{"id":828,"date":"2010-06-15T22:31:53","date_gmt":"2010-06-16T05:31:53","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/spacingvancouver.ca\/?p=828"},"modified":"2013-02-26T13:24:37","modified_gmt":"2013-02-26T21:24:37","slug":"a-year-in-five-minutes-vancouver-1973","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/spacing.ca\/vancouver\/2010\/06\/15\/a-year-in-five-minutes-vancouver-1973\/","title":{"rendered":"A Year in Five Minutes: Vancouver 1973"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"attachment_8968\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" title=\"granvilleisland1917_archives\" src=\"http:\/\/regardingplace.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2010\/06\/granvilleisland1917_archives.jpg\" alt=\"Granville Island, photographed here in 1917, would see major transformations begin in 1973. Item # Wat P93.\" width=\"290\" height=\"232\" \/>Granville Island, photographed here in 1917, would see major transformations begin in 1973. See details below. Item # Wat P93.&nbsp;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<p>This year saw the start of the Downtown Eastside Residents\u2019  Association, the Agricultural Land Reserve and ICBC. It was also the  year that would change Rick Hansen\u2019s life.<\/p>\n<p><strong>By Chuck Davis, <\/strong><strong><a href=\"http:\/\/www.vancouverhistory.ca\/index.htm\" target=\"_blank\">The        History of Vancouver<\/a><br \/>\nPhotos courtesy of <a href=\"http:\/\/www.city.vancouver.bc.ca\/ctyclerk\/archives\/\" target=\"_blank\">Vancouver Archives<\/a><\/strong><\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p><strong><!--more-->DERA<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>DERA was born in 1973. Writing in <em>The Greater Vancouver Book<\/em> (1997), Jim Green said: \u201cCommunity decisions [in the Downtown East  Side] were being made by City Council or the province, church groups or  planners. Most, if not all the organizations, had boards composed  entirely of people from outside the community. The residents themselves  had no voice. In 1973, with the support of the Social Planning  Department of the City of Vancouver, this situation changed. Planner  Peter Davies was sent to deal with some of the problems in the area.  (Among the worst were concerns about the health of the residents. The  area had one of the highest incidences of tuberculosis in the country,  and its women had an extremely short life span compared with women in  other communities.) Davies decided what was needed was a democratic  organization to permanently alter the situation. The fact that many  residents were single, elderly men was considered by many to be a  negative component, but it became the strongest because many of those  same men had experienced the Dirty Thirties, and had been in  unemployment organizations such as the Single Men\u2019s Unemployment  Association, the Relief Camp Workers Union and various other  anti-poverty organizations that were very strong at that time.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cDavies,\u201d Green continued, \u201cmet a retired member of the Canadian  Seaman\u2019s Union who had lived in the Downtown Eastside for many years.  Although Bruce Eriksen had no formal education, he was very  knowledgeable about the conditions and people in the neighborhood. Bruce  began to organize community meetings to identify the problems of the  community. One early accomplishment was the lighting of lanes to prevent  robberies and beatings by people hiding in unlit corners. This early  success provided the residents with evidence of the organization\u2019s  collective abilities and power.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cIn 1973 Bruce Eriksen and a handful of others set up the Downtown  Eastside Residents\u2019 Association to build a democratic voice and bring  pride and self-esteem to the people of the community. DERA required its  members to be residents of the community. The first order of business  was to name the area, which for many years had been known as Skid Road.  It had never been recognized as a community of human beings. DERA named  it \u2018The Downtown Eastside.