Vancouver's Gastown gains historic designation plaque - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 26, 2024, 05:23 AM | Calgary | -16.5°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
British Columbia

Vancouver's Gastown gains historic designation plaque

Vancouver's historic Gastown district received an official plaque to recognize its status as a national historic site.

District officially named a national historic site in 2009

Mayor Gregor Robertson and Minister Catherine McKenna unveil a plaque commemorating Vancouver's Gastown district as a national historic site. (Denis Dossman, CBC News)

Vancouver's historic Gastown district now has the hardware to show off its status as a national historic site.

Federal Environment Minister Catherine McKenna who also oversees Parks Canada, the body which administers the national historic site program joined Mayor Gregor Robertson to unveil a commemorative plaque declaring the Gastown Historic District a national historic site.

The site officially gained its designation in 2009, when then-Environment Minister Jim Prentice declared the site a significant area in shaping western Canada's economy.

Mayor Robertson noted the nearly seven year delay saying "it's overdue that Gastown is finally designated and recognized, and we have an official plaque unveiling."

Gastown whose boundaries are Water Street, Columbia Street, Hastings Street and Cambie Street is the historic downtown core of Vancouver.

The Legend of 'Gassy' Jack

The area was of importance to theSquamish, Musqueam and Tsleil-waututhindigenous peoples, but its current incarnation began in 1867 when a Yorkshire sailor "Gassy" Jack Deighton opened the area's first saloon.

Gastown is named after 'Gassy' Jack Deighton who opened the area's first saloon in 1867. (Denis Dossmann, CBC News )

Deighton's nickname was due to his chatty nature and the area that sprung up around his bar slowly developed, with the locals calling it Gastown.

The growth of the lumber industry and the extension of the Canadian Pacific Railwayin 1884 created a bustling urban area and a target for speculative investment.

After the great Vancouver fire of 1886, new developers seized the opportunity to build up the area in classic Victorian and Edwardian styles.

The area's rapid development after the Great Fire of 1886 led to a harmonious mix of Victorian and Edwardian styles. (Denis Dossmann, CBC News)

It was this latter development that Minister McKenna recognized "as an exceptionally intact urban area from the late 19th and early 20th centuries. This district includes a rare grouping of buildings that are harmonious in their materials, scale and architecture."

Modern Revitalization

Much of the historic architecture went into decline soon after the Great Depression, until the late 1960s when an activist heritage revitalization movement pushed for the area's historic buildings to be revitalized into new uses. The provincial government declared the area a provincial historic site in 1971.

"This neighbourhood has changed [and] what it is today is thanks to many, many people who over generations were committed to looking after these buildings, who were committed to revitalization" said Mayor Robertson.

Vancouver's Gastown, lined with cobblestone streets, is a rare intact urban area of buildings dating from the early 19th and 20th centuries. (Denis Dossmann, CBC News)

While the area still contains a significant amount of historic architecture, tensions between those who want to further develop the district and those who want to preserve its historic nature continue.

Gastown is one of over 970 such historic sites in Canada including Alberta's Head-Smashed-In Buffalo Jump, Newfoundland and Labrador's Signal Hill, and Vancouver's Stanley Park.