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Great Vancouver Fire

The Great Vancouver Fire destroyed most of the newly incorporated city of Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, on June 13, 1886.[1] It started as two land-clearing fires to the west of the city.[1] The first fire was farther away from the city and was clearing land for the roundhouse of the terminus of the Canadian Pacific Railway.[1] The second fire was clearing land to extend the city to the west.[1] The Great Fire occurred shortly after the township of Granville had been incorporated into the City of Vancouver in April 1886.[1]

Great Vancouver Fire
Hand drawn map of Vancouver in 1886 showing the spread of the fire
LocationVancouver
Coordinates49°16′59.4″N 123°06′40.6″W / 49.283167°N 123.111278°W / 49.283167; -123.111278
Statistics
Date(s)June 13, 1886 (1886-06-13)
CauseOut of control land clearing fires
Buildings destroyed600–1,000
DeathsExact number unknown

The fires spread northeast into the city, killing at least 21 people [2] and destroying 600 to 1,000 buildings (the exact numbers are unknown).[1] Most residents escaped by fleeing to the Burrard Inlet shore or the False Creek shore.[1] Following the recovery efforts, the city of Vancouver continued to grow.[1] The city's first police force was set up, its first brick buildings were built, and its first fire engine was brought in from the nearby larger town of New Westminster.[1]

Early Vancouver edit

 
Carrall Street looking south and showing "Maple Tree" corner at Water Street, c. 1886.

European settlement in the Vancouver area began in 1862 after Captain George Henry Richard's 1859 discovery of coal in the Burrard Inlet.[3] The settlement of Granville (later Vancouver) was formed in the mid-1860s between two Burrard Inlet sawmills.[3] It began as shops and hotels providing service to the workers of the mills and later their families.[3] The two sawmills were Moodyville (originally Moody's Mill), opened 1863, on the Burrard Inlet north shore and Hastings Mill (originally Stamps Mill), opened 1867, on the Inlet's south shore.[3] The two mills were the main employers in Granville.[3] In the early 1880s, they employed between 150 and 200 workers, not including loggers and longshoremen.[3] The exact numbers are unknown as many of the workers were transient unmarried men, who worked at a mill for only a few weeks at a time before moving on.[3] To reach Granville required either a nine-mile journey through dense forest from the nearby larger town of New Westminster or a thirty-mile journey via the Fraser River from Fort Langley, the capital of British Columbia at the time.[3]

In 1885, it was announced that Granville would be the west coast terminus of the Canadian Pacific Railway.[1] The township of Granville was incorporated as the city of Vancouver on April 6, 1886,[2] becoming the fourth city in British Columbia.[4] At the first city council election on May 3, 1886, Malcolm MacLean was elected the city's mayor.[5] The inaugural meeting of the Vancouver Volunteer Hose Company No.1 was held May 28, 1886.[1] Future Vancouver blocks and streets had been marked out to the west of the city to allow for its anticipated growth.[1] These had been designated by the Canadian Pacific Railway land commissioner Lachlan Hamilton.[1]

Demographics edit

 
St Paul's Roman Catholic Church at the Mission Indian Reserve, later more commonly known as Eslha7an (Squamish language),

Early Vancouver attracted budding entrepreneurs[6] who were very active in the civic politics forming the new city.[6] The population of Granville grew substantially in the early to mid-1880s.[2] The population and economic growth in the area in early 1886 was so significant three new newspapers were established.[1] The mid-1880s also saw a change in the population from mostly unmarried men and some families with First Nations wives to an increasing number of families especially with European wives.[2]

Following the British victory in the Opium Wars, British colonies such as Vancouver received an influx of Chinese migrants from the provinces surrounding Canton, the sole port for foreign trade.[7] Most of these migrants were employed at the Hastings Mill.[1] The Canadian Pacific Railway also brought in Chinese railway workers, employed to establish the CPR terminus.[3]

First Nations people edit

The main Indigenous population in the area at the time of European settlement were the hən̓q̓əmin̓əm̓-speaking Musqueam people. When sawmilling began in 1863, the local Squamish men were hired as unskilled labour.[3] The mission reserve near Moodyville and the Indian rancheria at Hastings Mill were the product of the mill's employment of Indigenous people.[3] In 1881, there were at least 500 Squamish people at Burrard Inlet.[3] The First Nations people were not given the same rights as their European contemporaries.[3] The men were not hired for higher skilled and higher paid roles at the sawmills and women were unable to inherit property from their white partners and were often ejected from their homes after his death.[3]

