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

Saturday, October 30, 2010

HELP US HELP SAVE VANCOUVER'S HISTORY!


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Every day we see archival images of our city in newspapers, on websites, in books, in documentaries and even hanging framed on office and restaurant walls. Where do these precious photos and films come from, how did they survive and how are people and organizations so easily able to access them?

The City of Vancouver Archives is one of the most popular “go to” places for archival photographs and film, as well as many other historical records. For seventeen years the Friends of the Vancouver City Archives (FVCA) has raised funds to help collect, save and preserve these rare and vital objects of our cities past.

Money raised by the Friends helped purchase: a 1600 cubic foot cold storage facility to preserve the Archives’ deteriorating photographs and films, web publisher software to assist researchers search the database, a dye-sublimation printer and the Archives’ Reading Room photocopier. Currently the funds the Friends raised are supporting a crucial description and digitization of a backlog of old photos donated to the Archives Collection.

“I found my grandfather`s 8mm film of a 1944 Callister Exhibition Park Rodeo held on the old PNE grounds. You can even see the wooden roller coaster in the background. The film was beginning to show signs of deterioration and would have soon turned into a sticky messy roll. It`s now safely preserved in the Archive’s cold storage room and digitized to view on their website...” says Friends board member Jolene Cumming.

As with many groups, the Friends have been hit hard by budget and granting cuts. You can help support our work to support the endeavours of The Archives by attending our Fall Fundraiser. Other ways to help preserve records of Vancouver’s past include; purchasing memberships, cash donations or donating your family or firm’s archival records.

2010 FUNDRAISING EVENT

The Friends of the Vancouver City Archives are asking the Vancouver citizens, organizations, businesses and others to help them “Help Save Vancouver” by attending:

“Researching Women in the Archives & in the Family”
An illustrated talk by M. Diane Rogers
President of the BC Genealogical Society


Explore researching strategies, techniques and learn how to interpret archival photographs.

Sunday Nov 14th, 2010
2pm-4pm

Includes a Reception with Refreshments by Emelle’s Catering.

Tickets $25

Please Register by November 9th  at 604-736-8561

Event location: City Archives at 1150 Chestnut Street in Vanier Park


Media contact:
James Johnstone, Chair, Friends of the Vancouver City Archives

CVA 677-35 Malkin Family at 1406 Davie

Friday, September 11, 2009

Calling all East Enders



Did you grow up in the Vancouver neighbourhoods now known as Strathcona and Grandview Woodland?

Did you come from a family that once lived in here?

Did you go to Lord Strathcona School, Lord Seymour School or Britannia?

Do you or does anyone you know have pictures of the old East End, particularly of its old houses and lost streetscapes?

Are you interested in preserving the history and heritage of Vancouver's oldest neighbourhood and the people who lived here?


Would you be interested in sharing a scan of these for the East End Neighbourhood History Mapping Project and Web Site?

Over the past ten years I have researched the history of over 750 houses in Vancouver and the stories of the people who lived in them. To date, just under half of these houses have been in the old East End. I have actually plotted them all out on an old fire insurance map and there are a fair number of lots that I have coloured in yellow to show the ones I researched so far that are now forming larger blocks of colour.


My long-term goal is connect all these dots through a sponsorship-funded neighbourhood-based project--one that would resurrect the old East End, not just what they call Strathcona these days, but one that would include all buildings from about Carrall Street to McLean Drive and from the Burrard Inlet to the old shoreline of False Creek south to Grant. This would cover all of District Lots 196, 181 and 182, possibly 183.

All data would go on an interactive web site and would resurrect, in virtual reality anyway, all the neighbourhood lost to industrial expansion north of Hastings Street, including old Japantown, as well as Hogan's Alley and other sections of what we now call Strathcona that were demolished in the 1960s and 1970s for highway development and project housing.



How It Would Work:
A website user would be able to click on a map of the East End to choose an area or block a user was interested in:


Then select a lot or address on that page, click that and up would pop the first available archival photo showing the house built on that lot.




The user would then be able to scroll through all the information available on the house, such as when and by whom it was built, how much it cost, etc., and find out who lived in the house over the years, where they came from, where they worked, etc. Basically everything that I would include in my house histories would be available online. Where available, links would be embedded throughout allowing users to see old photos of the interior of the house, pictures of the people who lived there, archival photos of their workplaces, and so on.


Who Would Benefit from the Web Site?
Through this project, current and past residents could connect or reconnect with the neighbourhood. High school students writing term papers, doctorate students writing their theses, researchers, genealogists, historic fiction and fiction writers would be able to find practically everything they would need for their projects. All the data locked away in increasingly fragile archival material would be immediately accessible to users working on their home computers. Hopefully the web site project would encourage people to look at the East End, and other historic neighbourhoods differently, and respect the unique architecture and environment and remaining historical architecture, encouraging investors to preserve, rehabilitate and restore old buildings, not tear them down.



Filling In The Gaps:
Another goal of the project is to fill in the gaps of data concerning certain historic communities living in the East End, in particular the Japanese and Chinese, and to a lesser extent Russians and Italians. If you look at the old city directories from the early 1900s right up to the 1950s very often you will find that people of Chinese or Japanese heritage were listed just as that, "Japanese" or "Chinese" or worse, "Orientals". Italians and Russians were often listed the same way, or listed as "Foreigners". Entire generations of East End residents have been wiped from the history books in this way.



I hope that by reaching out to the various historic communities that made up the East End in the past that not only important family photos can be saved and used but that important information about past residents who were not properly listed will be forthcoming.


What I Am Doing Now:
Right now I am working on a number of things for the project:
· Sourcing a web site host for the project. This will likely be a university, either SFU or UBC.
· Looking at funding options. As stated above, I am leaning strongly toward funding through sponsorship.
· Getting the word out.
· Soliciting copies of, and the permission to use, photos of the East End, the neighbourhood's old houses, churches, businesses, lost streetscapes, past residents, etcetera, for the website.


If you can help by supplying scanned copies of your old East End-related photos or would allow me to scan them, please e-mail me at househistorian@yahoo.ca.

If you know of other former East Enders who might be able to help in the same way, please let them know about the project and encourage them to get involved. Thank you! Above are samples of photos to be used for the project that have been donated.


Thanks to Lucille Mars, Gary McDonald, Emidio de Julius, Graham Elvidge, and Bettina Shuen for the use of these photos.