1871. In 1856,
Adam Horne, a Scottish fur trader employed by the
Hudson's Bay Company, was directed to locate a land route across Vancouver Island. There were stories that the Indigenous people used a trail starting at Qualicum. Adam Horne found this trail leading to the Alberni Valley and it became known as the Horne Lake Trail. Many other settlers used this trail to get to the Alberni Valley. In 1860, the Anderson company, a shipping company from
London, England, took the advice of their Victoria agent Captain Edward Stamp and set up a sawmill operation. At the time, the American Civil War prevented the importation of timber from the southern United States.
Gilbert Sproat and
Edward Stamp transported men and machinery to Alberni. They received land grants from Governor
James Douglas and started running the Anderson sawmill at the mouth of the Somass River on May 22, 1861, at the rate of 14,000 board feet a day. The first mill in B.C. was built to export lumber. The original mill failed, but several others were established in the 1880s. The settlement of Alberni developed around the sawmill. In 1862, small-scale placer gold mining took place on China Creek; in the 1890s more gold mining took place along the Alberni Inlet at China Creek and Mineral Creek. Several gold veins were found. Exploration for gold continued over the years with peaks in the 1930s and 1960s. The subdistrict of Alberni had a population of 191 in 1891. In 1896, a new settlement was established to the south of Alberni, first known as New Alberni and later as Port Alberni. It was built around a new Canadian Pacific Navigation Company wharf at the foot of today's Argyle Street. In 1921, there were 998 people in Alberni. From 1900 until 1973, the Alberni Indian Residential School operated just north of Port Alberni on the west bank of the Somass River. The Alberni School is now considered to be part of a genocidal operation against the Indigenous people. The School, run by the Presbyterian and United Churches and the federal government, forcibly separated children from their families and communities so as to cut them off from their traditional culture. Children at the school were fed poorly, at one time deliberately as part of a malnutrition experiment, murdered, and abused in other ways. The residential school was closed in 1973 and in 2009 it was demolished.
Strength from Within is an art installation by
Connie Watts located in Port Alberni that commemorates survivors of and those whose people died at the Alberni School. The installation depicts two thunderbirds, adorned with West Coast designs, and a third without any cultural symbols to represent the horrors of the residential school era.
Port Alberni Mill opened as a
kraft pulp mill in 1946, followed by two
paper machines in 1957. The
1946 Vancouver Island earthquake was a 7.3
magnitude earthquake that struck at 10:15 a.m. on Sunday, June 23, 1946. The main shock
epicentre occurred in the
Forbidden Plateau area north of Port Alberni. While most of the large earthquakes in the
Vancouver area occur at
tectonic plate boundaries, the 1946 Vancouver Island earthquake was a
crustal event. Shaking was felt from
Portland, Oregon to
Prince Rupert, British Columbia. The earthquake is remembered as one of the most damaging earthquakes in the history of British Columbia. In 1955, the Alberni Athletics Senior-A Men's Basketball Team had an outstanding year. The Alberni Athletics won the Canadian Senior Basketball Championships at home. A young
Jim Robson honed his sports reporting skills doing the play-by-play on radio station
CJAV. The Alberni Athletics were inducted into the
BC Sports Hall of Fame in 2001. In 1964, Port Alberni was hit by a
tsunami during the
Good Friday earthquake. The water rose about in a minute reaching above the high-water mark. About 375 homes were damaged and 55 were washed away, however there were no injuries or fatalities. In 1967, the neighbouring towns of Alberni (on the north) and Port Alberni (on the south) amalgamated to form the city of Port Alberni. Today, the town is a hub for local, regional, and provincial government, and its West Coast General Hospital provides services to west coast communities like Bamfield,
Tofino, and Ucluelet. Currently, Port Alberni is in the process of developing itself as a tourism destination, making use of the natural environment of the area. ==Geography==