Cache Creek, British Columbia
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Cache Creek is a historic transportation junction and incorporated village Template:Convert northeast of Vancouver in British Columbia, Canada. It is on the Trans-Canada Highway in the province of British Columbia at a junction with Highway 97. The same intersection and the town that grew around it was at the point on the Cariboo Wagon Road where a branch road, and previously only a trail, led east to Savona's Ferry on Kamloops Lake. This community is also the point at which a small stream, once known as Riviere de la Cache, joins the Bonaparte River.<ref name="akrigg">Akrigg, Helen B. and Akrigg, G.P.V; 1001 British Columbia Place Names; Discovery Press, Vancouver 1969, 1970, 1973, p. 35</ref>
History
Template:Stack The name is derived, apparently, from a cache or buried and hidden supply and trade goods depot used by the fur traders of either the Hudson's Bay Company or its rival the North West Company.<ref>Template:Cite bcgnis</ref> In 1891, the Cache Creek subdistrict had a population of 697.<ref>Government of Canada (Department of Agriculture, Census Branch). Census of Canada, 1890-1891, 1893, table 2.</ref> Although it was first incorporated as a Local District municipality with the name Cache Creek in 1959, the name has been associated with this community since long before incorporation. The Cache Creek post office was established in 1868.<ref>Template:Cite bcgnis</ref>
Although still very active with traffic, Cache Creek was extremely busy for a few decades before the Trans-Canada Highway was superseded by the newer and shorter Coquihalla Highway, which bypasses the Fraser and Thompson Canyons between Hope and Kamloops via Merritt, about Template:Convert southeast.
The nearby fossil locality, the McAbee fossil beds, is noted for the wide diversity of Eocene plants and animals preserved in the shale, including the extinct plants Dillhoffia<ref name="M&P2008">Template:Cite journal</ref> and Trochodendron drachukii.<ref name="Pigg2007">Template:Cite journal</ref> The town lends its name to significant geological features, dating back to the Carboniferous, whose rocks are exposed in the area, Cache Creek terrane and Cache Creek Ocean.
The town was evacuated during the 2017 Elephant Hill fire, which burned over several outlying communities nearby. Damage to the forest ecosystem has led to increased and destructive flooding in the town.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
Demographics
In the 2021 Census of Population conducted by Statistics Canada, Cache Creek had a population of 969 living in 471 of its 522 total private dwellings, a change of Template:Percentage from its 2016 population of 963. With a land area of Template:Cvt, it had a population density of Template:Pop density in 2021.<ref name="2021census">Template:Cite web</ref>
Media
The village of Cache Creek is also served by a community television station (run by the Ash-Creek Television Society), CH4472 in the neighbouring town of Ashcroft on VHF channel 4 (with an effective radiated power of 74 watts at Template:Convert above ground level), with a repeater (CH4473 on VHF 8, with an effective radiated power of 49 watts at Template:Convert) in Cache Creek, British Columbia. The town is also served by CFMA-FM 105.9, a community radio station run by the Ash-Creek Television Society.