The Dales House at 414 Alexander Street circa 1890 CVA Photo SGN 490
Showing posts with label Wooden Cobbles. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wooden Cobbles. Show all posts

Monday, May 31, 2010

The Things You Find When You Are Looking For Something Else

Just now I am trying to put the finishing touches on three projects I am doing for two different clients. In the process of looking for newspaper clippings related to people living in a house on the 3000-block of West 7th I stumbled across this picture and article relating to frost heaving up wooden cobbles in the 600 block of Keefer Street. If you have been following my blog for a while you will probably remember the article on the wooden cobbles I found on the 200-block of Union. If you have been on one of my East End History Walks you will have seen them with your own eyes. Well, here is a news clipping from the front page of the November 14th Vancouver Province.

Wish I could tell from which direction the picture was taken and if any of the houses visible in the photo are still standing... now that I think of it, I wonder if the wooden cobbles are still there on the 600 block of Keefer under all that asphalt. If they are still down there, two days before the 2010 Winter Olympics opened here in Vancouver, the Olympic Torch was run over those very same cobbles. Huh!

Remember you can click on the image for magnification.

Saturday, September 26, 2009

Wooden Cobbles Underneath Union Street?!?



Union Street is part of an east-west cycle path that stretches all the way from Boundary Road to the False Creek Seawall. I wonder if the cyclists that barrel down my neighbourhood road give more than a passing thought to the causes of the bumpity bumps they must experience in the 200-block of Union. Just in front of the new V6A development construction site, parts of the asphalt have come off revealing something surprising underneath. Speeding cars must experience them too. It is almost as if the ghosts of my old neighbourhood are working a bit of magic, telling the frantic passers by to slow down and pay attention to what they are passing by.



In August, when I was planning my first history walking tour of the East End, I did a run through of my route. That's when I found them. I was crossing the street from where the main part of Hogan's Alley was--the block bounded by Main, Union, Gore Avenue and Prior-- north toward where Vie's Chicken and Steak House had once stood at 209 Union. In the westbound lane of Union Street, there were three or four places where the asphalt had come off exposing of all things wooden cobbles. Now I have seen brick exposed in a number of places in the city. There is, or was, large sections of exposed brick in Victoria Drive between Powell and East Hastings. I don't know how old it is. In my imagination it was laid that way so that horses could easier climb the hill. Maybe it is not that old at all and has nothing to do with horses. If anyone knows the story, please let me know. 



Then there are large sections of East Pender, or is it Frances, on both sides of Clark Drive, where you can see granite cobbles that once lined some old BC Electric tram route. But nowhere had I seen wooden cobbles before.



Quite coincidentally, during a search for an article on the opening of the Connaught Hotel (see earlier post) in the February 28, 1913 Daily News Advertiser I found an article on those very wooden blocks. Rather than reiterate what is written there, have a read for yourself. Just so you know, and the article will talk about it, the cobbles were not left exposed like that, but were covered with a layer of creosote and sand. This method of road paving was supposed to be the best for horse traffic, which in 1913, still dominated our city’s roadways.



Remember that all images in these blogs will enlarge when you click them.

Since this piece was first posted, a friend of mine sent me a link to an article on Waddington Alley in Victoria. It is still completely paved with wooden cobbles. Here is the link: http://www.islandnet.com/~jar/streetscapes/topics/waddington.htm