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Stanley Park's Secret

Autor Jean Barman
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 6 aug 2007
Each year, over eight million people visit Stanley Park, a 400-hectare (1000-acre) haven of beauty that offers a backdrop of majestic cedars and firs and an environment teeming with wildlife just steps from the sidewalks and skyscrapers of Vancouver. But few visitors stop to contemplate the secret past of British Columbia's most popular tourist destination. Officially opened in 1888, Stanley Park was born alongside the city of Vancouver, so it is easy to assume that the park was a pristine wilderness when it was first created. But much of it had been logged and it was home to a number of settlements. Aboriginal people lived at the villages of Whoi Whoi, now Lumbermans Arch, and nearby Chaythoos. Some of the immigrant Hawaiians earlier employed in the fur trade took jobs at the lumber mills that dotted Burrard Inlet from the 1860s and settled at "Kanaka Ranch", which was located just outside the parks south-east boundary. Others resided at Brockton Point on the peninsula's eastern tip. Only in 1958 was the last of the many families forced out of their homes and the park returned to its supposed "pristine" character. Working in collaboration with descendants of the families who once lived in the park area, historian Jean Barman skilfully weaves together the families' stories with archival documents, Vancouver Parks Board records and court proceedings to reveal a troubling, yet deeply important facet of BCs history.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781550174205
ISBN-10: 1550174207
Pagini: 280
Ilustrații: b/w photos
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 19 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Editura: Harbour Publishing

Cuprins

Preface - The Lilac Still Blooms; The Aboriginal Presence; Kanaka Ranch; The Families of Brockton Point; Imposition of Stanley Park; Generational Transitions; Life Goes On; Changing Times; To the Courts; The Several Faces of the Law; Dispossession; Afterword; Back to the Lilac; Notes; Index.

Notă biografică

Jean Barman, professor emeritus, has published more than twenty books, including On the Cusp of Contact: Gender, Space and Race in the Colonization of British Columbia (Harbour Publishing, 2020) and the winner of the 2006 City of Vancouver Book Award, Stanley Park's Secret (Harbour Publishing, 2005). Her lifelong pursuit to enrich the history of BC has earned her such honours as a Governor General's Award, a George Woodcock Lifetime Achievement Award, a Lieutenant Governor's Medal for Historical Writing and a position as a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada. She lives in Vancouver, BC.