Kilbella Bay
Feature Type:Bay - Water area in an indentation of the shoreline of a sea, lake, or large river.
Status: Official
Name Authority: BC Geographical Names Office
Relative Location: Head of Rivers Inlet, NE of McAllister Point, Range 2 Coast Land District
Latitude-Longitude: 51°41'59"N, 127°21'00"W at the approximate centre of this feature.
Datum: WGS84
NTS Map: 92M/11
Origin Notes and History:

Adopted 31 March 1924 in the 18th Report and reported to be confirmed 6 April 1950 on 92NW.

Source: BC place name cards & correspondence, and/or research by BC Chief Geographer & Geographical Names Office staff.

Kilbella means “long river” in the Oowekyala language, which is spoken by members of the Wuikinuxv or Oweekeno First Nation (the name of the adjacent Chuckwalla R, by comparison, means “Short River”). The Wuikinuxv First Nation reserve at this location, however, is spelled Kiltala. This confusion over the spelling of First Nation names may explain why the cannery (and, later, the logging camp) located on this bay at the mouth of the river was named Kildala. Built in 1906 by George Dawson and Alfred Buttimer, with Dan Grooves as manager, Kildala Cannery was sold in 1925 to the Canadian Fishing Co. It ceased canning in the 1940s but was used as a gillnet camp until 1960. The Kilbella and Chuckwalla rivers are home to famous races of Chinook salmon.

Source: Scott, Andrew; "The Encyclopedia of Raincoast Place Names"; Harbour Publishing, Madeira Park, 2009, page 307.

Various spellings of the name have been recorded: "Kildella" and "Kildalla" as reported to be labelled on BC Reference Map 12; and "Kildala."

Source: BC place name cards & correspondence, and/or research by BC Chief Geographer & Geographical Names Office staff.