Origin edit

Prior to the fire, Vancouver had experienced three weeks of abnormal heat for late spring.[1] Sunday, June 13, was particularly hot with an offshore breeze from the Pacific Ocean.[1] There was also significant forest deadfall in the area to the east of the city as well as debris from the recent clearing for the expansion of the city which provided fuel to the fire.[1]

First clearing fire edit

The first clearing fire was located to the south-west of the city.[1] The land was being cleared to create the roundhouse for the western terminus of the Canadian Pacific Railway.[1] The dry conditions and a Pacific breeze caused the fire to grow out of workers' control throughout the morning and into the afternoon.[1]

Second clearing fire edit

The second clearing fire was located at the west end of the city near the intersection of Cambie and Cordova street.[1] The fire was being used to clear land for the expansion of the city.[1] It grew out of control in the early afternoon.[1]

Spread edit

 
Panorama of Vancouver with clearing fire c.1886

The men working on the clearing fires and volunteers from the town attempted to put out both fires with buckets, wet blankets and shovels.[1] For the first clearing fire, the water came from False Creek, whilst the second fire used the hand-pump well at the newly constructed nearby Regina Hotel.[1] The men attempted to bring both fires under control into the afternoon, however, the breeze turned to a gale and the men at the first fire were forced to give up their efforts and flee to the False Creek shore.[1] At the second fire, an attempt to create a fire break with pickaxes was unsuccessful.[1] The second fire was abandoned when the two fire fronts joined.[1]

The smoke from the fire filled the sky over the town.[1] The men fleeing warned the people in the town of the incoming fire.[1] Most residents hurriedly packed up their belongings and their stores and headed to the Burrard Inlet shore.[1] However, despite warnings from other residents and the growing smoke, a number of residents did not believe the fire was dangerous.[1] Some residents waited until the last minute to flee whilst others headed to the hotels to drink the unguarded liquor.[1] The Squamish people from the south shore village Snauq, paddled across in canoes to view the fire.[1]

At the Burrard Inlet shore, some residents were able to flee out into the inlet on floats and vessels.[1] At least two hundred people found refuge on the Robert Kerr, "the ship that saved Vancouver", a 58-metre (190 ft) wooden ship at anchor close to the Burrard Inlet shore at the time.[8] The local Squamish Nation provided help to the survivors who were floundering in the water.[9] They paddled over and canoed people to safety.[9] The men of the Vancouver Volunteer Hose Company No.1 went to Scoullar's General Store to remove a supply of explosives, which were taken to the Hastings Mill at the opposite end of town.[1] The city clerk Thomas McGuian saved the city records detailing the city's short history by entrusting them to a stranger.[1]

After the fire edit

 
Vancouver Police Department 1886
 
First Vancouver City Council Meeting after the fire c.1886

After the fire passed, the newly elected Mayor of Vancouver, Malcolm MacLean,[3] sent telegrams to the Canadian Prime Minister and the Mayor of Toronto.[1] The telegram to the Prime Minister Sir John A. Macdonald read: "Our city is ashes three thousand people homeless can you send us any government aid?"[1] The telegrams were sent via horse to the nearby town of New Westminster.[1] Shortly after, word arrived that relief supplies from New Westminster were being sent in wagons.[1] At this time most Vancouver residents had gathered at Hastings Mill or False Creek.[1] Mayor MacLean instructed the survivors to gather at Westminster Bridge to await the relief supplies.[1] An impromptu bivouac was set up with tents and lean-tos made with large branches.[1]  At around midnight, supplies arrived from New Westminster and Port Moody (an eastern township on the Burrard Inlet).[1]

Damage edit

Between 600 and 1,000 buildings were destroyed by the fire,[1] with few surviving the blaze.[2] The Regina Hotel at the north of the city survived, as did the Bridge Hotel at the south-east.[2] A side building of the Bridge Hotel was used as a makeshift morgue.[2] According to Alderman Gallagher, a Vancouver businessman, who witnessed the fire and the aftermath, there were 21 bodies (or parts thereof) found immediately after the fire, while others were discovered during the cleanup and rebuilding.[2] The exact number of dead is unknown, mostly because Vancouver's population at this time was constantly changing due to its rapid expansion as well as the transient nature of many of the mill workers.[1][3]

