Every Place Has a Story

Jack Webster and BC Penitentiary

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CKNW’s Jack Webster was called in by Warden Hall to act as a go-between in the 1963 prison riot. Photo Ken Oakes, Vancouver Sun
Maximum Security:

BC Penitentiary was a maximum-security federal prison plagued with riots throughout its 100-year life. There was the 1975 riot and hostage taking resulting in the death of Mary Steinhauser, a 32-year-old social worker. She was one of 15 hostages shot when police stormed the prison. Long before that, there was the 1934 riot when 78 prisoners refused to work unless they were paid. But perhaps the most bizarre, was the riot of 1963 when radio news hound Jack Webster became part of the story.

Province, April 22, 1963
The Riot:

Just after 9 p.m. on April 19, 1963 prisoners Nelson Wood, 27, Gerard Caisy 28 and Wayne Carlson, 21 escaped through an auditorium window. They were spotted by prison guard Patrick Dennis who was patrolling with his dog. Dennis fired three shots in the air, before he was subdued by prisoners armed with hand-made knives and Molotov cocktails made with electric light bulbs filled with gasoline and fused with a twist of rag.

Cell damaged during a riot. “Iron bars were used to punch holes between cells and allow prisoners to escape from one cell to the next.” Angus McIntyre photo, May 1980

At 10 pm Warden Tom Hall, called Jack Webster and told him there was trouble at the pen and asked for his help. “They want to speak with Lester Pearson or Webster. We can’t get Lester Pearson, so we’re calling you” Hall told him.

Webster:

When Webster arrived, Dennis was sitting in a chair, his hands bound behind his back with copper wire, and another loop of the wire running from his wrists to around his neck. Three knives were held at his face. Another 15 prisoners who either stayed for support or couldn’t get out, played handball, dozed on mattresses or just made up the audience, but otherwise didn’t get involved.

BC Pen after it closed in 1980. Angus McIntyre photo

In another part of the prison a couple of hundred prisoners smashed windows, furniture, toilets and sinks. They ripped out pipes, tore doors off their wooden frames and burned walls. RCMP reinforcements and troops from Chilliwack were called in and fired tear gas into the building before storming the blocks.

After 12 hours, the hostage takers said they would let Dennis go if Warden Hall guarantee that Caisy and Carlson would be transferred to St. Vincent de Paul Penitentiary in Montreal and Wood to Stoney Mountain near Winnipeg prison so his wife could be closer to her family.

Webster brokered the deal and the prisoners were put on flights to Montreal and Winnipeg, and at 11:00 the next morning, Webster told the media: “the guard is free.”

The headline on his own story in the Vancouver Sun two days later was: “Night of Terror: I was Afraid it Would End in Murder,” and can’t you just hear him saying that in his Scottish brogue.

© Eve Lazarus, 2022

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Jail for Sale

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BC Pen’s former gatehouse at 319 Governor’s Court can be yours for under $6 million. Eve Lazarus photo, 2021
Jail for Sale:

In a real estate crazed city like Vancouver where a heritage house can sell for hundreds of thousands of dollars over its list price, turns out it’s just not that easy to sell an old jail.

Aerial photo of BC Pen, 1982. Courtesy New Westminster Archives

Realtor Leonardo di Francesco has had parts of the former BC Penitentiary on the market since last December, so this week I drove out to New Westminster to check out the buildings and former prison grounds.

Cast in 1895, the brass bell now hangs in the garden at Jamieson Court. Angus McIntyre photo, May 1980

BC Pen was a maximum-security federal jail that opened in 1878 and closed in 1980. Most of the buildings were demolished and the grounds turned into townhouses in an area that’s been remarketed from Jailhouse Blues to Fraser Lands. The two heritage-designated buildings that survived though are quite impressive.

Outside the BC Pen in May 1980. Angus McIntyre photo
Gate House:

The one-time jail gatehouse is exactly 60 steps up from Columbia Street. It looks like a giant castle, and was a daycare, offices for a technology company, and most recently a pub/restaurant. Built in 1931, it’s currently empty and assessed at $3.4 million.

Former jail block and hospital at 65 Richmond Street is selling for a little under $8 million. Eve Lazarus photo, 2021

The second building is the three-storey prison and hospital completed in 1878. Current tenants include a sports medicine clinic and an orthopedic surgery. It was constructed out of heavy stone which di Francesco tells me was brought over from England because the weight of the stone was useful in balancing the ship’s cargo. It’s currently assessed at $4.5 million.

76 Jamieson Court, built in 1989 can be yours for under $7 million. Eve Lazarus photo, 2021

The third building for sale, currently a church and daycare, was built in 1989—nine years after BC Pen was decommissioned. While it’s not a heritage building, it does have a beautiful garden and the prison’s brass bell that was cast in 1895. According to the plaque the bell “was used to call in the inmates from the fields, toll the meal hours and signal that the inmate count was correct.” It also rang when prisoners escaped or held a riot. That property (which includes the bell) is currently assessed at $1.7 million.