\u2019\u201d<\/p>\n<p><strong>Granville Island<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>On January 12, 1973 Ron Basford, minister of urban affairs and  Liberal MP for Vancouver Centre, announced that Central Mortgage and  Housing Corporation, a federal body, had acquired Granville Island and  would develop it. The Island is a huge attraction today, second in  Vancouver only to Stanley Park, popular with both visitors and locals:  shops, studios, restaurants, sightseeing and funky old buildings.<\/p>\n<p>In <em>The Greater Vancouver<\/em> <em>Book<\/em> Tom Poiker outlined  the Island\u2019s attractions: \u201cGranville Island was once a dilapidated and  ugly industrial region in the middle of Vancouver. But, thanks to an  imaginative federal government scheme (who would have guessed?) the  island\u2014which was originally nothing more than a sandbar that disappeared  at high tide, then was built up with silt taken from elsewhere\u2014has been  transformed since 1973 into a Mecca for shopping and cultural  activities.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Ron Basford Park, on the Island, was named for the man who pushed hard for the concept.<\/p>\n<p><strong>ICBC<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>On April 18, 1973 the Insurance Corporation of British Columbia  (ICBC) was created. On March 1, 1974 all motor vehicles in BC would be  required to have their vehicles insured by ICBC.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Agricultural Land Reserve<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Also on April 18: To quote the Agricultural Land Reserve\u2019s own <a href=\"http:\/\/www.alc.gov.bc.ca\/alr\/Establishing_the_ALR.htm\" target=\"_blank\">web site<\/a>:  \u201cUp to the 1970s nearly 6,000 hectares of prime agricultural land were  lost each year to urban and other uses. The Provincial government  responded to the serious erosion of our agricultural land base by  introducing BC\u2019s Land Commission Act on April 18, 1973.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>A Commission, appointed by the provincial government, established a  special land use zone to protect BC\u2019s dwindling supply of agricultural  land. This zone was called the \u201cAgricultural Land Reserve.\u201d Initially  the ALR comprised 4.7 million hectares, about five per cent of the  province.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Sedgewick Library<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>The Sedgewick Undergraduate Library opened its doors at UBC in  January, 1973. It was a popular area of study for new university  students and a favorite tourist attraction for visitors. It was one of  the largest branches in the UBC Library system, and\u2014thanks to the  architectural firm of Rhone and Iredale\u2014one of the most innovative in  design. When the student population increased rapidly in the 1960s, UBC  decided to construct a new library building devoted entirely to  undergraduate needs. Students\u2019 traffic surveys indicated the best  location would be the Main Mall, close to the Main Library. To preserve  the area\u2019s open space, it was decided to build the new library partially  underground. The eight magnificent oaks that had lined the Mall for  decades were incorporated into the design. The name of the library would  cease to exist when the renovation attaching it to the Koerner Library  was completed. The Koerner would open March 10, 1997.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Karen Magnussen<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>On March 3 Vancouver-born (April 4, 1952) Karen Magnussen, who  trained first at Kerrisdale Arena, then at the North Shore Winter Club,  won the World Women\u2019s Figure Skating Championship, held in Bratislava in  what was then Czechoslovakia. She was awarded the Order of Canada and  the Freedom of the District of North Vancouver. (Magnussen was Canada\u2019s  Athlete of the Year in 1971 and 1972.) She was inducted into the BC  Sports Hall of Fame in 1972. A North Vancouver arena would later be  named for her.