Lake Cowichan (B.C. : Town)

Taxonomy

Code

Scope note(s)

Source note(s)

  • BC Geographical Names Information System.. Town.

Display note(s)

Hierarchical terms

Lake Cowichan (B.C. : Town)

Equivalent terms

Lake Cowichan (B.C. : Town)

Associated terms

Lake Cowichan (B.C. : Town)

10 Archival description results for Lake Cowichan (B.C. : Town)

10 results directly related Exclude narrower terms

Trevor Green interview : [Wiles, 1984]

RECORDED: Lake Cowichan (B.C.), 1984-10-04 SUMMARY: In an interview with Roger Wiles, Trevor S. Green discusses his life in the Cowichan Valley; the Lake Cowichan area; the history of the Simpson Estate at Marble Bay; and stories about its various owners, especially Mrs. Jeanne S. Simpson.

Doreen Ruffner interview

RECORDED: Duncan (B.C.), 1982-09-23 SUMMARY: Doreen Ruffner talks about how her family came to the Cowichan Valley after her father bought 500 acres at Cowichan Lake. Describes Duncan; the building of the family house, and its location between Bear Lake and Honeymoon Bay; and their neighbours. Describes fending off a cougar that attacked her and cousin, a young boy named Tony Farrer (or Farrar?), on 16-Sep-1916. She and Tony both received the Albert Medal by the Duke of Devonshire. [Their Albert Medals were later exchanged for the George Cross.] Postcards of Doreen, Tony and the cougar were made. Describes album of letters and gifts received from all over the world.

Vancouver Island land register

  • GR-2625
  • Series
  • 1898-1942

This series consists of of a lot register for the following Vancouver Island land districts: Chemainus, Folio 1-20, Comiaken, Folio 2140, Helmcken, Folio 41-60, Dunsmuir, Folio 60, Bright, Folio 89, Malahat, Folio 130, Somenos, Folio 150, and Cowichan Lake, Folio 180. Entries in the register are dated 1898-1942.

The registers list lots within the land districts by lot numbers, recording the alienation of land from the Crown (by purchase, pre-emption, lease, etc.). Information may include the name of the purchaser, dates and numbers of certificates issued (including Crown Grants), dates and amounts of payments, and reference numbers to correspondence files and field books. The volume contains an index to land districts by folio (page) number, and also an alphabetical name index.

British Columbia. Dept. of Lands

Floyd Fairclough interview

RECORDED: [location unknown], 1975-05-29 SUMMARY: Floyd A. Fairclough, director of property development for the University of Victoria, discusses the gift of land and plants from Mrs. Jeanne Simpson of Lake Cowichan. He explains that this was a gift before death, not a bequest. Mrs. Simpson, who was widowed in 1958, was to have quiet and undisturbed life occupancy. She had suggested that the name "Stoker" be used for the property. Discussion of the university's plans for the plants and for development on the Lake Cowichan site. The university has about 400 pages of correspondence.

Trevor and Yvonne Green interview : [Chamber, 1975]

SUPPLIED TITLE OF TAPE(S): The garden in the forest : the Simpson garden at Lake Cowichan RECORDED: Lake Cowichan (B.C.), 1975-06-23 SUMMARY: Trevor Green is a lifetime resident of Lake Cowichan. Mr. and Mrs. Green were close personal friends of Mrs. Jeanne Simpson and of her husband. Comments on the garden. The Simpson's connection with the Stokers. Comments on the characters of Mr. and Mrs. Simpson. The Lake Cowichan reaction to the removal of the rare plants from the property.

James L. Crickmay interview

CALL NUMBER: T0273:0001 SUPPLIED TITLE OF TAPE(S): The career of a logging engineer, 1929-1970 RECORDED: Vancouver (B.C.), 1974-04-05 SUMMARY: Born Vancouver, 1905. Graduated UBC in engineering, 1929. Worked in various Vancouver Island logging camps in the 1930s. Camp conditions and union organizers. Logging methods at Caycuse in the 1930s. Logging equipment. Moved to Youbou, 1944. Changes after the BCFP takeover, 1946. Other companies bought in 1946 by BCFP. Construction in the San Juan Valley. Anecdote about logger "Jesse James".

