| Masset |
Masset
Harbour on Delkatla Inlet |
The small
village of Masset is the largest town on the Queen Charlotte
Islands. Located at the northern end of Graham Island, the
largest of the more than 150 significant islands that comprise
the Queen Charlotte Islands/Haida Gwaii, Masset is the northern
gateway to North Beach and Naikoon Provincial Park.
The
small community is one of the two incorporated settlements
on the islands, incorporated in 1961, and is the oldest
municipality on Haida Gwaii.
Originally
known as Graham City, it was named in June 1909 after
the president of the Graham Steamship, owned by the Coal
and Lumber Company and Benjamin Graham. Graham City eventually
became known as New Masset, as it was located a few kilometres
south of the Haida village of Old Masset.
A
story told in Haida today of how the name "Masheet" came
into existence relates that one of the first ships to
come into Masset Harbour anchored off what is now the
Village of Masset. One of the officers, a man named Masseta,
died and was buried on the little island off which the
ship lay anchored. The Haida named the island after him,
but finding it difficult to pronounce, they corrupted
the word to "mah-sh-t". From this, George M. Dawson,
a geologist and naturalist well known in the vicinity,
named the island "Maast" in 1878.
A
Canadian Forces Base was established here in 1971, operating
until its downsizing in 1997, when the base houses were
sold off to interested investors and homeowners. Logging
and fishing are the main industries in Masset today,
with tourism becoming an increasingly important industry.
Population: 965
Location: Masset is located on the northern
shore of Graham Island. The Queen Charlotte Islands
are accessed by ferry from Prince
Rupert to the Skidegate Landing Ferry Terminal
on Graham Island, by air from Vancouver to
Sandspit (770 km), and by air from Prince Rupert
to Sandspit on Moresby Island. Masset is located
at the northern end of Graham Island and there
are also direct flights to the Masset Municipal
Airport from Vancouver and Prince Rupert. Other
commercial air services (including float planes
and helicopters) are available at Sandspit, Queen
Charlotte City and Masset. A 20-minute ferry
ride connects Graham and Moresby Islands.
View
a map of
the Queen Charlotte Islands. |
- Visit St.
Paul's Anglican Church, a heritage building built
in 1912, and still in use today. The Anglican Church
had established a mission at the old village in 1876.
- The Old
Schoolhouse was built alongside the St. Paul's
Anglican Church in about 1912 and used as the schoolhouse
until the early 1940s, when it was sold and moved
to its present location near the church. Today it
is a private residence.
- At
the west end of Collison Avenue is the The Old Hospital,
a heritage building dating back to 1914. It was used
as a hospital and doctor's residence until the 1920s,
serving the settlements of Buckley Bay and Naden Harbour.
During the 1930s it was used as a residence, later
a school, a teacherage, and the School District's Resource
Centre.
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Crab
Traps stacked in Masset Harbour |
Take
a stroll down to the Government Wharf and watch
the comings and goings, with boats docking, fishermen
preparing for trips or unloading their catches - there's
always something of interest happening.
- The
beautiful Masset Cemetery on Tow Hill Road is
well worth a visit. The graves are marked by mounds
of moss planted with flowering bulbs in a peaceful
setting of trees and shrubs.
- A fish
canning and freezing plant located on the east
shore of Masset Sound is a significant source of
employment in the community, and a hive of activity
during the fishing season. With the downturn in salmon
fisheries, the fish plant in Masset was facing hundreds
of lay-offs until they switched to processing the
lowly Dogfish, locally abundant and a source of high
value by-products. The processing plant offers custom
processing, vacuum packing, smoking, freezing and
shipping for locally caught sport fish. Fresh or
frozen fish and crabs are also sold.
- The
abandoned Haida village of Yan, on the west
shore of the mouth of Masset Inlet, is a 30-minute
boat ride from Old Masset. The large village of seventeen
houses built along the shoreline was established in
the late eighteenth century, and occupied by two Haida
clans - the Eagles and the Ravens - before the villagers
abandoned the site and moved back to Masset. Tours
by boat can be arranged at the Visitor Information
Centre.
- Beachcombing near
Masset and along North Beach can be very rewarding
for those seeking to combine the excitement of searching
for treasures with the exercise of hiking along the
vast expanse of beach. Top treasures include Japanese
glass fishing floats, sperm whale teeth, shells, sand
dollars, and agate gemstones. Beachcombing in
the Queen Charlotte Islands.
- The
Dixon Entrance Maritime Museum Society and the Village
of Masset will restore and remodel a heritage building
donated by the Village of Masset. The building will
be restored to its historical style (circa 1914) and
remodeled to house the maritime collection. The museum
will be an integral partner with two other existing
museums on the islands. Each museum has concentrated
on one or two areas of expertise to develop its own
individual theme: Haida culture and natural history
at the Haida Gwaii Museum; forestry and its history
at the Port Clements Museum; and, now, maritime culture
and history at the Dixon Entrance Maritime Museum.
- The
largest log barge in the world operates in Masset
Inlet and Masset Sound. The self-propelled and self-dumping
barge, the Haida Monarch, is 129 metres (423
ft) long and 26 meters (85 feet) wide, and can transport
15,000 tons of felled trees per load - equal to the
contents of 400 logging trucks, or 12,000 telephone
poles. The self-loading barges are fitted with enormous
cranes and water tanks that are flooded during offloading,
causing the barge to list and dump its load into the
water, to be manoeuvered into log sorting grounds by
tugs. The smaller Haida Brave is 121 metres
(397 ft) long and 25 metres (82 ft) wide, with a load
capacity of 10,000 tons.
