Boundary-Waneta Border Crossing

The Boundary-Waneta Border Crossing connects the town of Northport, Washington with Trail, British Columbia on the Canada–US border. Access is via Waneta Road on the American side and British Columbia Highway 22A on the Canadian side. Canada has operated a customs office at or near this crossing since 1865, initially to inspect vessels arriving via the Columbia River, then to inspect trains with the completion of the Nelson and Fort Sheppard Railway (N&FS) in 1893.[1]

Boundary-Waneta Border Crossing
US Border Inspection Station at Boundary, Washington
Location
CountryUnited States; Canada
Location
Coordinates49.000742°N 117.62505°W / 49.000742; -117.62505
Details
Opened1865
US Phone(509) 732-6674
Canadian Phone(250) 367-9656
Hours9:00AM - 5:00PM
Website
http://www.cbp.gov/contact/ports/oroville-wa

N&FS had misspelled Fort Shepherd (at this BC location, but on the opposite bank of the Columbia). In 1892, a hotel and restaurant were built, and the surveyed townsite advertised as Kootenay City. After correcting survey errors that placed some lots south of the border, the development was relaunched as Fort Sheppard in 1893. The separate towns of Waneta and Fort Sheppard, north and south of the railway bridge across the mouth of the Pend-d'Oreille River, merged into the former after a few years, and Boundary City appeared on the US side. The Fort Sheppard Hotel, having been abandoned three decades, was demolished in the early 1950s.[2]

A border crossing for motor vehicles was created in 1945, when the railway built a new bridge parallel to the existing one, which was repurposed for single lane vehicle traffic.[3] The first road border inspection posts were opened on the Canadian side in 1975, and the US in 1978. In 2013, the US built a new border station a few hundred yards south of the earlier facility.

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