Sunnyside, Surrey

Sunnyside, Surrey Sunnyside, Surrey is one of the popular Beach located in , listed under Residence in Surrey , Landmark & Historical Place in Surrey ,

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Sunnyside is a neighbourhood of South Surrey, which in turn is a region of Surrey, British Columbia, Canada.HistoryOrigin of the nameThere is no historical significance to the name, other than that its location is on the sunnier, south slope of the "uplands" of Surrey, on the Semiahmoo peninsula.First Nations and the Semiahmoo TrailAs traders, the original Coast Salish peoples since the last Ice Age established communities at the mouths of the local rivers, the Nicomekl, Serpentine, and Campbell Rivers, which connected them to inland communities.As the forebears of the present Semiahmoo First Nation faced raids from northern First Nations' groups, they used what came to be known as the Sunnyside area as access to a fort built in the 1830s on what is now the Ocean Park bluffs.The Semiahmoo also used a route across the Sunnyside area of South Surrey to cross the ridge between the Campbell River to the south and Mud Bay to the north, where the Nicomekl and Serpentine were. By 1890 this was called the Semiahmoo Trail.Telegraph Trail (The Collins Overland Telegraph)The Telegraph Trail was built along this route in 1865 meant as part of a telegraph linkage from the mainland-USA through Alaska and Siberia to Europe. Initially it was known as The Collins Overland Trail, and the first message carried on it to New Westminster was to report the assassination of Abraham Lincoln in April 1865. The line reached New Westminster from the USA in June 1865. It also provided access from the Nicomekl River a few miles north, to the Boundary Commission Camp located at the mouth of the Little Campbell River at the Canada–United States border. The Boundary Commission Camp had been established in 1858.

Map of Sunnyside, Surrey