- Take
a walk through the Delkatla Wildlife Sanctuary,
a refuge for 150 different species of both migrating
and resident birds, including bald eagles, great blue
herons and Canada geese. The once endangered Trumpeter
Swan winters here in small numbers, and the Sandhill
Crane does its stately dance in the spring. There are
observation towers and several trails through the refuge,
starting from points along Trumpeter Drive, and from
the gates along Cemetery Road. Wildlife
Viewing in the Queen Charlotte Islands.
- Golf: The
delightful oceanfront Dixon Entrance Golf & Country
Club is located on Tow Hill Road, 3 miles (5 km) from
Masset. One of two golf courses on the Queen Charlotte
Islands, the 9-hole public course is signposted from
the highway and at the road entrance. Golf
Vacations in British Columbia.
- Agate
Beach near Tow Hill offers a campground and great
beachcombing - watch out for agates, glass balls,
driftwood and shells. Visitors can get splashed at
the Blow Hole or climb 109-metre high Tow
Hill.
- The
fabulous North
Beach is a must-see on any visit to Masset, offering
clam digging for razor clams, crabbing, beachcombing,
and great hiking in Naikoon Provincial Park. Attractions
in North Beach include Tow Hill, a huge outcrop of
basalt pillars formed from volcanic rock, Agate Beach,
a campground at Agate Beach, Tow Hill Picnic Grounds
on the Hiellen River, a natural Blow Hole, and the
spectacular North Beach. There are two ecological reserves
near North Beach: Tow Hill Ecological Reserve and Rose
Spit Ecological Reserve. Golfers will be delighted
with the Dixon Entrance Golf Course, located right
on the oceanfront. At North Beach, according to Haida
legend, raven first brought people into the world by
coaxing them out of a clam shell, making North Beach
the site of creation.
- Camping: There
are two campgrounds in Naikoon Provincial Park, one
of which is located at North Beach on the Tow Hill
Road. Agate Beach Campground is equipped with
cooking shelters, pit toilets and water - located approximately
1.5 km west of the Tow Hill parking area. The interior
of the park remains undeveloped, and wilderness camping
is permitted throughout Naikoon Provincial Park. Camping in
the Queen Charlotte Islands.
- The
village of Masset maintains an RV Park & Campground opposite
the scenic Delkatla Wildlife Sanctuary. Open year round,
the campground is close to downtown and the beaches,
with 22 shaded gravel sites, some electric hook-ups,
firewood, water, hot coin showers, heated washrooms,
a laundry facility, and a summer kitchen. A sani-station
is available at the Visitor Information Centre 1 km
away. Some of the lowest rates in BC!
- For
something a little different, the adventurous can take
a 2-hour Llama Trek along North Beach. Ask for
details at the Visitor Information Centre.
- Two
trails start from the 109-metre high Tow Hill on
the north side of the park. The first leads to the
summit of Tow Hill, an easy 0.6-mile (1-km) uphill
climb. From the top of this unusual basalt tower, the
hiker is rewarded with expensive views of the ocean,
Graham Island, and even Alaska away in the distance.
A second trail leads 6 miles (10 km) to Cape Fife on
the east coast. From here it is possible to hook up
with the East Beach Trail, and hike a two-day,
13-mile (21-km) loop back to Tow Hill. It is from Tow
Hill that legend says the cruel Tow threw boulders
to slay the Haida warrior Hopi.
- Fishermen should
try their skills at Hiellen River, Sangan River or
Chown River. Fishing in
the Queen Charlotte Islands.
- Pure
Lake Provincial Park is a popular swimming and
picnicking spot encompassing and protecting Pure
Lake, located about 15 kilometres south of Masset
on the island highway. No camping facilities are
available at the park, but public toilets, picnic
tables and firepits are provided.
- Be
sure to join in the festivities of Masset Harbour
Days in May, a fun-filled weekend of family events
with a parade, kids events, ball tournament, bucket
rides, concessions, and a barbecue.
- There
are two large parks in the Charlottes: Gwaii Haanas
National Park in the south, and Naikoon
Provincial Park in the north, which attracts visitors
with its almost 100 km of beaches. Naikoon gets its
name from a corruption of the Haida term for 'long
nose,' which was the Haida name for Rose Spit, one
of the most prominent features in the park. Naikoon
Provincial Park is largely low and flat. Most of its
topographic features are formed by underlying glacial
deposits.
- Masset
Sound (25 miles/40 km long) is a fast-flowing
connection between Dixon Entrance, the body of water
between the Queen Charlottes and Prince of Wales
Island in Alaska, and the ecologically unique Masset
Inlet. The village of Massett is located at the mouth
of Masset Sound, and Port Clements sits on the eastern
shore of Masset Inlet, which leads into Juskatla
Inlet, and the logging camp of Juskatla on
the eastern shore.
- Five
minutes down the coastal road from Masset is the village
of Old
Masset (2 miles/3.2km), also known as Haida. Search
here for Haida treasure, or visit the Ed Jones Haida
Museum, located in an old schoolhouse, whose exhibits
include historical photographs, Haida art, and original
Queen Charlotte totem poles. Across from the museum
is a carving shed where Haida artists can be seen at
work during the summer months.
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Village
of Masset
Box
68
Masset, BC
VOT 1MO
Local Ph: (250) 626-3955
Fax: (250) 626-3968
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