Midway is a small community that is rich in history. It also offers two large parks, curling, ice and hockey rinks, playground, baseball field and large open space for just enjoying the sun, romping and playing or that game of tag football.
* Frank Carpenter Memorial Riverfront Park is located on the beautiful Kettle River. It is a popular park for locals and tourists. There is a gazebo that is often used for weddings, family reunions and other local events. You can hike or bike the trails around Midway, tubing and fishing on the Kettle River, or just enjoy a warm summer day with a picnic lunch. Camping is near by the park.
“ABOUT MIDWAY
In the 1800's, fur traders, prospectors and white settlers began moving through Midway’s sun-drenched valley. Until then, it had been a traditional hunting ground and place for gathering the medicinal rock rose roots.
When gold was discovered at Rock Creek in 1859, and U.S. miners came swarming into the region, Governor Douglas saw that an east-west route through the interior was vital for maintaining British control. He dispatched an energetic young engineer named Edgar Dewdney who hacked out a four-foot-wide road from Hope to Rock Creek in 1860; then with the discovery of gold at Wild Horse Creek in the Kootenays, Dewdney again tackled the task and pushed the Dewdney Trail on through the Midway valley in the spring of 1865.
By 1884, Midway had its first resident, a Mr. Henry Nicholson, and by 1889 Louis Eholt owned a thriving ranch on what is now the town site of Midway, known then as the Eholts. A Montreal-based company bought this site for a smelter in 1892, but that plan fell through, and a year later the town site was plotted. The new town's original name, Boundary City, was changed in 1894 to Midway.
In 1895, the first provincial policeman was posted here and in 1897 Canada Customs arrived. In 1900, Midway became the western terminus of the Columbia and Western Railway, (a subsidiary of the CPR). A copy of the Midway Advance Newspaper of June 17, 1901 carries advertising for five hotels, a meat market, dry goods store, pharmacy, bakery, wagon and carriage builder, stationery shop, sawmill, and a stagecoach company in the burgeoning little town.
The decade following, saw feuding railroad companies, litigation, a series of railroad plans that were short lived, railroad ventures, and violence all centered in Midway. In November 1905, a pitched battle with shots fired was waged between CPR workers and a crew of the Vancouver, Victoria, and Eastern Railway (known as the Washington and Great Northern Railway in the U.S.) which was determined to run a line north from Spokane into Midway. Expropriation was granted the V.V. & E., and in 1905 Midway had its second railroad. Then on July 5, 1910, the sod was turned on yet another railroad venture - the Kettle Valley Line - to link Midway to the west coast, with Andrew McCulloch as chief engineer. The first eastbound passenger train left Midway on May 31, 1915; the last passenger train on the Kettle Valley Line passed through Midway on January 17, 1964.
Today, although the tracks have been removed, you can still catch a glimpse of a bygone era. Stand on the original platform and imagine the hustle and bustle of the old train station, now converted into the Kettle Valley Museum.
Gold and the railroads shaped Midway's past; service industries, the lumber industry and tourism shape Midway today.”