#201 - 5760 Teredo St
Sechelt, BC V0N 3A0 Canada |
George Vancouver Visits the Sunshine Coast: 1792
SECHELT, BC — JUNE 21, 2007 — Local real estate agent Gary Little has written the following article relating to the 250th anniversary of the birth of Capt. George Vancouver and his exploration of the Sunshine Coast of British Columbia.
Portrait of George Vancouver 1757-1798 215 years ago, in June of 1792, when Vancouver was just 34 years old, his flagship Discovery and armed tender Chatham emerged from Juan de Fuca Strait and anchored in Birch Bay, just south of the 49th parallel. It had taken the 145-man expedition over 14 months to get there from England. It was from this anchorage that Vancouver and a crew of 30 left on a memorable 11-day survey of the southwest coast of British Columbia using two small longboats under power of oar and sail. The second longboat was commanded by Lieut. Peter Puget who two weeks earlier had surveyed what is now known as Puget Sound in the Seattle area of Washington State. During this survey, Vancouver explored Burrard Inlet, Howe Sound, the length of the Sunshine Coast up to Pender Harbour, and Jervis Inlet to the end of Queens Reach. He traveled over 500 km in the process. Vancouver first entered the waters off the Sunshine Coast in the afternoon of June 15. This was the day after he had sailed up the east coast of Howe Sound and survived "heavy squalls and torrents of rain" while camping for the night near Squamish. Here is how he described the islands he observed in southern Howe Sound (Gambier, Keats, the Pasley group, and Bowen) while sailing along the western shore of the sound towards Gibsons:
"The shores of these, like the adjacent coast, are composed principally of rocks rising perpendicularly from an unfathomable sea; they are tolerably well covered with trees, chiefly of the pine tribe, though few are of luxuriant growth." The exact spot where Vancouver and crew spent their first night on the Sunshine Coast is not known with certainty. In the B.C. centennial year of 1971 a memorial cairn was erected in Chaster Park (near Harry Road and Ocean Beach Esplanade) and a plaque affixed which reads Near this spot in June 1792 Captain George Vancouver, R.N. camped and gave Gower Point its name. However, Vancouver's account of the event suggests the more likely campsite was Gibsons harbour.
George Vancouver cairn at Chaster Park On June 16, Vancouver sailed the length of the coast between Gibsons and Pender Harbour. Here's what he had to say about the land between Gibsons and Halfmoon Bay:
"This part of the coast is of a moderate height for some distance inland, and it frequently jets out into low sandy projecting points. The country in general produces forest trees in great abundance, of some variety and magnitude; the pine is the most common, and the woods are little encumbered with bushes or trees of inferior growth." After going through Welcome Pass, Vancouver noted "the coast...is composed of a rugged rocky shore, with many detached rocks lying at a little distance." That evening he made it as far as Francis Peninsula at Pender Harbour where he "found shelter in a very dreary uncomfortable cove," probably Francis Bay, located within what is now Francis Point Provincial Park and Ecological Reserve.
Vancouver's chart (southwest coast of B.C. detail)
"The shores we passed this day are of a moderate height within a few miles of this station, and are principally composed of craggy rocks, in the chasms of which a soil of decayed vegetables has been formed by the hand of time; from which pine trees of an inferior dwarf growth are produced, with a considerable quantity of bushes and underwood." For the next four days, Vancouver explored Jervis Inlet to the end of Queens Reach (he didn't enter Princess Louisa Inlet because of the challenging Malibu Rapids, so he missed today's biggest tourist attraction in the area), and then started the long trip back to Discovery & Chatham. Vancouver's book of his expedition, published in 1798, does not say where he stayed on the night of June 21, but it is likely he was back near the Sunshine Coast, probably on Worlcombe Island, one of the islands in the Pasley group, or Bowen Island. (Peter Puget's journal says that Night we reached the Cluster of Islands in Mid Channel off Noon Breakfast Point [Point Grey], where we stopped.) Early the next morning (Vancouver's 35th birthday) he reached Point Grey where he had his famous — and highly unexpected — encounter with the Spanish explorers Galiano and Valdés who had arrived in the same waters only three days behind Vancouver. By the morning of June 23, Vancouver was back in Birch Bay, and the following day Discovery & Chatham were on the move again, heading towards a new anchorage further north in Desolation Sound to continue the survey, accompanied by the two Spanish vessels.
New Vancouver stamp
For more information on Vancouver's survey of southwestern British Columbia, see the interactive online map at www.garylittle.ca/van250.html. Also plan to visit the new George Vancouver exhibit at the Sunshine Coast Museum & Archives at 716 Winn Road in Gibsons; it runs through the summer. If you're looking for a souvenir, Canada Post is issuing a new international rate ($1.55) commemorative postage stamp tomorrow (Vancouver's 250th birthday) to honour the great captain.
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Gary Little is a realtor® and licensed real estate trading services representative in the offices of Royal LePage Sussex in Sechelt, British Columbia, Canada. He is a former senior software marketing manager, having previously worked in Silicon Valley for almost 20 years at the worldwide headquarters of Apple Inc. and Sun Microsystems, Inc. He is well known for his interactive real estate map of the Sunshine Coast (map.garylittle.ca).
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CONTACT INFORMATION
Gary Little, realtor® This news release is located online at: http://www.GaryLittle.ca/maps-historic/vancouver.html |