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Rick Hansen<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>On June 27, 1973 15-year-old Port Alberni student Rick Hansen\u2014still  exhilarated from being named his school\u2019s Athlete of the Year\u2014was  terribly injured in a motor vehicle crash returning with a couple of  friends from some fishing. They hitchhiked a ride on a truck, the driver  of which was drinking. A few miles on and the driver lost control of  his vehicle. The truck overturned. Rick\u2019s back was broken and he became a  paraplegic. Every Canadian knows what Rick made of that horrific event.  His 1985-87 Man in Motion tour\u2014during which he wheeled 40,000  kilometres around the world\u2014was a physical, mental and emotional triumph  and raised $24 million. He has raised many more millions for research  into spinal cord injury through the Rick Hansen Institute at UBC, and  has encouraged thousands of people with disabilities.<\/p>\n<p><strong> <\/strong><\/p>\n<div id=\"attachment_8969\"><strong><strong><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" title=\"grandviewunited_archives\" src=\"http:\/\/regardingplace.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2010\/06\/grandviewunited_archives.jpg\" alt=\"Grandview United Church in 1973, before becoming 'The Cultch'. Photo by Walter Edwin Frost. Item # CVA 447-147. \" width=\"340\" height=\"192\" \/><\/strong><\/strong>Grandview United Church in 1973, before becoming &#8216;The Cultch&#8217;. Photo by Walter Edwin Frost. Item # CVA 447-147.&nbsp;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<p><strong>The Cultch<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>The Vancouver East Cultural Centre opened October 15, 1973 at 1895  Venables in the city\u2019s east end in what had been a church. (The church,  Grandview United, which had opened in 1909 as Grandview Methodist,  closed in 1967.) As architectural historian Dr. Harold Kalman writes,  \u201cFounding director Christopher Wootten co-ordinated municipal,  provincial, and federal support programs to make the ambitious project  happen . . . The church was transformed into a theatre, recital hall and  community facility for its then culture-starved neighborhood . . . The  intimate audience chamber, with its good sight-lines and acoustics and a  feeling of warmth, and which can seat up to 350, has made \u2018The Cultch\u2019 a  popular performing-arts venue that attracts people from far beyond East  Vancouver.\u201d The rehabilitation was by John Keith-King. In 2010 it  underwent a further transformation.<\/p>\n<p>Anna Wyman\u2019s dance company was the first to perform there, stayed two weeks.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Bill Bennett leads<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>\u201cI want everyone in B.C. to know I am my own man.\u201d Bill Bennett, the  brand-new leader of the provincial Social Credit party, was addressing  delegates November 24, 1973 at the Socred leadership convention in the  Hotel Vancouver. The line was a reference to Bennett\u2019s father, W.A.C.,  ensconced in a 14th-floor suite of the hotel, deliberately keeping away  from his son\u2019s moment of triumph. The elder Bennett had been defeated  Aug. 30, 1972 by the NDP\u2019s Dave Barrett after 20 years as premier. His  son oozed confidence. \u201cWe\u2019ll win the upcoming North Vancouver-Capilano  byelection,\u201d he told the delegates, \u201cand we\u2019ll win the next provincial  election.\u201d His score as a prognosticator: 50 per cent. Liberal Gordon  Gibson won the byelection, but Bill Bennett\u2019s Socreds did indeed go on  to win the bigger prize.<\/p>\n<p><strong>SUCCESS!<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>The United Chinese Community Enrichment Services Society (SUCCESS) was founded. Their <a href=\"http:\/\/www.successbc.ca\/eng\/\" target=\"_blank\">web site<\/a> says: \u201cFounded in 1973 and incorporated in 1974 as a non-profit  charitable organization, S.U.C.C.E.S.S. is now one of the largest  immigration and social service agencies in British Columbia. Its mandate  is to promote the well being of Canadians and immigrants, and to  encourage their involvement in the community. This is done through the  provision of social, educational and health services, business and  community development, and advocacy.