Newspaper reports edit

The Quebec Daily Telegraph reported the fire June 15, 1886.[10] It reported five people dead, 1,000 homeless and a total loss of an estimated one million dollars.[10] The Day in New London, Connecticut, reported the fire June 15, 1886, with 50 people dead, 1,000 homeless and a total loss of one million dollars.[11] The Manistee Weekly Times in the June 15, 1886, edition outlined the events of the fire and attributed the blaze to the Canadian Pacific Railway.[12] It also reported that “liberal and prompt” aid was expected from Canadian Pacific.[12] The fire was reported in the June 16, 1886, edition of the Toronto World.[13] It reported 12 lives had been lost, outlined the events of the fire and included a response from the Toronto mayor promising immediate aid.[13] The Montreal Gazette reported June 18, 1938, that a George H. Keefer of Cobble Hill, B.C., claimed he was responsible for setting the Great Vancouver Fire.[14] This claim is not verified by any other sources.[14]

 
Postcard of CPR Hotel Vancouver, c.1908. The front left portion of the building was built following the fire.

Rebuilding edit

The day after the fire, the manager of the Hastings Mill, Richard Alexander, announced free lumber for anyone rebuilding their homes and businesses after the fire.[1] Impromptu emergency shelters were set up in the few surviving structures.[1] Several blocks of ice found beneath the wreckage of the Deighton House ice shed provided drinking water to residents.[1] The city council set up a temporary tent city hall.[1] A few months later, one of the first brick buildings in Vancouver became the city hall building.[1] The day after the fire, to address looting, Mayor MacLean appointed three special constables, Jackson Abray, V.W. Haywood, and John McLaren, to join constable John Stewart as the first Vancouver police force.[1][3] The police force operated out of the city hall tent whilst Vancouver was rebuilt.[1]

 
City Wharf at Cordova and Hastings Streets c. late 1886

In the days that followed, the residents of Vancouver set up white canvas tents and small huts[4] and searched the wreckages of their homes and businesses looking for any surviving objects.[1] The CPR Hotel was the first building to be completely rebuilt.[4] Within two weeks, Cordova St from Carrall to Abbott streets was filled with businesses reopening in basic structures.[4] The City Council organised the main streets to be planked.[4][15] Within six months, 500 buildings had been rebuilt with many of the new buildings being made from brick.[4]

Population growth edit

After the fire, the City Council focused on urban development to promote the growth of the city.[16] The Canadian Pacific Railway played an important role in the growth of Vancouver.[6][16] It brought demographic and economic growth and was the largest property owner.[6][16] In the years following the fire, the population of Vancouver continued to grow, expanding from several hundred people, to 2,000 people within a year and 13,000 people within six years.[16]                  

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd Smith, Lisa (2014). Vancouver is ashes : the great fire of 1886. Vancouver, B.C., Canada. ISBN 978-1-55380-320-1. OCLC 866622127.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h Matthews, James (1958). "The Inauguration of Civic Government in Vancouver". Vancouver Historical Journal. 1: 26–70 – via archive.org.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q McDonald, Robert A. J. (1996). Making Vancouver : class, status and social boundaries, 1863-1913. Vancouver [B.C.]: UBC Press. ISBN 0-7748-0555-2. OCLC 180704404.
  4. ^ a b c d e f "Vancouver - Reconstruction". British Columbia Historical News. British Columbia Historical Federation. 19: 9–11. 1986 – via archive.org.
  5. ^ Matthews, James (1960). "The Burning of Vancouver". Vancouver Historical Journal. 3: 2–70.
  6. ^ a b c d McDonald, Robert (1990). "Vancouver's 'Four Hundred': The Quest for Wealth and Status in Canada's Urban West, 1886-1914". Journal of Canadian Studies. 25 (3): 55–73. doi:10.3138/jcs.25.3.55. S2CID 151869211.
  7. ^ "Early Transpacific Chinese Travelers and Today's British Columbia | Curious". curious.royalbcmuseum.bc.ca. Retrieved May 28, 2020.
  8. ^ "Robert Kerr-'The Ship that Saved Vancouver'". hec.lrfoundation.org.uk/. April 14, 2018. Retrieved May 3, 2022.
  9. ^ a b "Community celebrates history with canoe ceremony". Ammsa.com. Retrieved September 3, 2019.
  10. ^ a b "The Vancouver Fire, Aid For Sufferers". The Quebec Daily Telegraph. June 15, 1886. Retrieved May 20, 2020.
  11. ^ "50 Lives Lost". The Day. June 15, 1886. Retrieved May 20, 2020.
  12. ^ a b "Death In The Flames". The Manistee Weekly Times. June 15, 1886. Retrieved May 20, 2020.
  13. ^ a b "The Vancouver Fire". The Toronto World. June 16, 1886. Retrieved May 20, 2020.
  14. ^ a b "Origin of Vancouver's Fire in 1886 Revealed". The Montreal Gazette. June 18, 1938. Retrieved May 20, 2020.
  15. ^ "Turnpikes and Toll Roads in Nineteenth-Century America". eh.net. Retrieved May 28, 2020.
  16. ^ a b c d McDonald, Robert A.J. (1983). "The Business Élite and Municipal Politics in Vancouver 1886-1914". Urban History Review. 11 (3): 1–14. doi:10.7202/1019011ar. ISSN 0703-0428. JSTOR 43559103.

