Every Place Has a Story

Documenting Local History

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It wasn’t easy getting a seat at the West Vancouver Library last Wednesday night. The West Van Historical Society presented Local Voices: Shooting the North Shore with Ralph Bower, retired Vancouver Sun photographer and Mike Wakefield, who also recently retired from a 35-year photography career with the North Shore News.

Mike Wakefield, Lynn Brockington West Van librarian, Laura Anderson moderator and Ralph Bower. Eve Lazarus photo

The place was packed. I found myself sitting next to former Vancouver Sun and NSN columnist Trevor Lautens, behind former Sun business reporter Alan Daniels, and in front of Peter Speck, the founder of the NSN.

I can’t say I worked with Ralph when I was at the Sun in the ‘90s, but when I did a search of my stories, I see Ralph had photographed a couple of them. And, as I research my current book Vancouver Exposed: Searching for the City’s Hidden History, I keep coming across photos that Ralph shot. Ralph started at the Vancouver Sun in 1955, and he brought along the camera he worked with—a Speed Graphic that held 10 negatives. He was still there—just—in 1996 when the Sun bought six digital cameras for $20,000 a pop, and in doing so, wiped out film.

Ralph Bower with a Speed Graphic Camera. Mike Wakefield photo

Ralph and Mike are local North Shore boys, born, bred and stayed. Ralph in Queensbury and Mike in Lynn Valley.

Both were asked to share five of their favourite photos. Ralph chose a Canucks game in 1970 when he was the first photographer to place a camera in the net; his friend Harry Jerome at Empire Stadium in 1962, Muhammad Ali, the 1958 Second Narrows Bridge disaster, and a horrifying photo of a knife wielding man dangling his tiny son from a third-floor balcony.

This photo of a knife-wielding man dangling his son from a third floor window won Ralph Bower a National Newspaper Award in 1986

Mike chose a photo of kite surfers at Ambleside which he took moments before falling down the rocks and breaking his camera. There’s a beautiful shot of the top of the Lions Gate Bridge peaking out from under the fog; one of dozens of people snapping phone shots of the Vancouver Aquarium releasing seals at Cates Park, a fascinating study of award winning film students at Carson Graham Secondary, and Jim Burton and his wife Susan.

Harry Jerome ties world record in the 100-yard dash at Empire Stadium in 1962. Ralph Bower photo

“The best photo I’ve ever taken, I probably had the least to do with it,” said Mike. It was Jim Burton’s 101st birthday and he was being awarded France’s Legion of Honour for his service in the First World War. Burton wanted Susan, his wife of 70 years in the photo. Susan had Alzheimer’s, so they went to the care unit. Burton helped Susan into a chair and combed her hair. Susan gripped his hand and smiled. Burton kissed his wife’s hair. And Burton told Mike “We are ready for our photo.”

Jim and Susan Burton. Mike Wakefield photo

He’d already taken it.

“Sometimes it’s skill,” says Mike. “Sometimes it’s dumb luck.”

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

The North Vancouver Ghost

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Happy Halloween. And, in honour of my favourite non-holiday, here’s a completely true ghost story from the pages of Sensational Vancouver. Eve Lazarus photo - North Vancouver ghost When Jennifer, Patrick, Graham, 6 and Angus, 3 moved into their home, they didn’t realize they’d be sharing it with strangers. But to Jennifer, an interior designer, it soon because obvious they were not alone. “We really had some very unusual experiences when we first moved in,” she says.

“We even contacted the previous owners to ask if they’d had any strange experiences and they said ‘no, no, no, there was nothing, it’s fine we never had anything unusual happen’.”

It was obviously a memory lapse because things did happen.

And they weren’t easy to explain. The boys each had their own room on the main floor of the house.

“It made me a little anxious because they had always slept above us in the previous house,” says Jennifer. “I was hyperaware of listening for them. There was one morning, it was very early, around 4:30 am and I could hear running in the hallway downstairs. I jumped out of bed and came downstairs and both the boys were fast asleep. The next day at the same time, I found my youngest outside on the driveway. There’s no way he could have unlocked the door. The next day he woke up, came upstairs and said, ‘I can’t sleep downstairs anymore because the boy and the girl are keeping me awake all night’.”

And other strange things happened.

Jennifer had taken photos of the house when it first went up for sale. She says when they went back some time later to look at the photos, they could see a little face gazing out from the window that was now Angus’s room.

“All of those things were unusual, but they could have explanations other than there was a ghost in the house; but at the time, there were a lot of things,” she says. “Doors were opening and closing—never when I could see them, but I could always hear them.”

northshoreghostFour years before they bought the house, North Shore News reporter Dorothy Foster interviewed the owner at the time. She told Foster that she was working in the garden one day when a former owner drove up and told her that she had shared the house with two ‘entities’. One she described as a lovely young woman and the other ghostly figure as an angry old man.

The current owner told Foster that she didn’t think much about the story until a friend came to visit, but refused to come inside because she had a strange feeling about the house. One day after the owner insisted she come in for a cup of tea, she came out of the kitchen to see her friend bolt out of the house, jump into her car and drive off. Later she told her that she’d seen a vision of a pretty young woman dressed in black in the living room, and was confronted by the apparition of an angry old man on the stairs.

Jennifer wasn’t able to find any explanation for her ghosts when she researched past owners, but she’s sure that it was two children. After a few months everything stopped and she figures that the move disturbed the presence somehow. “It was all kind of bizarre.”

For more ghostly stories check out these podcast episodes:

S1 E9 Three Ghost Stories and a Murder

S2 E24 Halloween Special 2021

Victoria’s Ghost

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