1. All of the grey squirrels in Stanley Park today are descended from
eight pairs of grey squirrels given to Vancouver by New York City in 1909.
2. The Jolly Jumper baby seat was patented in B.C. in 1957 and
manufactured in North Vancouver. Susan Olivia Poole and her son,
Joseph Poole, designed the seat to be suspended from the ceiling by a
harness, allowing children to bounce and swing without parental help.
3. One of the oldest known western red cedars, the Hanging Garden
Tree on Meares Island near Tofino, is estimated to be between 1,500
and 2,000 years old.
4. Whistler is named after the hoary marmot, a rodent nicknamed
"whistler" because it gives a sharp piercing whistle to warn of danger.
5. The first electric streetlights in Vancouver were lit on Aug. 8, 1887.
6. The top 10 languages spoken in B.C. are: English, Cantonese,
Mandarin, Punjabi, German, Tagalog, French, Korean, Spanish and Farsi.
7. In the 1950s Vancouver was second only to Shanghai as the city
with the most neon signs per capita. Neon Products Ltd. of Vancouver,
the largest manufacturer of neon signs in Western Canada, estimated
that in 1953 Vancouver had 19,000 neon signs one for every 18 residents.
8. The largest landslide ever recorded in Canada occurred on Jan. 9,
1965, 17 kilometres southeast of Hope. The slide killed four people
and extinguished a small lake. The slide debris poured across the
valley and slopped up its southern side by more than 100 metres.
9. West Vancouver resident Jimmy Pattison is Canada's third richest
person, with a fortune of $7.3 billion, according to Forbes magazine.
Pattison is the world's 184th wealthiest person, according to Forbes.
10. B.C. has about 40,000 islands.
11. The first local telephone call in B.C. was made between Port
Moody and New Westminster in 1883.
12. The first trans-Canada telephone call was made in 1916 between
Vancouver and Montreal on a circuit running 6,763 kilometres through
Buffalo, Chicago, Omaha, Salt Lake City and Portland, Ore.
13. Vancouver had the first Skid Row in Canada, according to National
Geographic Magazine. In Vancouver's early days, the area presently
bounded by Carrall and Cordova streets was the terminus of an actual
skid road a slideway used to drag logs to water or to railway track
for transport to a lumber mill. How was the term skid road altered to
Skid Row? Unemployed loggers often gathered at the end of these
trails to ask a boss for work. When no jobs were available, it was
time to party. In Vancouver and in Seattle, this involved booze and
brothels. Cheap lodging for out-of-work loggers and mission soup
kitchens for derelicts were soon added.
14. In June 1942, newspapers reported that a Japanese submarine had
fired on the Estevan Point Lighthouse at the north end of Clayoquot
Sound on Vancouver Island. That makes Estevan Point the only place in
Canada to come under enemy fire during either world war.
15. The last nuclear weapon left on Canadian soil was held at
Canadian Forces Base Comox. The base's annual report notes with pride
that Comox "was the last unit in Canada to have the vast
responsibility for the direct security of nuclear weapons and
components." On June 28, 1984, the nuclear warhead left Canadian soil
and was returned to the United States after a 20-year deployment.
(The warheads held at Canadian bases were never under Canadian
control. A U.S. Air Force unit stationed at each nuclear base acted
as the custodians of the bombs.)
16. It's boom time for beer in B.C. The number of breweries has
almost doubled in just three years. At the end of 2011, the province
was home to 51 breweries of all sizes. By this fall there will be
more than 90. The recent openings have all been microbreweries
providing small-batch craft beer.
17. At the height of his fame in 1926, baseball legend Babe Ruth came
to the Pantages theatre for a week of performances. "The Bam is being
paid the highest salary ever paid a vaudevillian," reported the
Vancouver Sun at the time. "He draws down a cool 100,000 smacks for
12 weeks of cavorting before Alex's footlights. Alex was Alexander
Pantages, who ran one of the great vaudeville chains. Ruth, who
handed out "six autographed baseballs at each performance," caused a
sensation in Vancouver. He lunched with orphans at a Children's Aid
Society home on Wall Street in east Vancouver, visited a disabled boy
in hospital, and posed for a picture with the chorus girls at the
Pantages. Ruth's vaudeville stint didn't hurt his productivity: The
year after he played the Pantages, he set a new record by hitting 60
home runs.
18. The 75-kilometre West Coast Trail on the west coast of Vancouver
Island is ranked the world's No. 1 hike by besthike.com. California's
famous John Muir Trail will just have to try harder: It's ranked
second by the website. The West Coast Trail typically takes five to
seven days to complete. Challenges confronting hikers include
climbing ladders, fording streams, negotiating muddy trails and using
cable cars.