\u201d<\/p>\n<p><strong>Also in 1973<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>An old brewery on Granville Island was renovated and named the  Creekhouse, becoming the first building on the island to be converted  from industrial use. It opened for business January 18.<\/p>\n<p>On February 8 Eatons opened its Pacific Centre store.<\/p>\n<p>On February 14 provincial education minister Eileen Dailly ordered the strap abolished from BC schools<\/p>\n<p>Walter Stewart Owen was sworn in March 19 as B.C.\u2019s lieutenant-governor, succeeding John Nicholson.<\/p>\n<p>The federal government gave title to the Jericho Defence Lands to the  City of Vancouver on April 1. The city made it a 72-acre park.<\/p>\n<p>The first traffic barriers went in in the West End on June 18.<\/p>\n<p>The opening of False Creek Park June 23 marked the official start to redeveloping the False Creek area.<\/p>\n<p>West Vancouver, which had held May Day celebrations since 1931,  discontinued them under that name in June, 1973. The new title was  Community Days, and there were no more May Queens . . . because the  celebrations were now held in June.<\/p>\n<p>On August 31 the Greater Vancouver Transit System took over the  city\u2019s transit, under contract from BC Hydro. This would last to March  31, 1980.<\/p>\n<p>Burnaby and New Westminster co-hosted Canada\u2019s Summer Games in  August. Preparations included the creation of a 2,200-metre rowing  course on Burnaby Lake, then one of only three such competitive courses  in North America. The New Westminster venue was Queen\u2019s Park.<\/p>\n<p>The last movie played at the Strand Theatre September 3, 1973.<\/p>\n<p>The demand for French language classes within the Vancouver public  school system had been increasing during the late 1960s and the 1970s.  As a result, L\u2019Ecole Bilingue opened in September 1973 in a section of  Cecil Rhodes School. L\u2019Ecole Bilingue took over the entire school with  its French-immersion program, and by 1996 would have an enrolment of 350  students in classes from kindergarten to grade 7.<\/p>\n<p>The problem of the rapidly growing resident student numbers at BCIT,  the BC Institute of Technology, was eased in September 1973 when an  unoccupied building, formerly the Willingdon Avenue School for Girls,  was converted into a residence for about 100 students.<\/p>\n<p>First, in 1922, it was Radio CFQC. Then, in 1928, it became CKMO. In  February of 1955 the station became C-FUN, (sometimes written CFUN). In  1968 it changed owners and got its fourth name, CKVN, emphasizing news.  In October CKVN died and CFUN was reborn at the same spot on the dial as  a contemporary music station.<\/p>\n<p>Also in October, the Capilano Salmon Hatchery, near Cleveland Dam,  opened. Before the dam the Capilano River produced 1,000 to 2,000 coho  salmon annually. Twenty years later the hatchery was returning to the  river annually half a million coho, from two to three million chinook  and 20,000 steelhead trout.<\/p>\n<p>Mission\u2019s Ferndale Prison, a minimum security institution with 121  inmates (designed for a capacity of 110), opened in November 1973.<\/p>\n<p>Capilano College\u2019s new Lynnmour Centre, consisting of classrooms,  Media Centre, library, science labs, and cafeteria was officially opened  in November.<\/p>\n<p>The Greater Vancouver Visitors and Convention Bureau changed its name  to the Greater Vancouver Convention and Visitors Bureau. In 1986 it  would change again to Tourism Vancouver.<\/p>\n<p>A number of publications first appeared in 1973. They included:  The monthly business magazine <em>BC Business<\/em>.  It\u2019s published by Canada Wide Magazines Ltd., and covers prominent  business leaders and key developments in the local area. Canada Wide has  sponsored 1976 in <a href=\"http:\/\/www.vancouverhistory.ca\/\" target=\"_blank\">The History of Metropolitan Vancouver<\/a>. <em>BCSF A-ZINE<\/em>, a monthly publication of the British Columbia Science Fiction Association, published in Vancouver. <em>The Link <\/em>(Vancouver), published twice weekly by Link Communications Ltd. It was free, printed in English, with some Punjabi.  <em>Madison\u2019s Canadian Lumber Reporter<\/em>, a trade weekly devoted to North American lumber market activity. The <em>North Delta Sentinel<\/em>, a free bi-weekly suburban community newspaper. <em>Speak Up!<\/em>, a quarterly for \u201cChristians Concerned for Racial Equality,\u201d published by the Bible Holiness Movement. <em>Wargamer<\/em>, a bi-monthly published in Burnaby.<\/p>\n<p>The Vancouver Blazers, of the now-defunct World Hockey Association,  began. The Blazers, owned by businessman Jimmy Pattison, were active  until 1975. They entered hockey history in more ways than one: the first  professional goaltender to use a curved stick in a hockey game was the  Blazers\u2019 Don Mcleod.<\/p>\n<p>Vancouver\u2019s George Athans Jr. won the world crown for water-skiing at  Bogota, Colombia and would be inducted into the B.C. Sports Hall of  Fame in 1976.<\/p>\n<p>Iona Campagnolo, born in Vancouver October 18, 1932, was awarded the  Order of Canada \u201cfor her wide-ranging services in organizing, promoting  and conducting community projects in Prince Rupert, British Columbia.\u201d  Later she will become the first woman to be named B.C.\u2019s  lieutenant-governor.<\/p>\n<p>With 40 fire deaths this was the worst year in the city\u2019s history.  \u201cThis terrible toll,\u201d says Alex Matches, historian of the Vancouver Fire  Department, \u201cwas found to be partly caused by the lack of sprinkler  systems in hotels and rooming houses. Steps were immediately taken to  improve this with new sprinkler by-laws. The following year the toll was  dramatically reduced, and by 1982 deaths by fire were down to eight.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Gordon Campbell, born in Vancouver January 12, 1948, returned from  working for CUSO as a secondary school teacher, basketball and track  coach in Yola, Nigeria, and became an aide to new Vancouver mayor Art  Phillips.<\/p>\n<p>So far as we know, <em>Chuck Davis\u2019 Guide to Vancouver<\/em>,  published this year by J.J. Douglas Ltd., was the first general guide  book to the city. There were sections on restaurants, shopping,  sightseeing, etc. An excerpt: \u201cThe other part of the North Shore, west  of the Lions Gate Bridge, is West Vancouver. This is the \u2018classy\u2019 suburb  of the city, with homes worth $50,000 and up . . .\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Wesbrook and His University, by William C. Gibson, was published.<\/p>\n<p>Capilano College opened a regional campus in Squamish.<\/p>\n<p>The Vancouver Whitecaps were formed in 1973 and would enter the North  American Soccer League in time for the 1974 season. We\u2019ll have more on  the team when 1974 goes up.<\/p>\n<p>Vancouver\u2019s Bruce Robertson won gold in the 100-metre butterfly at the World Aquatic Championships in Belgrade.<\/p>\n<p>The movie <em>A Name For Evil<\/em> (aka <em>The Grove and The Face of Evil<\/em>),  filmed in Vancouver, was released. The director was  Bernard Girard.  Comments Michael Walsh: \u201cAn architect (Robert Culp) inherits an  18th-century mansion and is driven to extremes when his wife (Samantha  Eggar) is seduced by the resident ghost.\u201d<\/p>\n<p><em>J\u2019ai Mon Voyage<\/em>, a film directed by Denis H\u00e9roux, takes a  comic look at Canada\u2019s \u201ctwo solitudes.\u201d Quebecois director Heroux,  writes Michael Walsh, chronicles the problems of a French-speaking  family (Dominique Michel, Jean Lefebvre, Rene Simard) during a  cross-country trip to Vancouver.<\/p>\n<p>J.V. Clyne, who had been named a director of MacMillan Bloedel in  1957, and who later became chairman and CEO, retired from the firm, aged  71.<\/p>\n<p>McDowell\u2019s Drug Store, which had opened in 1905 at 1st Street and  Lonsdale in North Vancouver, was no more.  It had been run by the same  family for 68 years.<\/p>\n<p>Wakayama, Japan became the sister city of Richmond. Mio-mura, a  village in the same prefecture, was the native home of many of  Steveston\u2019s earliest Japanese immigrants.