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Strolling into Victoria’s Distinguished Past
Exploring B. C.’s Historic Capital
By Rick Millikan
British
Columbia’s capital exudes old world charm, proud traditions and extraordinary
history. Its natural beauty, mild climate and pleasant compactness make walking
the perfect way to explore Victoria’s intriguing past.
Staying at the elegant Gatsby Mansion, we were hot to trot.
Furnished and decorated with antiques, our room resonated with history. Its
window framed the inner harbour and two of Francis Rattenbury’s many extravagant
structures. Now housing the Royal London Waxworks, the old C.P.R. Steamship
Terminal resembled a Greek temple. Blanketed with glorious green ivy, the
chateau-style Empress Hotel embodies subdued elegance. Built on reclaimed
swampland in 1908, it offers hundred year-old traditions: rose garden lingers,
high tea rituals and tall, cool drinks in the Bengal Room.
The
imposing B.C. Legislative Building sprawls along the next block. Complete with
copper domes, a gilded George Vancouver atop the cupola and Greco-Roman central
fountain, this ornate home of government emanates imperial dreams of the 19th
century. Arriving from Britain at age 25, Rattenbury completed this commanding
stone edifice in 1897 and became Victoria’s most influential architect. Behind,
he added an Edwardian baroque Parliamentary Library akin to a vast mausoleum.
Statues of provincial explorers and administrators rest in niches on columned
facades, so many that an explanatory plaque was installed outside to identify
them. Medallions of Shakespeare, Milton and other classical scribes surround the
walls.
On
expansive lawns in front, a bronze Queen Victoria gazes over the harbour. Over a
century ago early electric lights outlined the emerging legislative building to
celebrate Queen Victoria’s Diamond Jubilee. Now an evening tradition, over
three thousand lights adorn this majestic structure. From the corner, since 1903
horse drawn carriages have provided tours into its distinguished neighborhoods
and famed park.
James
Bay represents the city’s oldest residential area. The gingerbread heritage
homes are colourfully restored. Emily Carr, Victoria’s distinguished eccentric
and B.C.’s most famous artist-writer was born in this neighbourhood. Educated in
San Francisco and Paris, the perennial “hippie” philosophized about life and
dramatically painted the soul of B.C.’s rainforest. Her home is open to the
public.
In 1850, Colonial governor James Douglas established
bordering Beacon Hill Park, named for beacons that guided early ships into the
harbour. In 1888, John Blair, a Scottish landscape designer, tidied up nature
providing the park’s leafy carriage ways, ornamental fountains, artificial lakes
and 18th century landscape gardens typical of English manors.
Walking
back along the sea wall, we noted plaques describing the tall ships once choking
Inner Harbour awaiting monthly exports such as millions of cans of salmon.
Today, buskers, crafters and pleasure boats fill the area with lively activity.
The 1843 Fort Victoria’s stockade once stood above the
inner harbor’s causeway. Hudson Bay Company agent James Douglas built the fort
establishing British presence in the northwest. H.B.C. employees and native
chiefs are named on bricks paving the entry into today’s Bastion Square.
The
adjacent “castle” boasts a chateau roof, parapets, stonework friezes and
gargoyles spouting rainwater. Once the fanciful Bank of Montreal, Rattenbury’s
design deviated from somber, secure looking banks of its era. Within the square
illustrious Judge Mathew Begbie interpreted British law in the Old Courthouse
constructed in 1899. He sentenced scoundrels to wear a noose at the hanging
tree. Many ghosts are said to haunt the square.
As often frontier streets became muddy nightmares, pioneer
businessman Mr. Waddington paved a still existing alley with wooden bricks from
Fort Street to Market Square. In this heart of old town, sailors, miners,
“tarnished doves”, natives and Chinese merchants once worked and played. Now
nine heritage buildings encompass Market Square’s three stories of shops and
restaurants overlooking a central courtyard employed for special events.
A
block eastward, Canada’s oldest Chinatown reflects early Chinese settlement.
Tiled eaves and a pagoda roof embellish the Chinese Imperial School. Lee’s
Benevolent Association Building presents Portuguese colonial gables and
Romanesque arches with Chinese tile-work. Fan Tan Alley is Canada’s narrowest
commercial alley. Gates and watchmen once thwarted police raids into this
enclave of brothels, gambling centers and opium dens patronized, but never
acknowledged.
On Government Street we love Roger’s Chocolates, an ideal
period shop with stained glass and rich wood interior. A vintage clock still
measures time in the corner. The famous candy couple once lived upstairs; Mr.
Rogers was often seen in the kitchen wearing long johns while stirring his
secret recipe for chocolate creams, sometimes visiting the bank in the same
attire.
Crystal Gardens stand east of the Empress. Here, in 1925
Rattenbury imitated seaside winter gardens of his youth and created a heated
salt-water pool facility of steel and glass, complete with tearooms, wicker
chairs and chirping birds.
Across
the street a pathway leads past Thunderbird Park native totems to Doctor
Helmcken’s House, B.C.’s oldest preserved home. Herbal gardens recreate his
source of early medicines. Inside, audio taped portrayals of family members
conduct tours laced with frontier anecdotes. Next door stands St. Ann’s
Schoolhouse. A small group of Montreal nuns taught in this two-room log school
playing a pivotal role in the city’s early educational life.
