Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Kitwanga" in English language version.
A reproduction of one of the more imposing of the totem poles at Kitwanga is to be seen on the new Canadian ten-cent postage stamp
L.A. Bahler, an engineer on the Canadian National Railways, met with serious injuries to his scalp at Kitwanga...
The engine, baggage and express cars were derailed at a point one mile east of Woodcock…
…section gang worker was killed while scaling a rock bluff one mile east of Andimaul, near Kitwanga. The victim lost his footing and was hit by a large boulder that came loose above him.
…the recent train derailment near Kitwanga.
Bob MacDonald of Telkwa was severely injured in an accident near Kitwanga…acting conductor…slipped and fallen under a boxcar while switching. He was rushed to Mills Memorial Hospital in Terrace where one of his legs was amputated above the knee.
…near Andimaul Creek, just east of Kitwanga …A tanker-trailer carrying 10,000 gallons of paving oil parted from its rig…and plunged down a steep slope before coming to rest upside down in the river.
An R.C.A.F. pilot stationed at Terrace was killed at Kitwanga…when his plane struck a ferry cable…
Gitxsan nation members…set up camp…a few kilometres east of Kitwanga…The group's plan is to harvest sockeye salmon and to sell them from a highway stand to non-native passerby...
Kitwanga Lumber was started by the Hobenshield family in 1963 before being sold to the now-defunct Skeena Cellulose. It then came under the control of New Skeena Forest Products also now defunct, when it bought Skeena Cellulose. A company called Westex Alberta then struck a deal to buy the mill from New Skeena but it is now owned by Baljit Gill of Surrey.
Hudson's Bay Company…new post established by the company on the edge of the Kitwanga reserve.
…Bay…accepted the $1 purchase price of the store from Kitwanga band manager…The Kitwanga Bay was established in the 1920s after Hudson Bay governor Charles Winston Sales made a trip through the area in 1920. At that time the store was established mainly for the fur trade business and has served the residents of Kitwanga for groceries and hardware until its recent closure.
The Regional District of Kitimat-Stikine is undertaking a project this summer to provide house numbering and street addresses for Kitwanga.
…opening the $1,350,000 building,,,This addition will enable students of grades 8, 9 and 10 from the area to attend where formerly they were bussed to Hazelton Secondary.
The Kitwanga Elementary-Junior Secondary School marks its 10th anniversary…also marks the graduation of Grade 10 students, the first class to start and complete at the school.