19. B.C.'s largest forest fire to date is the Kech fire of 1958, which burned
2,860 square kilometres in north-central B.C.
20. Preserved footprints of three tyrannosaurs, all heading in the
same direction, were discovered near Tumbler Ridge in 2011, marking
the first time the footprints of more than one tyrannosaur have been
found close together. Scientists speculate the prints suggest the
predator may have hunted in groups.
21. In 1955 logger Bert Thomas became the first person to swim the
Strait of Juan de Fuca between Vancouver Island and Washington's
Olympic Peninsula. During his swim, he was sustained by rum and coke
funnelled to him through a garden hose, and lit a Cuban cigar as he
backstroked to shore.
22. Greenwood, a community of 676 residents nestled in the Kootenay
Boundary region of southern B.C., lays claim to being Canada's
smallest city by population.
23. The Millionaires are celebrated for winning B.C.'s first Stanley
Cup in 1915 (the Victora Cougars won one too, in 1925), but really,
we're more used to being merely Stanley Cup finalists. The Canucks,
of course, made it to the dance in 1982, 1994 and 2011. But did you
know the first Stanley Cup-losing B.C. team was the 1914 Victoria
Aristocrats? (Apologies, readers, an earlier version of this list
neglected to mention the Cougars' win in 1925. Ed.)
24. The McKechnie Cup, played for by B.C.'s top regional senior men's
rugby teams, is the oldest trophy still in use in the province. Teams
representing Vancouver, Vancouver Island and the Fraser Valley play
in an annual series to determine the champion. First awarded in 1895,
the trophy was originally donated by Robert E. McKechnie, who would
go on to be UBC's longest-serving chancellor.
25. On March 1, 1923, world famous escape artist Harry Houdini, who
was in Vancouver as part of a vaudeville show performing at the
Orpheum Theatre, took up a challenge to be hoisted high into the
air while shackled and tied up in a straitjacket outside The Sun
building at 137 West Pender. About 10,000 people showed up to see if
the famed "master of escape" could wriggle his way out of his
predicament. Two Vancouver police detectives were tapped to bind
Houdini, who was then hoisted up hanging upside down from his ankles.
It took Houdini only three minutes and 39 seconds to extricate
himself from the straight-jacket. A film of the escape was shown that
night at the Orpheum, with Houdini in the audience.
26. The Glass House in Boswell, a small town near Creston, is made of
half a million empty embalming fluid bottles. The curiously beautiful
house was started in 1952 by David H. Brown, a retired undertaker. It
took two years to build the house, which became the Brown family
home. David Brown passed away in 1970 and his family eventually made
the house accessible as a tourist attraction.
27. The first three radio stations in B.C. all owned by
newspapers were licensed in Vancouver in 1922.
28. Academic and politician Pauline Jewett became president of Simon
Fraser University in 1974, making her the first woman to head a major
Canadian university.
29. Victoria's is the first and oldest Chinatown in Canada and second
oldest in North America after San Francisco.
30. Vancouver track star Percy Williams won two Olympic golds in
1928. In 1950, a national poll declared him Canada's greatest track
athlete of the first half of the 20th century. In 1972, he was named
Canada's greatest-ever Olympian. His double-gold feat is no longer
B.C.'s best summer-time performance, though. That crown has been
passed on to another Vancouverite, rower Kathleen Heddle. She won two
golds in Barcelona in 1992, then another gold (and a bronze) in
Atlanta four years later.
31. B.C. has the world's largest supply of nephrite jade, making it a
geological temple to the substance the Chinese call "the stone of
heaven." The green stone is found at about
50 sites in the province. Most of B.C.'s jade production is exported
to China. Jade boulders are weathered brown, grey or white, which
conceals the green nephrite core.
32. More than eight times the height of Niagara, the Della Falls is
the highest waterfall in Canada at 440 metres. The Della Falls is
located in Strathcona Provincial Park near the town of Port Alberni
on Vancouver Island.
33. The Lost Lagoon fountain in Stanley Park is a leftover from the
1936 World Fair in Chicago. Vancouver purchased the fountain after
the world fair ended.
34. Sliced bread came to Vancouver in 1937.
35. B.C. could be called sci-fi central. The filmed-in-B.C. series Smallville
(2001-2011) holds the Guinness World Record for the longest
consecutively running sci-fi television show, with 218 episodes. The
previous record holder was Stargate SG-1 (1997-2007), which was also
filmed in B.C. Supernatural, which made its debut in 2005 and is
currently shooting in B.C., is hot on Smallville's heels. It has
produced 195 episodes and has been renewed for a 10th season.