Once a pathway to vegetable gardens, Fort Street developed
into Antique Row, full of eclectic shops offering coins, stamps, clocks, retro
furniture, and intriguing collectibles. After a good time browsing through
windows, we entered Victoria’s most prestigious neighborhood. We often visit
Victoria Art Gallery. Built for banker Alexander Green, the Italianate villa
temporarily housed the Lt. Governor. Craigdorrah Castle perches on the hill
above. Conical turrets, chateau-style slate roof, decorative wrought iron and
tall chimneys are reminiscent of Tudor England. Coal baron Robert Dunsmuir built
this four-story mansion for $500,000 in 1889. The glowing hardwood paneling,
magnificent hand carved stairways, Italian leaded glass and period furnishings
dazzle visitors. Rambling through its restored rooms, we could visualize the
elegant lifestyle of the Dunsmuirs. Rattenbury constructed the Lt. Governor’s
residence nearby. Later rebuilt reflecting his initial design, Government House
features the original carriage entry. Its extensive gardens are open to the
public.
Below lies Ross Bay Cemetery, named for Hudson Bay
Company’s chief factor Charles Ross, who supervised the construction of Fort
Victoria. Serving as a richly endowed botanical and contemplative garden, Ross
Bay Cemetery celebrates the lives of early British Columbians.
Picturesque
treed avenues, mausoleums, granite pedestals and epitaphs echo the sanctimony of
the times. Even final resting places were conferred along class lines. Arriving
in black hearses drawn by plumed horses, Victoria’s elite were interred high on
the hill. Below lie natives and Chinese in humble marked graves.
Pioneers, premiers, Lieutenant Governors, Hudson Bay
Company employees, Sisters of St. Ann and military men repose in this
characteristic 19th century necropolis. A map helped us locate William Pendray,
Judge Begbie, and other B.C. luminaries. Enclosed with cast iron fencing, Sir
James Douglas, the “father of B.C.” reposes under a giant red granite memorial
topped with a Celtic cross. Steps away under an epitaph strewn with floral
tributes, Emily Carr rests living on in the hearts of Canadians.
Francis
Rattenbury is conspicuously absent. Meeting a young wartime heroine who taught
piano in James Bay, “Ratz” was bewitched. Divorcing his first wife in 1925, he
married Alma Parkenham. He dodged the scandal, retiring to England. Perhaps the
romanticism found elegantly in his projects was unsustainable in matrimony. His
second marriage ended ten years later, when Alma and their chauffeur became
lovers, who murdered Rattenbury. “Ratz” was buried in an English graveyard.
Immediately red, double-decker buses, flower clad lampposts
and old-world design reflect Victoria’s heritage. Exploring its vintage streets
and structures over two pleasant days, our walks uncovered tantalizing facets of
our capital’s rich legacy.
When you go:
Historic Tours: Bordering the inner harbor on Douglas
Street Victoria’s Visitor Info Bureau
www.travel-victoria.com provides self-guided maps for James Bay and Ross Bay
Cemetery and arranges a Ghostly Tours
www.discoverthepast.com Unique guided walking adventures can also be booked
here. Across the street, the Empress Hotel
www.fairmont.com/empress provides guided tours
www.walkabouts.ca into its own venerable past. Nearby Victoria Carriage
Tours
www.victoriacarriage.com regularly loop through Beacon Hill Park and James
Bay heritage neighborhood. On the edge of Victoria the Dunsmuirs, early B. C.
coal barons, created two regal residences: Craigdarroch Castle
www.thecastle.ca and Hatley Castle
www.hatleypark.ca that are well worth exploring.
Museums: At Royal British Columbia Museum
www.royalbcmuseum.bc.ca visitors may walk through 300 years of B.C. History.
In Bastion Square, the Maritime Museum of British Columbia
www.mmbc.bc.ca reflects not only a rich coastal heritage, but also houses
North America’s oldest operating birdcage elevator and “Hanging” Judge Begbie’s
courtroom. Hundred-year old Point Ellice House
www.pointellicehouse.ca is a scenic Harbor Ferry ride away. An audio taped
rendition of their Chinese houseboy, Irish maid and Scottish gardener lead
visitors through this authentically restored home.
Venerable Digs: Oak Bay Beach Hotel
www.oakbaybeachhotel.com offers suites reflecting turn of the century
Victoria. Its free shuttles and mountain bikes conveniently access the heart of
the old capital. Bordering China Town, Swans Suite Hotel & Brewpub
www.swanshotel.com was the first, and to me remains the most beautiful
restored building in old Victoria. Perched above Inner Harbor, William Joseph
Pendray’s 1897 Gatsby Mansion
www.gatsbymansion.com boasts crystal chandeliers,
stained glass windows, hand-frescoed ceilings, rich wood paneling and twenty
Victorian style bedrooms furnished in antique. Two blocks away long replacing
Pendray’s old soap factory, a modern Laurel Point Inn
www.laurelpoint.com stretches around a harbor side parkway.
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