A BRIEF HISTORY
 Like many towns and cities across Canada, Greenwood’s beginnings can be traced to mining activities. In 1891, Richard Thompson and William McCormick discovered the Mother Lode Mine of copper, gold, and silver in Deadwood, just three kilometres west of the city. Named in 1895 after the Greenwood mining camp in Colorado by merchant Robert Wood, it became a bustling community with a general store, hotels, assay offices, an opera house, and many other establishments before becoming incorporated as a city on July 12, 1897.
          
By 1899, Greenwood's population reached an historical high of 3,000, and the city was now accessible from the east by the Columbia and Western Railway. Despite the fire in the same year that destroyed several businesses, Greenwood continued to thrive. In 1901, the New York based British Columbia Copper Company established its smelter operation to service the Mother Lode Mine and surrounding ones, employing up to 450 men. A bustling city with a courthouse, one hundred businesses and two newspapers, Greenwood also became the seat of government for the Boundary.