Efforts underway to save West Vancouver's Navvy Jack House - Action News
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British Columbia

Efforts underway to save West Vancouver's Navvy Jack House

A group of citizens in West Vancouver are hoping to raise money to save the Navvy Jack House, believed to be the oldest building on the North Shore.

Group hopes to turn West Vancouver's Navvy Jack House into a cafe

A three-storey building, with some wooden boards in front of it, stands behind a tiny garden.
The Navvy Jack House in West Vancouver, B.C., seen here in a 2020 photo, stands empty. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

A group of citizens in West Vancouver are hoping to raise money to save the Navvy Jack House, believed to be the oldest building on the North Shore.

John "Navvy Jack" Thomas was a Welsh deserter from the Royal Navywho married Row-i-a, the granddaughter of Squamish Nation Chief Kiepalano.

According to the West Vancouver Historical Society, "their union was one of the first between the local Indigenous people and the incoming settler population, and their offspring continue to live in the Squamish, Tsleil-Waututh and Musqueam lands of the Lower Mainland."

Thomas built the home sometime around 1873, according to the society, where heand Row-i-araised four children.

Three women smile for the camera in a black-and-white picture.
John "Navvy Jack" Thomas's three daughters, pictured in the early 1900s. His descendants hope to restore the house, which is located in John Lawson Park. (Submitted by Evelyn Lamont)

The home was occupied until 2017, making it theoldest continuously occupied home in the Lower Mainland, according to the society.

In 2020, West Vancouver councillors votedto halt a previous proposalto tear down the Navvy Jack House.

Descendants of Thomas hopeto restore the building, which is located in John Lawson Park. To them, it's a key part of local history, and a part of family history.

"As Indian people we always feel the presence of who belonged there so that would be icing on the cake if they could restore that," says Andrea Jacobs, Navvy Jack's great-granddaughter.

Jacobs says her grandmother died in the house.

"Her spirit is still there," she said.

The Navvy Jack House Citizens' Group says they hope to turn the building into a waterfront cafe.

The cost of restoration is estimated to be $2.6 million. The District of West Vancouver, which owns the house,has agreed to give $1 million and the group has until the spring of 2024 to raise the remaining $1.6 million.

Geoff Jobson of the Navvy Jack House Citizens' Group hopesto preserve the building and honour its legacy.

"It's the stories of the house and the people who lived in the house that have importance for us," he said.

With files from Yasmin Gandham