BC Pen in May 1980. Angus McIntyre photo

© Eve Lazarus, 2022

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Lolly, CFUN, and the Brill Trolley Bus

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Angus McIntyre was reading Murder by Milkshake  when he stopped and took a closer look at a photo snapped by the Vancouver Sun’s Dan Scott in December 1966.

Where I saw a rare photo of Lolly Miller leaving court during the murder trial of her lover, Rene Castellani—Angus was looking at the background.

“I just noticed something about Lolly Miller’s photo on page 58,” said Angus, who was a Vancouver bus driver for 40 years. “In the background there is a Brill trolley bus, with the B.C. Hydro logo visible. On the side there is an advertisement–this  was for a disc jockey on CFUN, Tom Peacock.”

The ad reads “Tom Peacock. Afternoons 3 to 6.”

Radio plays a prominent part in Murder by Milkshake. In 1965, CKNW personality Rene Castellani murdered his wife Esther with arsenic so he could marry the station’s 20-something receptionist Lolly Miller.

Brill trolley bus in 1969, Angus McIntyre photo

“I just thought it was ironic that behind Lolly there was an ad for a rival radio station,” says Angus who moved to Vancouver in 1965.

“CFUN had a request line phone number, REgent 1-0000, promoted as ‘REgent ten-thousand, CFUN Requestomatic’. It almost always had a busy signal in the days of relay switches in the telephone exchanges, and kids would yell out their phone numbers over the sound of the busy signal to get a call back,” says Angus. “Some of their contests had so many people phone in that parts of the REgent exchange would crash.”

During the ’50s and ’60s, CKNW, the Top Dog, was a familiar sight in the community. Courtesy CVA 180-2127

According to his broadcast bio, Peacock eventually moved to CKWX (1130) and became the station’s general manager. He died in 2006, at age 67.

In 1965, CKNW was still the “Top Dog,” and as George Garrett, a news reporter for the station for over four decades, told me, “We were the most promotions minded station you could imagine.” The station’s deejays included Jack Cullen, Jack Webster and Norm Grohmann. Over at CFUN, a top 40-station at the time, deejays (below) were Red Robinson, Al Jordan, Fred Latremouille, Tom Peacock, Ed Kargl, Mad Mel, and John Tanner.

It depends what source you look at, but I find it hard to argue with thoughtco.com’s top 10 picks of 1965:

  1. I Can’t Get No Satisfaction; The Rolling Stones
  2. Like a Rolling Stone; Bob Dylan
  3. A Change is Gonna Come; Sam Cooke
  4. Tambourine Man; The Byrds
  5. Ticket to Ride; The Beatles
  6. I’ve Been Loving You Too Long; Otis Redding
  7. Papa’s Got a Brand New Bag; James Brown
  8. My Girl; The Temptations
  9. Stop! In the Name of Love; The Supremes
  10. Do you Believe in Magic?; The Lovin’ Spoonful

Top photo: Lolly Miller. Photo by Dan Scott/Vancouver Sun [PNG Merlin Archive]

Murder by Milkshake is now a two-episode Cold Case Canada podcast:

© All rights reserved. Unless otherwise indicated, all blog content copyright Eve Lazarus.

Joe Ricci’s Vancouver

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Excerpt from Sensational Vancouver

Detective Joe Ricci, 1914. Vancouver Archives

When I write a history book there’s always one character that really captures my attention. In At Home with History it was Alvo von Alvensleben. In Sensational Victoria it was Spoony Sundher, and in Sensational Vancouver, it’s Vancouver City Police Detective Joe Ricci—a kick-arse cop from the old school. I got to know Joe really well through his daughter who lives in the home he built in 1922, through the boxes of newspaper clippings, letters and photos that she saved, and from the testimony he gave at the Lennie Commission—one of the many inquiries into police corruption that took place last century.

Joe Ricci, middle (holding murder weapon), 1924. Vancouver Archives and Canadian Colour

Joe was the first Italian to join the force. He was hired in 1912 because of his contacts within the close knit Italian community, his knowledge of the Black Hand (a sort of early version of the Mafia) and his ability, often with his partner Donald Sinclair, to bring in the bad guys. Ricci and Sinclair were on the scene at the 1917 shoot-out in Strathcona when Police Chief Malcolm Maclennan was murdered with a shotgun blast to the face.

Joe Ricci Vancouver Police Detective
East Pender Street

Those were the days when police didn’t worry too much about procedure, warrants and other legal niceties. In fact, more often than not Ricci and Sinclair took to opium dens with axes, fired their service weapons at fleeing bad guys and brought in the evidence – whether it was illegal stills during Prohibition or millions of dollars worth of drugs squirreled away in the secret compartments of buildings.

West Coast Central Club, 1948. Joe Ricci far left

A few years after he left the police force, Joe opened up a club right next door to the station. Everyone was welcome from Joe Celona, King of the bawdy houses to Angelo Branca Supreme Court judge to Jack Webster, reporter, as well as any cop who wanted a drink. He told a newspaper reporter at the time that he no longer had any interest in chasing bad guys. “I’ve had a bellyful of police work and criminals,” he said. “The crooks are too dumb today to make it worthwhile.”

© All rights reserved. Unless otherwise indicated, all blog content copyright Eve Lazarus.