36. The B.C.-based Jimmy Pattison Group owns the Guinness World Book
Company and Ripley's Believe It or Not.
37. Ogopogo has been a protected species since 1989, thanks to the
B.C. government. The legendary serpent-like creature believed but
never proved to inhabit the depths of Okanagan Lake has legal
protection from being captured, killed or even harassed. "Now we can
protect the creature because we can put a total closure on its
capture," B.C.'s wildlife director Jim Walker said at the time. "It
would be most exciting if it was some species not known before."
38. Between 1787 and 1898, approximately
850 Hawaiians came to the Pacific Northwest as part of the fur trade
and many of them settled in B.C. Most of the Hawaiians who settled in
B.C. married and formed families with local native women. Government
officials referred to their offspring as "Kanakas Although many of
the places named for them Kanaka Row in Victoria (a shantytown
located where the Empress Hotel now stands) and Kanaka Ranch in what
is now Stanley Park no longer exist, many British Columbians can
trace their ancestry back to B.C.'s Hawaiian pioneers.
39. The filmed-in.B.C. series Beachcombers, shot in Gibsons from 1972
to 1990, is Canada's longest running drama series. In all, 387
episodes were produced. If Beachcombers had aired for one more
season, it would have caught up to Gunsmoke for the title of
longest-running TV drama anywhere. (It ran in dozens of countries
around the world, including in Germany, where its title translated as
Beach Pirates.)
40. Francis Rattenbury, the prominent architect who designed the B.C.
legislative buildings in Victoria when he was just in his 20s was the
victim in a 1935 murder that was labelled the "crime of the century."
Rattenbury, who also designed the Empress Hotel and the provincial
courthouse in Vancouver (now home to the Vancouver Art Gallery), left
B.C. and retired to his native England in 1930 after marrying Alma
Clarke Pakenham, who was 30 years his junior. In 1935, the
68-year-old Rattenbury was bludgeoned over the head by a croquet
mallet and his wife's 17-year-old lover, George Stoner, was convicted
of the murder.
41. Vancouver was incorporated the same year that Coca-Cola and the
automobile were invented: 1886.
42. Nine metres below VanDusen Botanical Gardens is an enormous
abandoned reservoir that was built in 1912. The concrete vaults once
held three million gallons of city drinking water. The reservoir was
abandoned and sealed in the early 1970s.
43. The length of B.C.'s coastline, including the shorelines of
islands, is 27,200 kilometres. (The circumference of the Earth at the
equator is 40,075 km.)
44. Canada's longest swimming pool at 137 metres is Vancouver's
Kits Pool. The outdoor saltwater pool opened on Aug. 15, 1931.
45. The eruption of Wilksi Baxhl Mihl in northwestern B.C.'s Nass
Valley approximately 250 years ago buried two Nisga'a villages and
reportedly caused the death of more than 2,000 people.
46. B.C. is home to the two largest Douglas fir trees in Canada. The
largest, known as the Red Creek Fir, is in the San Juan River Valley
and stands 73.8 metres tall and has a circumference of 13.28 metres.
The second largest, known as Big Lonely Doug because it stands alone
among dozens of giant stumps in a clearcut area, is just 20
kilometres away near Port Renfrew. Lonely Doug stands 70.2 metres
high, about as tall as an 18-storey building, and has a circumference
of 11.91 metres. Conservationists believe Doug could be as much as
1,000 years old.
47. Cosmetic Botox was invented in Vancouver. In 2000 Vancouver
doctors Alastair Carruthers and Jean Carruthers presented findings
from the first major study on the safety and efficacy of Botox to
prevent wrinkles. The husband-and-wife team were the international
pioneers in the use of the medical marvel many years earlier. It is
now one of the most common cosmetic procedures around the world.
48. B.C.'s first train robber was Billy Miner, who was immortalized
in the 1982 movie The Grey Fox . An American-born stagecoach robber,
Miner crossed the border into B.C. in the early 1900s and robbed at
least two trains before he was caught and sentenced to 25 years in
prison. Miner was sent to New Westminster's B.C. Penitentiary. He
escaped in 1907, leaving behind $155 and a pocket watch that is in
the Royal BC Museum in Victoria. Reputedly the first robber to use
the phrase "hands up!" Miner was known for his genteel manners and
apologetic demeanour.
49. The Denman Arena, the largest ice arena in Canada at the time
with 10,500 seats, opened in 1911 in Coal Harbour. It was the first
artificial ice surface in Canada. The arena burned down in
1936.
50. The Canadian record for greatest rainfall in one day 489 mm was
set in Ucluelet on Oct. 6, 1967. The record still stands.