The early
pack trail was northward from Wasa via Wolf Creek Rd, Wasa Sheep Creek Rd,
Premier Lake, Sheep Creek (
Lussier River), Top of the World,
Whiteswan Lake, and the
White River to its mouth. A wagon road northward from
Galbraith's Ferry opened in 1886. The route initially retained the section northward via Premier Lake, before heading southwestward to Skookumchuck. Stopping places for horse changes, meals, and possible overnight rests were every . In summertime, the Golden–Fort Steele passenger service encompassed riverboat, tramway and stage modes. In 1892, the Upper Columbia Navigation & Tramway Co opened the tramway which connected Columbia Lake and
Windermere Lake. In wintertime, when river ice shut down river traffic, a stage traversed the whole route. By 1896, a ferry operated across the Kootenay just north of Wasa. Assumedly, the ferry continued until the bridge opened. During an overnight stop at Wasa in 1897, the mail bag, en route to Fort Steele, was robbed and about $1,100 taken. The thief, who was captured within six hours, received a 10-year sentence but served only five years. That year, the tramway permanently closed. Passengers transferred to a stage for the
Windermere–Fort Steele leg. To assist his logging operations, Nils Hanson built a toll bridge in 1901 below the southern end of the lake. The
drawbridge, which had a draw, cost $5,000. In the 1920s, a cross-river cable ferry operated to the south of Wasa. The 1928 opening of the Skookumchuck bridge diverted travel immediately north of Wasa from the east shore of the Kootenay to the west one. Housed in relief camps during the
Great Depression, workers reconstructed the road to Kimberley. In 1940, paving was completed on the highway from the
Canada–US border via Kimberley to
Radium Hot Springs. In 1946, an overweight logging truck collapsed a section of Hanson's bridge at Wasa. Around 1950, the rail bridge was planked for dual highway use. In late 1955, a narrow two-lane-log
stringer-trestle constructed by highways crew opened. Located at the road junction north of Wasa, the cost was $20,000. In 1979, the new four-span concrete replacement cost $1.9 million. ==Railways==