Friday, May 21, 2010

A Hundred Years

My great, great grandmother probably came out from Ireland in the 1860's to settle in Quebec on the Ottawa River. Knowing her background, she probably travelled as a steerage passenger.

The "steerage",or between-deck, often shortened to "tween-deck", was originally the deck immediately below the main deck of a sailing ship. (Norw: Mellomdekk or Mellemdekk)

In the early days of emigration the ships used to convey the emigrants were originally built for carrying cargo. In reality the passengers were placed in the cargo hold. Temporary partitions were usually erected and used for the steerage accommodation. To get down to the between-deck the passengers often had to use ladders, and the passageway down between the hatches could be both narrow and steep. The manner in which the ships were equipped could vary since there were no set standards for this. It was necessary that the furnishings could be easily removed, and not cost more than absolutely necessary. As soon as the ships had set the passengers on land, the furnishings were discarded and the ship prepared for return cargo to Europe On the picture above you can see examples on how many of the sailing ships would be equipped.


After reading the book, Voyages of Hope, which describes the terrible conditions that people endured while traveling steerage class at that time, I have begun to wonder about her. She would have been a young lady. I don't know if she married before she left Ireland or shortly after she arrived in Canada. I do know that she was Irish Catholic and like many of her countrymen, she chose to settle in French Catholic Quebec rather than English Protestant Ontario. She probably would have sailed to Quebec City and then taken a smaller boat up to the Ottawa Valley.

Her voyage would have been much shorter - closer to one month as opposed to the two months or more that it took to get to British Columbia - but conditions would not have been much better. Knowing the fastidiousness that seems to be a trait of many people on that side of the family, I can only image how she could have endured such conditions.

A hundred years later, in the 1960's, I was coming of age in Toronto, Montreal and Vancouver in much different circumstances. From the perspective of 2010, fifty years later, I am wondering what the 2060's will bring.

Thursday, May 20, 2010

Bride-Ships







British Columbia history can be quite fascinating. I am surprised that few Canadian historical novels have been written about our past. The four bride-ships that arrived in Victoria in the 1860's has enough material for several novels. In all, about one hundred women, mainly working class, sailed from England hoping to find a better life in British Columbia.

Victorian England was in the throes of recession. Women who became widowed, or were let go from factory jobs, or poorly educated unemployable women who had not married young faced desperate lives in workhouses or worse. There were far more women than men in Britain and even middle class women had difficulty in finding husbands. As the numbers of these poverty- stricken women grew, some churches and a few philanthropic upper class women formed the Columbia Emigration Society to both give these destitute women a new chance and to rid England of the expense of keeping them.

Meanwhile, in North America gold had been discovered on the Fraser River. The gold lured hundreds of men from the fizzled California gold fields and created towns in the Cariboo that were devoid of single, white, marriageable women. At the same time, Victoria and New Westminster were becoming thriving cities with growing families in need of domestic help.

The frontier towns here were more wild and dangerous than those in the American west. There was no law and order and only a few, mostly Anglican, missionaries were trying to create stability. Added to this mix were rigid religious and social attitudes which virtually forbade any contact with Native women. Murder, theft and drunkenness were the order of the day.

Local governments hoped that English women would marry and stabilize our wild west or alternatively provide domestic services in Victoria and New Westminster. Governments in England liked this idea because they wanted English people to populate the land north of the 49th parallel. And, they wanted to rebalance the population at home.

Between 1862 and 1870, as a result of the Columbia Emigration Society's initiatives, four steam driven sailing ships, the Tynmouth, the Robert Lowe, the Marcella and the Alpha departed England and delivered women around the horn and up the Pacific Coast to Victoria. During the voyages that could last several months, these women who were sponsored by the Columbia Emigration Society travelled steerage and experienced horrible on board conditions.

Crowded below decks into tiered bunks in groups of eight, there was little room to move. It was crowded, dark and dank with little fresh air. The sanitation was poor, movement up to the deck was limited to areas where the women often encountered smoke and soot from the coal- fired boilers. Unlike the people in cabins whose meals were prepared, people in steerage were given daily rations to prepare for themselves. Fresh water was in very short supply. There were storms and seasickness. The stench became unbearable. Then, to add to this misery, church sponsored chaperones made it their duty to make sure none of these women came into contact with any men on board ship.

Surprisingly, while there was some death and disease in their months at sea, most of the women made it to the shores of Vancouver Island. Once, landed most quickly found husbands or positions as domestics. Glimpses of their lives in Lillooet, Barkerville, Chemainus, Victoria, Vancouver and New Westminster while poorly documented, are fascinating.















Most of this information came from the book Voyages of Hope by Peter Johnson.



A New World


A high ranking Cardinal in the Catholic Church said last week that the church should move towards a morality based on virtue rather than avoidance of sin and center on happiness rather than duty. WOW! Apparently he is one of the few top ranking ecclesiastics that can actually have some influence in getting this done.