Further reading edit

  • Smith L. Vancouver is Ashes. Vancouver: Ronsdale Press; 2014.
  • McDonald R. Making Vancouver. Vancouver: UBC Press; 1996.
  • Matthews J. The Burning of Vancouver. Vancouver Historical Journal. 1960;3:2-70.

great, vancouver, fire, this, article, cites, sources, does, provide, page, references, help, providing, page, numbers, existing, citations, june, 2020, learn, when, remove, this, template, message, destroyed, most, newly, incorporated, city, vancouver, britis. This article cites its sources but does not provide page references You can help providing page numbers for existing citations June 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Great Vancouver Fire destroyed most of the newly incorporated city of Vancouver British Columbia Canada on June 13 1886 1 It started as two land clearing fires to the west of the city 1 The first fire was farther away from the city and was clearing land for the roundhouse of the terminus of the Canadian Pacific Railway 1 The second fire was clearing land to extend the city to the west 1 The Great Fire occurred shortly after the township of Granville had been incorporated into the City of Vancouver in April 1886 1 Great Vancouver FireHand drawn map of Vancouver in 1886 showing the spread of the fireLocationVancouverCoordinates49 16 59 4 N 123 06 40 6 W 49 283167 N 123 111278 W 49 283167 123 111278StatisticsDate s June 13 1886 1886 06 13 CauseOut of control land clearing firesBuildings destroyed600 1 000DeathsExact number unknownThe fires spread northeast into the city killing at least 21 people 2 and destroying 600 to 1 000 buildings the exact numbers are unknown 1 Most residents escaped by fleeing to the Burrard Inlet shore or the False Creek shore 1 Following the recovery efforts the city of Vancouver continued to grow 1 The city s first police force was set up its first brick buildings were built and its first fire engine was brought in from the nearby larger town of New Westminster 1 Contents 1 Early Vancouver 1 1 Demographics 1 2 First Nations people 2 Origin 2 1 First clearing fire 2 2 Second clearing fire 3 Spread 4 After the fire 4 1 Damage 4 2 Newspaper reports 4 3 Rebuilding 4 4 Population growth 5 See also 6 References 7 Further readingEarly Vancouver editMain article History of Vancouver nbsp Carrall Street looking south and showing Maple Tree corner at Water Street c 1886 European settlement in the Vancouver area began in 1862 after Captain George Henry Richard s 1859 discovery of coal in the Burrard Inlet 3 The settlement of Granville later Vancouver was formed in the mid 1860s between two Burrard Inlet sawmills 3 It began as shops and hotels providing service to the workers of the mills and later their families 3 The two sawmills were Moodyville originally Moody s Mill opened 1863 on the Burrard Inlet north shore and Hastings Mill originally Stamps Mill opened 1867 on the Inlet s south shore 3 The two mills were the main employers in Granville 3 In the early 1880s they employed between 150 and 200 workers not including loggers and longshoremen 3 The exact numbers are unknown as many of the workers were transient unmarried men who worked at a mill for only a few weeks at a time before moving on 3 To reach Granville required either a nine mile journey through dense forest from the nearby larger town of New Westminster or a thirty mile journey via the Fraser River from Fort Langley the capital of British Columbia at the time 3 In 1885 it was announced that Granville would be the west coast terminus of the Canadian Pacific Railway 1 The township of Granville was incorporated as the city of Vancouver on April 6 1886 2 becoming the fourth city in British Columbia 4 At the first city council election on May 3 1886 Malcolm MacLean was elected the city s mayor 5 The inaugural meeting of the Vancouver Volunteer Hose Company No 1 was held May 28 1886 1 Future Vancouver blocks and streets had been marked out to the west of the city to allow for its anticipated growth 1 These had been designated by the Canadian Pacific Railway land commissioner Lachlan Hamilton 1 Demographics edit nbsp St Paul s Roman Catholic Church at the Mission Indian Reserve later more commonly known as Eslha7an Squamish language Early Vancouver attracted budding entrepreneurs 6 who were very active in the civic politics forming the new city 6 The population of Granville grew substantially in the early to mid 1880s 2 The population and economic growth in the area in early 1886 was so significant three new newspapers were established 1 The mid 1880s also saw a change in the population from mostly unmarried men and some families with First Nations wives to an increasing