<\/p>\n<p>Drought hit Point Roberts, the small chunk of land south of the 49th  parallel and accessible by land only through BC. The 850 Canadian  residents were in danger of having their water cut off in favor of  American residents. Signs appeared, reading \u201cCanadians Go Home.\u201d Water  was trucked in from Blaine until the problem eased. A permanent water  supply (from Canada) would become available by 1986.<\/p>\n<p>The Royal Centre, main branch for the Royal Bank of Canada in  Vancouver, was built at 1055 West Georgia. It was 140 metres high, had  36 storeys.<\/p>\n<p>Granville Square was built at 200 Granville. It was 123 metres high, had 30 storeys. Two of its many tenants: <em>The Vancouver Sun<\/em> and the <em>Province<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p>The Landmark Hotel was built at 1400 Robson: 39 storeys, 120.7 metres.<\/p>\n<p>The Delta Airport Hotel was built at 3500 Cessna Drive in Richmond.<\/p>\n<p>The John Davis family began to restore 166 West 10th Avenue, the  oldest (1891) wood frame home in Mount Pleasant. Then they began to  restore other houses in the block. The result is one of the finest, most  attractive streetscapes in the city.<\/p>\n<p>The pool and waterfall at the Law Courts, Robson Square (completed  this year), were designed by architect Arthur Erickson and landscape  architect Cornelia Oberlander. The pool doubles as a holding tank for  the building\u2019s fire-sprinkler system.<\/p>\n<p>Vishva Hindu Parishad Temple was built at 3885 Albert Street in Burnaby. Their web site is <a href=\"http:\/\/www.hindutempleburnaby.com\/\" target=\"_blank\">here<\/a>.<\/p>\n<p>The overthrow of the Salvador Allende government in Chile in a  military coup led by Augusto Pinochet led to an influx in Vancouver of  Chilean refugees.<\/p>\n<p>The Education Building at UBC was renamed to honor Neville V. Scarfe, former dean of the faculty.<\/p>\n<p>Burnaby Hospital opened an extended-care wing. The wing was opened by health minister Dennis Cocke.<\/p>\n<p>The last class of psychiatric nurses graduated from Essondale, the mental hospital. (Riverview).<\/p>\n<p>The Community Information Service became part of the Vancouver Crisis  Centre, changed its name to Community Information Centre, and began to  shift its role from direct service to support for the 35 Neighborhood  Information Centres that had sprung up in the Lower Mainland.  Today  it\u2019s known as Information Services Vancouver, and participates in the  innovative 211 service. Modeled after the emergency 9-1-1 service, 2-1-1  is described as the \u201cnational abbreviated dialing code for access to  non-emergency social, health and government service information and  referral.\u201d It\u2019s free and confidential.<\/p>\n<p>The RCMP, in a report on commercial crime on the west coast, said:  \u201cLaw enforcement agencies have estimated that approximately 20 to 30 per  cent of the mines and local, junior industrial stocks listed on the  Vancouver Stock Exchange are manipulated.\u201d That report, the NDP  governments\u2019 mining royalties and other factors led to a sag in VSE  trading. The exchange lost money this year, for the first time in almost  40 years.<\/p>\n<div id=\"attachment_8970\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" title=\"spencersdepartmentstore_archives\" src=\"http:\/\/regardingplace.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2010\/06\/spencersdepartmentstore_archives.jpg\" alt=\"Spencer's Department Store, photographed here in the 1930s, was demolished in 1973. Item # CVA 1495-32.\" width=\"350\" height=\"283\" \/>Spencer&#8217;s Department Store, photographed here in the 1930s, was demolished in 1973. Item # CVA 1495-32.&nbsp;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<p>The old Edwardian buildings of Spencer\u2019s Department Store were  demolished and Sears moved into Harbour Centre, the city\u2019s newest\u2014and at  the time the tallest\u2014building (a 455-foot (139 metres)) high tower  topped by a revolving restaurant). Today, the building is home to Simon  Fraser University\u2019s downtown campus.