Just think what it would mean if a large chunk of the world started think about virtue and happiness rather than sin and duty. If thoughts have energy, and increasingly this is being proven, then there would be a huge shift from negative to positive energy.

In my small world, it would mean that people around me could quit acting like martyrs, could start to like themselves and take time to take care of themselves, stop criticizing everything around them, and most of all it would create a larger, better force field of positive energy.

And, I might even consider going back to church.

Tuesday, May 18, 2010

The Bloedel Floral Conservatory is a interesting place to spend a rainy day in Vancouver except you have to keep your rain gear on as the roof leaks in several places. Rain falling from the ceiling is easy to ignore though as the exotic plants and birds and even fish command your attention.

The Parks Board had plans to close this place earlier this year as it was too expensive to repair; but, it appears that it has had a reprieve for the time being. The doors are still open and the plants and still lush and colourful and it is business as usual for the time being.








The Vancouver walking group had arranged for a walk in Queen Elizabeth Park with a side tour of the Bloedel Conservatory this morning topped off with lunch at the Seasons Restaurant. In the face of our first major rainfall in awhile, a few of us decided on the dryer route of just the conservatory and lunch.
















This is the place to go if you ever want to see what your houseplants should look like.

Monday, May 17, 2010

Buddy

For two and a half hours on Sunday, I was a teenager again. The production "Buddy: The Buddy Holly Story" transported me back. This is so well done! I am always amazed at the quality of actors in Vancouver.

In his short one and a half year career, Buddy Holly only released three albums but he was a major influence on 'rock 'n roll'. The Beatles were impressed by his music. When they were looking for a name for themselves, they wanted something close to the name of Buddy's group, "The Crickets".

After the plane crash, the producers were able to release many more songs by Buddy Holly because of all the tracks he had laid down in studios and home demos. Buddy's music was upgraded with studio musicians and modern technology and he remained popular for a very long time.

Stories, plays, books and music have been written about Buddy Holly - my favorite being - American Pie by Don McLean.

There were many interesting tidbits in the musical I saw yesterday; like the fact that Buddy was married and his wife was pregnant at the time of his death. Unfortunately, after a little research on the internet, I discovered that she miscarried.

If you have the time in the next month or so, I highly recommend this production. Go for the story and especially go for the music.

Here are the details:


BUDDY: THE BUDDY HOLLY STORY

By arrangement with Alan Janes for Theatre Partners

By Alan Janes and Rob Bettinson

Now playing until July 11, 2010 | Stanley Industrial Alliance Stage

10 shows sold out!

The World’s Most Successful Rock ‘n’ Roll Musical

Viewed by more than 20 million people in over 17,000 performances worldwide

Tuesday, May 11, 2010

Zip Lining

I spent Mother's Day on Grouse Mountain zip-lining for the first time. It was a blast!

It was a perfectly warm May day but there is still lots of snow on Grouse. It was hard walking up hill.


















My daughter and I doing the starfish to slow ourselves down on the fastest line.


























Me, on the second line, enjoying the scenery.





















For more information see:




Sunday, May 9, 2010

Stuck on Reading

I am currently reading five books. This is a little unusual for me, although I usually have at least two on the go. They are listed below in order of 'like':


This one has taken me almost a month but I am almost finished. It is a little slow going at times but well worth the effort. There are lots of places where you need to stop and do little exercises. I am definitely going to set up his filing system. For any one that needs a little organization in their life, this is a good place to start. It is written by David Bach and this is the Canadian edition.


I have liked all of Amy Tan's books particularly The Joy Luck Club. I received Saving Fish from Drowning for Christmas and started reading it in January. It is just as good as her others but I got stuck some time back on the karma of work animals and have not been able to pick it up again. I am sure I will get back to it on a sunny afternoon by the pool where I know I will not necessarily fall asleep with terrible images in my head.


I have just started An Irish Country Christmas. (I enjoy reading books set in winter on hot summer days.) It will be prime pool/deck reading this summer. I read and enjoyed An Irish Country Doctor also by Patrick Taylor awhile back. Patrick Taylor is an Irishman who lives in Canada most of the time.




Frank McCourt, another Irishman, this one transplanted to the U.S, wrote Teacher Man about his years as a high school teacher in New York. I loved his first book Angla's Ashes but not so much his second book 'Tis. This one is more like his first, but it got lost under my bed a few weeks ago and I just retrieved it today. This is good nighttime reading as it is interesting but not so riveting that you stay up half the night reading.


I have been trying to read Voyages of Hope, The Saga of the Bride-Ships by Peter Johnson for several months now. I just seem to have something better to read each night. But I am interested in BC history, particularly the hardships women faced in the early years in British Columbia. The first hundred or so pages were quite readable. I just seem to have hit a dull part. Hopefully I can finish this one on the beach this summer as well.