CALL NUMBER: T0273:0002 RECORDED: Vancouver (B.C.), 1974-04-30 SUMMARY: This tape contains description and discussion of a 1928 photo showing track of logging railway, cold deck, steam donkey, etc.

Ed Peck interview

SUPPLIED TITLE OF TAPE(S): Logging Superintendent, BCFP RECORDED: Vancouver (B.C.), 1974-06-13 SUMMARY: Born in 1912, in Midale, Saskatchewan; schooling in Weyburn; Ed and his brother came to Cowichan Lake in 1934; jobs splitting wood for a steam donkey; join back rigging crew; worked at various woods jobs at Camp 6, Caycuse, BC; early union efforts at Caycuse; later woods foreman at Caycuse and logging superintendent at Cowichan; due to retire in 1975.

IWA Women's Auxiliary of Lake Cowichan

CALL NUMBER: T3604:0001 SUPPLIED TITLE OF TAPE(S): IWA Women's Auxiliary of Lake Cowichan : [tape 1] RECORDED: Lake Cowichan (B.C.), 1979-08-09 SUMMARY: TRACK 1: This is a composite tape [i.e., a group interview] with five former members of the Lake Cowichan Women's Auxiliary of the IWA: Eva Wilson, Lori Belin, Lil Godfrey, June Olsen and Mary Greenwell, who were active in the Women's Auxiliary during the 1930s and 1940s. The women tell of their family and work backgrounds and their subsequent involvement with the union auxiliary. The women come out of very different backgrounds, some with strong trade union families (Nanaimo miners), and others from anti-union backgrounds. Most came to Lake Cowichan as young women who had married loggers. June Olsen, however, came as a teenager, grew up in Lake Cowichan, and joined her friends in the auxiliary. Conditions in the 1930s were primitive; couples lived in shacks without plumbing or electricity, the hospital was in Chemainus, and the road was terrible. TRACK 2: The Women's Auxiliary was pulled together in the 1930's by Edna Brown with the help of some of the organisers for the union. It helped to cut across the isolation that many of the young wives experienced, and to draw them into the struggle to organise the woods. The organiser went from home to home and to isolated logging camps, organising the auxiliary. Women were concerned with safety (because logging was and is an extremely dangerous business), as well as getting a better road to the hospital, and protecting and providing funds and cover for the union organisers. CALL NUMBER: T3604:0002 SUPPLIED TITLE OF TAPE(S): IWA Women's Auxiliary of Lake Cowichan : [tape 2] RECORDED: Lake Cowichan (B.C.), 1979-08-09 SUMMARY: TRACK 1: As the auxiliary developed, its functions expanded and it became the central instrument in creating a community at Lake Cowichan; providing social events, education, and political involvement; establishing the P.T.A., Red Cross, swimming lessons, theatre group, doing war support work, getting fresh milk into the town, organising a children's parade, Dominion Day and Labour Day events, a Lady of the Lake contest, and coordinating with other women's groups, as well as supporting the union's activities. The members attended conventions of the union and federated auxiliary in Vancouver and Eugene (Ore.), and were instrumental in forming auxiliary policy across the IWA because of the large numbers and success of their organisation. TRACK 2: In 1946, during the march to Victoria during the strike, the Lake Cowichan women marched in the front of the trekkers. In Victoria, they organised food and lodgings with other auxiliaries. In 1948, the Lake Cowichan Auxiliary split; the majority of its members went with the WIUC. These years saw some violent confrontations, for example at Iron River, where the IWA crossed WIUC picket lines. The women and their husbands were excluded from the new IWA auxiliary at Lake Cowichan after the WIUC collapsed, and some of them became involved in the co-op, while others later did support work for the IWA when their husbands re-entered the IWA.