<\/p>\n<p>The provincial government took over the Pacific National Exhibition  because of a high-profile conflict over the use of the Forum (between  minor hockey and a boat show). The takeover transformed the event from a  Vancouver Exhibition into a provincial one.<\/p>\n<p>The Vancouver Aquarium welcomed the addition of the Finning Sea Otter Pool.<\/p>\n<p><em>Wood Sculpture<\/em>, a (surprise!) wood sculpture, was installed  in front of Granville Square at the north foot of Granville. The artist,  from Washington state, was Michael Phifer, commissioned by the Canadian  Pacific Railway and Marathon Realty.<\/p>\n<p>The Vancouver Chamber Choir, led by its founder\/conductor\/music  director Jon Washburn, was the first Canadian choir to win a first-place  award in the prestigious BBC competition <em>Let The Peoples Sing<\/em> competition.<\/p>\n<p>The Burnaby Mountain Dance Company began at SFU, and would later move  off campus and become Mountain Dance Theatre, under the joint direction  of Mauryne Allan and Freddie Long.<\/p>\n<p>Rock impresario Bruce Allen began to handle Bachman Turner Overdrive,  which under his direction would sell 10 million albums from 1973 to  1978.<\/p>\n<p>Tad Publishing was established. They produced a pictorial <em>Canada Calling<\/em> series.<\/p>\n<p>Irene Howard wrote Bowen Island 1872-1972, published by the Bowen Island Historians.<\/p>\n<p>The book <em>Shipwrecks of British Columbia<\/em> by Fred Rogers  became a BC bestseller. Rogers had done 20 years of research into the  subject. His book chronicled more than 100 shipwrecks and their  discoveries. He would produce <em>More Shipwrecks of British Columbia<\/em> in 1992.<\/p>\n<p>Alan Woodland, a native of New Westminster, published <em>New Westminster: The Early Years, 1858-1898<\/em> while he was the city\u2019s chief librarian.  The book contains more than  100 photos dating back to when the \u2018Royal City\u2019 was the capital of the  Crown Colony of British Columbia.<\/p>\n<p>The Kensington Park Arena and Community Recreation Office opened at  6159 Curtis Street in Burnaby. There was an ice rink and roller rink.<\/p>\n<p>***<\/p>\n<p><em><strong>Chuck Davis<\/strong> is a Vancouver writer who has          written, co-written, or edited 15 books. Most of them are on local          history, and he describes his next book, <a href=\"http:\/\/www.vancouverhistory.ca\/thebook.html\" target=\"_blank\">The         History of Metropolitan Vancouver<\/a>, as the capstone of his    career.<\/em><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Granville Island, photographed here in 1917, would see major transformations begin in 1973. See details below. Item # Wat P93.&nbsp; This year saw the start of the Downtown Eastside Residents\u2019 Association, the Agricultural Land Reserve and ICBC. It was also the year that would change Rick Hansen\u2019s life. By Chuck Davis, The History of Vancouver<a href=\"https:\/\/spacing.ca\/vancouver\/2010\/06\/15\/a-year-in-five-minutes-vancouver-1973\/\">Continue reading <span class=\"sr-only\">&#8220;A Year in Five Minutes: Vancouver 1973&#8221;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":8116,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"ngg_post_thumbnail":0,"_ef_editorial_meta_paragraph_assignment":"","_ef_editorial_meta_date_first-draft-date":"","_ef_editorial_meta_checkbox_needs-photo":"","_ef_editorial_meta_number_word-count":"","footnotes":""},"categories":[11233],"tags":[3890,3896,3966,3939,3941,3927,816,2501,3541,1702,795,3963,3951,974,2140,3961,1984,2514,3973,3999,3952,3907,2738,3604,1598,3994,965,3901,2492,3019,3949,3347,2218,3916,1683,792,3919,1520,3904,3346,3988,3337,4000,3959,3964,1035,3900,401,750,3971,1971,3334,3331,1955,3671,3715,3977,3954,3957,1835,3358,3955,3940,2656,1065,3983,1027,3923,519,1208,3967,3363,3934,3925,3938,1829,3947,3892,1596,2022,3908,3905,1915,2470,2806,3989,3958,3986,3962,23,2681,3123,3915,3899,3928,3935,3917,3929,517,3956,3327,2607,3945,3950,3932,3931,3930,3980,3897,3970,3982,3898,3972,1001,2645,2796,3918,2303,3968,3903,1947,3485,3974,3944,4002,785,3978,3996,1655,3933,3111,2075,3969,3985,3990,3987,3936,1082