Jag, Inc

Business Hours

  • {mb_locations_monday}
  • {mb_locations_tuesday}
  • {mb_locations_wednesday}
  • {mb_locations_thursday}
  • {mb_locations_friday}
  • {mb_locations_saturday}
  • {mb_locations_sunday}

People Love {mb_page_name}

{mb_page_rating}

0 reviews

About forestry service, 83811, Clark Fork, ID, US, Idaho

Bonners Ferry (Kutenai language: ʔaq̓anqmi) is the largest city in and the county seat of Boundary County, Idaho, United States. The population was 2,543 at the 2010 census. The Porthill-Rykerts Border Crossing connects Bonners Ferry with Creston, British Columbia, Canada, on the Kootenay River. The Eastport–Kingsgate Border Crossing connects Bonners Ferry with Yahk, British Columbia, Canada, on the Moyie River. == History == When gold was discovered in the East Kootenays of British Columbia in 1863, thousands of prospectors from all over the West surged northward over a route that became known as the Wildhorse Trail. Edwin Bonner, a merchant from Walla Walla, Washington, established a ferry in 1864 where the trail crossed the broad Kootenai River. In 1875, Richard Fry, and his Sinixt wife, Justine Su-steel Fry, leased the business, but the location retained the name of the original founder and later became the town of Bonners Ferry. Before the gold rush, only a few visitors had come to the region; one of the first was explorer David Thompson, a cartographer for the North West Company. Thompson and four fellow fur traders arrived in 1808 to trade with the Lower Kootenais. The local natives gave Thompson's party dried fish and moss bread.

Neighborhoods in Bonners Ferry, Idaho

Things to do in forestry service, 83811, Clark Fork, ID, US, Idaho

Directions

forestry service, 83811, Clark Fork, ID, US Reviews

More Forestry Services

Drag and zoom on the map to display the list of company available