Old Alexandra Bridge in Fraser Valley, British Columbia
The Fraser River played a critical role in the history of British Columbia. It was the site of the gold discoveries in the 1850s that led to the creation of the province, and became a transportation corridor to the rest of Canada. Steamboats could travel as far as Yale, a gold camp downstream from this point, and then a set of precarious roads continued upstream to the Cariboo gold fields. These roads were largely obliterated when the Canadian Pacific Railroad was built through the canyon in the 1880s. This is the “second Alexandra Bridge,” which replaced an earlier version that had been closed in 1912 for safety reasons. Completed in 1926, it lay on the Fraser Canyon Highway, which was officially re-opened in 1927. The rise of automotive travel by the 1920s had led to pressure for a new highway through Fraser Canyon. This Alexandra bridge was decommissioned in 1964, being replaced by the new Alexandra (arch) Bridge on the Trans-Canada Highway, which became the new automobile route up Fraser Canyon. The old Alexandra Bridge has been recognized as a Provincial Heritage Site and is open to non-motorized traffic. It is undergoing limited renovation for safety reasons that preserves the historic flavor. The bridge was named after Princess Alexandra of Denmark, who married Prince Albert Edward in 1863 (long before he became King Edward VII in 1901).

The Fraser River played a critical role in the history of British Columbia. It was the site of the gold discoveries in the 1850s that led to the creation of the province, and became a transportation corridor to the rest of Canada. Steamboats could travel as far as Yale, a gold camp downstream from this point, and then a set of precarious roads continued upstream to the Cariboo gold fields. These roads were largely obliterated when the Canadian Pacific Railroad was built through the canyon in the 1880s.
This is the “second Alexandra Bridge,” which replaced an earlier version that had been closed in 1912 for safety reasons. Completed in 1926, it lay on the Fraser Canyon Highway, which was officially re-opened in 1927. The rise of automotive travel by the 1920s had led to pressure for a new highway through Fraser Canyon.
This Alexandra bridge was decommissioned in 1964, being replaced by the new Alexandra (arch) Bridge on the Trans-Canada Highway, which became the new automobile route up Fraser Canyon. The old Alexandra Bridge has been recognized as a Provincial Heritage Site and is open to non-motorized traffic. It is undergoing limited renovation for safety reasons that preserves the historic flavor.
The bridge was named after Princess Alexandra of Denmark, who married Prince Albert Edward in 1863 (long before he became King Edward VII in 1901).