The original building on the site was the
Post House, built on the north side of the highway in 1867 and moved to its present site in 1892. From 1875 until June of 1885 the building was operated as the "108 Hotel" by Agnus MacVee, Jim MacVee, and her brother-in-law Al Riley. Also in 1867 a log shed was built on the north side of the highway and moved to the present site in 1880, becoming the
Store & Telegraph office. Further additions in 1880 were the
Ice House and a Blacksmith Shop. The
Small Log Barn was added in 1892, as was the wood framed
Blacksmith Shop and the
Bunkhouse. In 1903 the site was bought by Captain Geoffrey Lancelot Watson and in 1904 this ceased to be a Roadhouse and stopping place when Captain Watson turned it into a ranch, raising purebred Clydesdale horses and Highland Cattle. In 1908 the large
Clydesdale Barn was erected. This log barn is valued as the largest log barn left in Canada.
The Store and Telegraph Office was built on the property in 1880 by William Walker. Actually, it was rebuilt, rather than built. It was one of the buildings originally to stand on the north side of the highway. Built in 1867 as a log shed, it was dismantled, the logs hauled and reassembled on its present site. That was one real advantage of building with logs - the building could be dismantled and reassembled any number of times.
"
looking for gold buried by Agnus MacVee", mentioned below, is unlikely if the building was actually moved in 1880. MacVee, her husband and her son in law purportedly
killed over 50 miners for their gold between 1875 and 1885, not being found out until 1885. No one knew about their murderous ways until 1885, when the North West Mounted Police discovered Agnus and son in law loading her husband's body onto a wagon after she had poisoned him. While a second sign on the building states a construction year of 1885, we'll go with the "1880" of the original sign and what's stated on the website.
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1903 1880 WILLIAM WALKER PRE-EMPTED 320 acres D.L. 76. He was a telegraph operator, stockraiser, dairy farmer, trader and 'BX Agent'.
- 1880 Built log dairy **ICE HOUSE** on this site.
- 1880 Tore down "1867" Roper log shed" north of the road and re-assembled it on this site for the ** store and ** TELEGRAPH OFFICE ** Rumor has it, he was looking for gold buried by Agnus MacVee.
- 1880 Black Smith Shop
- 1891 Walker sold the 108 on December 30 to Stephen Tingley for $320.00.
- From the 108 Mile House Heritage Site
Here's how the 108 Mile House Heritage Site came to be.
The beginning was 1969 and we were called the 108 Mile ‘Recreational’ Ranch. The developer, Block Brothers Realty, had a vision to create an ‘outdoor playground’, a five stage 26,800 acre seasonal recreational resort. The Agricultural Land Reserve prevented the last four stages from proceeding, but luckily much of the recreational infrastructure had been put in place first. We are now 1,140 permanent homes at the 108, with a population of approx 2,900. The treasure of it is that we have recreational facilities for a development of about 7,000 homes. The developers are gone and we now control our own destiny through our 108 Mile Ranch Community Association.
From 108 Ranch
In 1979 the Block Brothers sold the seven acre site to the 100 Mile House Historical Society for $1, it took over the 108 Mile House Heritage Site and continues to operate it today.