Monument 116B - Osoyoos, BC
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member ScroogieII
N 49° 00.003 W 119° 27.827
11U E 319799 N 5430386
Monument 116B is second from the west of four border monuments to be found at the Osoyoos Canada - U.S. border crossing.
Waymark Code: WM12R8Q
Location: British Columbia, Canada
Date Posted: 07/06/2020
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member Ernmark
Views: 2

Monument 116B, on the east side of the roadway leading into the U.S., is near the southwest corner of the Canadian Border Inspection Station at Osoyoos. Originally there were two border monuments at this border crossing, Monuments 116A & 116B. They were a special type of monument (see description below), installed in pairs between 1928 and 1937 on each side of major border crossings.

With expansion of border crossing facilities here several years ago the roads were realigned, necessitating that Monuments 116A & 116B be moved and placed on new bases in 2008. Meanwhile, Monuments 116C & 116D were added at a new roadway to the east in 2005.

This type of monument is an ornamental concrete obelisk set in a plain concrete base. The surface of the obelisk or shaft is finished in light-colored granular quartz aggregate, washed free of cement so that the color and texture of the coarse granular aggregate shows clean. The shaft is 6 feet 6 inches in length and projects 5 to 5½ feet above the base. The inscriptions on the shaft of the monument are cast in black aggregate flush with the surface. They read vertically upward and are as follows: On the side facing the highway "INTERNATIONAL BOUNDARY", on the side away from the highway "TREATY OF 1925", on the north side "CANADA", on the south side "UNITED STATES."
From the International Boundary Commission Report - 1937, Pages 120-23


Name			Province 		NTS map sheet	Municipal
BC-USA 142 IBC	British Columbia	82F.002.3.1	27-ROSSLAND
TOWN
Marker Type
UNKNOWN

SIT ON THE EAST SIDE AT THE CROSSING POINT OF THE WENATCHEE-PRINCETON HIGHWAY. REPORT - INT. BDY. COMMISSION. PAGES 117 & 146 FOR DESCRIPTION SEE REPORT PAGE 121. S Howard 1988 Princeton-Hedley Mapping control Old position was found to be in error in 1956 no change to lat. old long. was 119 27 39.070 This error was not corrected here until Dec.1989
From MASCOT
The International Boundary Line between the United States of America and the Dominion of Canada was adopted under article II of the Convention of London of 1818, under article II of the Webster-Ashburton Treaty of 1842, and under article I of the treaty of 1846, and was modified by articles I and II of the treaty of 1925. The boundary begins at the eastern shore of Georgia Strait and follows the original astronomic determination of the parallel of 49° of north latitude to a point in Lake of the Woods. The International Boundary from the Gulf of Georgia (Georgia Strait) to the Northwesternmost Point of Lake of the Woods is marked by 959 monuments set on the boundary line. The part of the line which follows the astronomic determination of the forty-ninth parallel is commonly called the 49th parallel land boundary. It is 1270.2 miles in length.

The boundary was originally surveyed and marked between 1857 and 1861. In lesser populated areas it was sparsely monumented, so by 1898 questions as to the adequacy of the then present markings of this boundary began to arise. A complete remapping and monumenting of the boundary lying west of the Rocky Mountains took place from 1903 to 1907. From the Pacific Ocean to the summit of the Rocky Mountains there are 272 monuments.

East of the summit of the Rocky Mountains remapping and monumenting took place between 1908 and 1914. The monuments from the summit to Lake of the Woods total 641. Finally, the treaty of 1908 was adopted, providing for the more complete definition and demarcation of the International Boundary between the United States and Canada from the Atlantic Ocean to the Pacific Ocean.

West of the summit of the Rocky Mountains the boundary line is marked by aluminum-bronze monuments, set in concrete bases, the distance between monuments not exceeding 3 miles, save in very exceptional cases where 4 miles should not be exceeded. The same protocol applies east of the summit of the Rocky Mountains to the North Fork of the Milk River. From there east to Lake of the Woods one-piece hollow cast-iron monuments, filled with concrete, identical in form with those set in 1872-1875, mark the boundary at distances apart not exceeding 2 miles except in a few exceptional cases, where 2¼ miles should not be exceeded.
Paraphrased from the International Boundary Commission Report - 1937
Photo goes Here
Type of survey mark: Concrete obelisk

What indicators are near the mark to help people identify where it is located?:
Monument 116B is near the southwest corner of the Canadian Border Inspection Station.


What property is this mark defining?:
Canada - U.S. Boundary


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