Every Place Has a Story

A Charming 1904 Postcard

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I found this charming little postcard dated August 7, 1904 while trolling Vancouver Archive’s website. It’s written to a Miss L.M. Woodrow “With every good wish for your birthday, from Emily.”

Second CPR station
The Second CPR station, 1904 postcard, Vancouver Archives AM1052 P-444
Second CPR station

I loved the picture of the second CPR station that briefly sat at the foot of Granville Street, and I wanted to know a little about Emily and the postcard’s recipient, Miss L.M. Woodrow. So last night, I poured a glass of wine and started to search.

Second CPR station
The Second CPR station, 1904 postcard, Vancouver Archives AM1052 P-444

My first stop was the 1904 City Directories. I looked up the Woodrow’s address at 1188 Robson Street (Bute Street). It was owned by John Woodrow who ran Woodrow and Williams butchers at Westminster and 9th Avenue (Main and Broadway).

1188 Robson Street
City Directories, 1910
1188 Robson Street

Jumping ahead to 1910, the Woodrow’s are still living there, but now more of the family members are listed, including Lillian. I found Lillian Margaret Woodrow’s marriage certificate at Vital Statistics. She married a banker named Fred Middleton Jones in September 1911 when she was 28. Lillian was born in Brighton, England and moved to Vancouver when she was six.

Woodrow family
Mountain View Cemetery

From her death certificate I know that Lillian was born on August 8, 1883–four days after the date of the postcard. A search of the Mountain View Cemetery site shows that Emily is buried with her mother, father, and brother, while her four younger sisters have a separate stone.

Emily lived in the family home until her death in 1939. The street address disappears from the city directories in 1941.

Emily Woodrow
Mount Pleasant Cemetery

The Second CPR station sadly had a much shorter life. Built in 1899, it was quickly deemed too small for burgeoning Vancouver, and the station was demolished in August 1914 when it was just 15 years old. The station was replaced by the current Waterfront Station, which against all odds, continues to exist.

Second CPR station
The second CPR station being demolished after the current and third CPR station was completed in July 1914. Vancouver Archives photo.

1188 Robson Street is more of a mystery. It’s now the Happy Lemon tea shop, which according to BC Assessment was built in 1988. I would love to see the house where they Woodrows lived for decades, but so far nothing has turned up.

1188 Robson Street
1188 Robson Street

For more stories like this see Vancouver Exposed: Searching for the City’s Hidden History

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

Our Missing Heritage: a railway station, a city hall and a court house: what were we thinking?

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For Part Six in my sad, but ongoing series of our missing buildings, I’ve selected a former city hall, a railway station and a court house and then taken a look at what we’ve done with their old sites.

Even if you don’t love the architecture—and I do happen to be a fan of anything that’s gothic and grim and wears a turret—you’ve got to admit that they’re interesting buildings, and would have made amazing additions to our current landscape.

The Second CPR Station

CPR station lotus johnson

Seems we’ve always had a penchant for new versus old. This interesting old building lasted not much more than a decade. Built in 1899, in a Canadian Chateau style design, it was quickly replaced by the third CPR station (now Waterfront Station or the Sea Bus terminal). The skyscraper and plaza that went up in the ‘70s and a parking garage occupy the old station’s former site and was for many years, the headquarters for the Vancouver Sun and Province. The building was part of Project 200, another “urban renewal”* scheme that would have wiped out most of Gastown, and fortunately never got off the ground.

The Old Courthouse

Photo of original courthouse courtesy Vancouver Archives CVA SGN 848 1900 hastings and cambie
Photo of original courthouse courtesy Vancouver Archives CVA SGN 848 1900 hastings and cambie

The first courthouse was built in 1888 at the corner of Hastings and Cambie, facing Hastings, and where Victory Square is today. Even with an addition in 1894, the building was quickly deemed too small for the growing city. Instead of repurposing the imposing building for some other use, it was gone by World War 1, replaced for a time by a large tent used by military recruiters to sign up soldiers to fight in the war.

Market Hall

Market Hall
Market Hall, ca.1930s photo courtesy Vancouver Archives CVA 447-298

Before it became City Hall in 1898, Market Hall had a public market on the ground floor and a theatre on the second floor. The building was finished in 1890 and sat on Westminster Avenue (Main Street) near the Carnegie Centre on East Hastings. City Hall moved down the street into the Holden Block in 1929. Market Hall came down in 1958.

For more stories like this one, check out Vancouver Exposed: Searching for the City’s Hidden History

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