British Columbia is just North of three states Washington, Idaho, And Montana
Montana shares its northern border with the Canadian provinces of British Columbia, Alberta, and Saskatchewan.
Yukon and the Northwest Territories border British Columbia on the north. Nunavut is also north of BC, but it doesn't border it. All three are territories, not provinces. No provinces are north of BC.
The three choices open to the colony of british columbia in 870-1871 were that British Columbia could remain a British colony, the colony could join the united states and that British columbia could join the canadian confederation.
There are three states that have British Columbia on their northern border: Washington, Idaho and Montana.
To the north Montana borders Canadian provinces British Columbia, Alberta, and Saskatchewan.
Washington, IIdaho and Montana
Washington is bordered by Oregon to the south, Idaho to the east, the Canadian province of British Columbia to the north, and the Pacific Ocean to the west.
Canada does not have states. We have provinces and territories. The three largest in order are Quebec, British Columbia, Ontario.
The time difference between Canada's westernmost province, British Columbia, and the U.S. capital, Washington, D.C., on the North American east coast, is three hours. Washington, D.C., is three hours ahead of British Columbia. British Columbia is in the Pacific time zone, and Washington, D.C., is in the eastern time zone.
Idaho, Wyoming, North Dakota, South Dakota Montana shares a border with North Dakota, South Dakota, Idaho, and Wyoming. Additionally, it borders the Canadian provinces of British Columbia, Alberta, and Saskatchewan.
Three Canadian provinces share their southern border with the United States from west to east: British Columbia, Alberta, and Saskatchewan. British Columbia is the westernmost province, followed by Alberta and then Saskatchewan. Each province has a border that runs along the US states of Alaska, Montana, and North Dakota, respectively.