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Notice d'autorité

McTavish, Mrs. G.A.

  • E0155
  • Personne
  • 1855-1922

Mrs. G.A. McTavish born Catherine Amelia (Amy) Helmcken on 19 March 1855, daughter of Dr. John Sebastian Helmcken and Cecilia, grandaughter of James and Amilia Douglas. Married in Dec. 1877 to George Archibald McTavish. Died 1 Nov. 1922. Her children included Rita (Margaret Cecilia) McTavish (1879-1954), Duncan Douglas McTavish (b. 1881), Claus Sebastian McTavish (b. 1884) and Dorothy Olivia McTavish (1889-1972). Rita married David C. Hughes in 1916. Dorothy married Edward Heddle in 1916. Both sons were given land in Dr. John Sebastian Helmcken's View Royal sections.

Esquimalt (B.C.)

  • E0164
  • Collectivité
  • 1912-

The geographic area now known as Esquimalt was home to Indigenous peoples approximately 4000 years before the arrival of Europeans. The Songhees and Esquimalt First Nations, part of the Coast Salish language group, have occupied the territory, where the Township of Esquimalt and City of Victoria are now located. The word Esquimalt is a transliteration of "Ess-whoy-malth," a phrase usually translated as "place of the shoaling waters."

Esquimalt possesses one of the finest, natural harbours on the west coast, and this fact was not lost on the Royal Navy, who established their Pacific Headquarters there in 1865. When the Royal Navy abandoned the naval base in 1905, it was revived in 1910 as the West Coast base for the newly created Naval Service of Canada [renamed the Royal Canadian Navy in 1911] and continued to play an important role – along with the Military – in the life of the community.

In 1912, the Esquimalt Village was a bustling commercial centre with hotels, general stores, Chinese laundries and machine shops surrounded by houses. In the District, Hudson’s Bay Company property was subdivided and sold, with new houses appearing throughout the area. The District of Esquimalt was defined in the letters patent signed August 15, 1912 and incorporated September 1, 1912, with the municipality to be called the Corporation of the Township of Esquimalt. Charles H. Lugrin was acclaimed as the first Reeve. One of the first items tackled by the new Council was the installation of a modern sewerage system.

Shipbuilding and repair, the major industry since 1893, continued its role as a major employer throughout the First World War, with major expansion taking place during the Second World War when Yarrow’s Shipyard built new ships for the Royal Canadian Navy and the Canadian Merchant Marine Service. Esquimalt became a focal point of activity during the Second World War, with Pacific Command Headquarters set up at Work Point Barracks. At one point, these staging grounds held 10,000 troops and officers training before deployment. The Old Esquimalt Village was expropriated in 1941 as well as property in the Naden area when more space was needed to enlarge the military barracks.

In the post war era a light industrial zone was established in the eastern part of the municipality where access to the railway was established through spur-lines. Recreational facilities, new schools, shopping plazas and commercial development expanded throughout the 1950s to 1970s. Many large homes were lost when their property was sub-divided to build apartment complexes, and single-family residential development took place throughout the Township. Esquimalt today has a healthy mix of commercial, residential and industrial development. The almost 17,000 residents of Esquimalt enjoy a variety of amenities including schools, recreational facilities, library, archives, parks both active and passive, a golf course, beaches and green spaces.

Esquimalt is one of the core municipalities in the Capital Region District. A mayor and six councillors serve the community and Esquimalt is protected by a dedicated Fire Department and by the joint Victoria-Esquimalt Police Department.

Esquimalt (B.C). Esquimalt Police-Fire Department

  • E0169
  • Collectivité
  • 1943-2002

Before incorporation, policing in the dockyard and village was carried out at different times by the Dominion Police, the Royal Northwest Mounted Police, and the Royal Canadian Mounted Police. After 1912, this task was undertaken by the Esquimalt Municipal Police, the Esquimalt Police-Fire Department and the Victoria Police Department. Early police constables were also unofficially responsible for fire protection as the Fire Marshall position was held by the Police Chief. In September 1943, Council informed the Board of Police Commissioners that police officers would also be the official firefighters for the municipality. In 1957, the title Police-Fire Chief replaced Police Chief and Fire Marshall.

The Esquimalt Police-Fire Department was one of the few dual police-fires services in Canada. The force withstood many challenges from within the department and from both council and taxpayers to separate. In 1964, the police union tried to negotiate itself out of firefighting duties. Difficulties surfaced again in the late 1970s after a major fire. These difficulties were temporarily solved with more personnel and better training for all members of the department. Another change took place in the 1980s when a designated police officer with no firefighting responsibilities was authorized to serve on every shift.

In 2002, at the request of Mayor Ray Rice of Esquimalt and Mayor Alan Lowe of Victoria, the Solicitor General, the Honourable Rich Coleman announced the separation of the dual force. The policing of Esquimalt became the responsibility of an amalgamated City of Victoria and Township of Esquimalt police force under the guidance of the Victoria and Esquimalt Police Board. Mayor Darwin Robinson of Esquimalt (newly elected in 2002) reversed a similar plan to amalgamate fire services and instead approved the formation of the Esquimalt Fire Department in 2003.

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