- Clayburn, Abbotsford
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Clayburn is a small historic village now located with the City of Abbotsford, in the Central Fraser Valley of British Columbia. Largely surrounded by farmland and green fields, on the northern slopes of Sumas Mountain's eastern ridge, the historic centre is situated immediately north and east of the city of Abbotsford's urban sprawl.
The settlement is known locally for its early twentieth-century brickworks and brick worker's cottages which line its main street.
The name "Clayburn" is used because in the late 1920s Clayburn was a large producer of clay bricks, and had various factories, some of which still exist today. Clay-mining and brick-making operations were started by John Morton, one of the so-called "Three Greenhorns", whose "Brickmaker's Claim" is now the West End of Vancouver and was thought originally to have been commercially viable for porcelain clay. Most bricks used in British Columbia historically came from the Clayburn Mine.
See also
- Kilgard, British Columbia
References
Coordinates: 49°05′00″N 122°16′00″W / 49.0833333°N 122.2666667°W
Categories:- Neighbourhoods in Abbotsford, British Columbia
- Mining communities in British Columbia
- Ghost towns in British Columbia
- British Columbia geography stubs
- Canada ghost town stubs
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