,1106,2655,3895,537,3911,3975,944,3922,1004,3942,2805,3995,3965,973,3921,1600,4001,3914,3926,2247,2484,3894,3948,625,3943,2138,3458,2999,3909,3937,3960,3981,931,3893,3140,3452,3976,3991,1383,3185,3920,2243,1894,3979,3913,1210,214,3336,3910,3200,3891,3998,3997,3300,1899,3984,3924,3953,3906,834,1553,3992,3946,3912,3902,1347,271,3993],"class_list":["post-828","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-history","tag-agricultural-land-reserve","tag-agricultural-land-reserve-and-icbc","tag-aide","tag-alan-woodland","tag-alex-matches","tag-anna-wyman","tag-architect","tag-architectural-historian","tag-art-phillips","tag-arthur-erickson","tag-artist","tag-athlete","tag-augusto-pinochet","tag-b-c","tag-bank-of-canada","tag-basketball-and-track-coach","tag-bbc","tag-bc-business","tag-bc-institute-of-technology","tag-belgrade","tag-bernard-girard","tag-bible-holiness-movement","tag-bill-bennett","tag-bogota","tag-bowen-island","tag-bratislava","tag-british-columbia","tag-british-columbia-science-fiction-association","tag-bruce-allen","tag-bruce-eriksen","tag-bruce-robertson","tag-burnaby-hospital","tag-burnaby-lake","tag-burnaby-mountain-dance-company","tag-businessman","tag-canada","tag-canada-wide-magazines-ltd","tag-canadian-pacific-railway","tag-canadian-seamans-union","tag-capilano-college","tag-capilano-river","tag-cecil-rhodes-school","tag-cfun","tag-chairman-and-ceo","tag-chief-librarian","tag-chile","tag-chinese-community-enrichment-services-society","tag-chuck-davis","tag-city-council","tag-cleveland-dam","tag-colombia","tag-community-information-centre","tag-community-information-service","tag-cornelia-oberlander","tag-dave-barrett","tag-dean","tag-delta-airport-hotel","tag-denis-heroux","tag-dennis-cocke","tag-director","tag-director-christopher-wootten","tag-dominique-michel","tag-don-mcleod","tag-downtown-eastside-residents-association","tag-driver","tag-education-building","tag-effect","tag-eileen-dailly","tag-false-creek","tag-federal-government","tag-founderconductormusic-director","tag-founding-director","tag-fred-rogers","tag-freddie-long","tag-george-athans-jr","tag-gordon-campbell","tag-gordon-gibson","tag-grandview-united-church","tag-granville-island","tag-granville-square","tag-greater-vancouver-convention-and-visitors-bureau","tag-greater-vancouver-visitors-and-convention-bureau","tag-harbour-centre","tag-harold-kalman","tag-health-minister","tag-health-services","tag-heroux","tag-his-university","tag-historian","tag-historical","tag-hotel-vancouver","tag-housing-corporation","tag-icbc","tag-institute-of-technology","tag-iona-campagnolo","tag-irene-howard","tag-j-j-douglas-ltd","tag-j-v-clyne","tag-japan","tag-jean-lefebvre","tag-jericho-missile","tag-jim-green","tag-jimmy-pattison","tag-john-keith-king","tag-john-nicholson","tag-jon-washburn","tag-karen-magnussen","tag-kensington-park-arena","tag-kensington-park-arena-and-community-recreation-office","tag-kerrisdale-arena","tag-koerner-library","tag-lecole-bilingue","tag-landmark-hotel","tag-landscape-architect","tag-liberal-mp","tag-lieutenant-governor","tag-link-communications-ltd","tag-lions-gate-bridge","tag-lumber-reporter","tag-lynnmour-centre","tag-macmillan","tag-main-library","tag-main-mall","tag-mauryne-allan","tag-may-day","tag-mayor","tag-mcdowells-drug-store","tag-mecca","tag-media-centre","tag-michael-phifer","tag-michael-walsh","tag-minister","tag-minister-of-urban-affairs-and-liberal-mp","tag-missions-ferndale-prison","tag-monthly-business-magazine","tag-mountain-dance-theatre","tag-neville-v-scarfe","tag-nigeria","tag-north-america","tag-north-american-soccer-league","tag-north-shore-winter-club","tag-north-vancouver","tag-pacific-centre","tag-pacific-centre-store","tag-pence","tag-peter-davies","tag-planner","tag-port-alberni","tag-premier","tag-prince-rupert","tag-provincial-educatio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See details below. Item # Wat P93.&nbsp; This year saw the start of the Downtown Eastside Residents\u2019 Association, the Agricultural Land Reserve and ICBC. It was also the year that would change Rick Hansen\u2019s life. 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