number of families especially with European wives 2 Following the British victory in the Opium Wars British colonies such as Vancouver received an influx of Chinese migrants from the provinces surrounding Canton the sole port for foreign trade 7 Most of these migrants were employed at the Hastings Mill 1 The Canadian Pacific Railway also brought in Chinese railway workers employed to establish the CPR terminus 3 First Nations people edit The main Indigenous population in the area at the time of European settlement were the hen q emin em speaking Musqueam people When sawmilling began in 1863 the local Squamish men were hired as unskilled labour 3 The mission reserve near Moodyville and the Indian rancheria at Hastings Mill were the product of the mill s employment of Indigenous people 3 In 1881 there were at least 500 Squamish people at Burrard Inlet 3 The First Nations people were not given the same rights as their European contemporaries 3 The men were not hired for higher skilled and higher paid roles at the sawmills and women were unable to inherit property from their white partners and were often ejected from their homes after his death 3 Origin editPrior to the fire Vancouver had experienced three weeks of abnormal heat for late spring 1 Sunday June 13 was particularly hot with an offshore breeze from the Pacific Ocean 1 There was also significant forest deadfall in the area to the east of the city as well as debris from the recent clearing for the expansion of the city which provided fuel to the fire 1 First clearing fire edit The first clearing fire was located to the south west of the city 1 The land was being cleared to create the roundhouse for the western terminus of the Canadian Pacific Railway 1 The dry conditions and a Pacific breeze caused the fire to grow out of workers control throughout the morning and into the afternoon 1 Second clearing fire edit The second clearing fire was located at the west end of the city near the intersection of Cambie and Cordova street 1 The fire was being used to clear land for the expansion of the city 1 It grew out of control in the early afternoon 1 Spread edit nbsp Panorama of Vancouver with clearing fire c 1886The men working on the clearing fires and volunteers from the town attempted to put out both fires with buckets wet blankets and shovels 1 For the first clearing fire the water came from False Creek whilst the second fire used the hand pump well at the newly constructed nearby Regina Hotel 1 The men attempted to bring both fires under control into the afternoon however the breeze turned to a gale and the men at the first fire were forced to give up their efforts and flee to the False Creek shore 1 At the second fire an attempt to create a fire break with pickaxes was unsuccessful 1 The second fire was abandoned when the two fire fronts joined 1 The smoke from the fire filled the sky over the town 1 The men fleeing warned the people in the town of the incoming fire 1 Most residents hurriedly packed up their belongings and their stores and headed to the Burrard Inlet shore 1 However despite warnings from other residents and the growing smoke a number of residents did not believe the fire was dangerous 1 Some residents waited until the last minute to flee whilst others headed to the hotels to drink the unguarded liquor 1 The Squamish people from the south shore village Snauq paddled across in canoes to view the fire 1 At the Burrard Inlet shore some residents were able to flee out into the inlet on floats and vessels 1 At least two hundred people found refuge on the Robert Kerr the ship that saved Vancouver a 58 metre 190 ft wooden ship at anchor close to the Burrard Inlet shore at the time 8 The local Squamish Nation provided help to the survivors who were floundering in the water 9 They paddled over and canoed people to safety 9 The men of the Vancouver Volunteer Hose Company No 1 went to Scoullar s General Store to remove a supply of explosives which were taken to the Hastings Mill at the opposite end of town 1 The city clerk Thomas McGuian saved the city records detailing the city s short history by entrusting them to a stranger 1 After the fire edit nbsp Vancouver Police Department 1886 nbsp First Vancouver City Council Meeting after the fire c 1886After the fire passed the newly elected Mayor of Vancouver Malcolm MacLean 3 sent telegrams to the Canadian Prime Minister and the Mayor of Toronto 1 The telegram to the Prime Minister Sir John A Macdonald read Our city is ashes three thousand people homeless can you send us any government aid 1 The telegrams were sent via horse to the nearby town of New Westminster 1 Shortly after word arrived that relief supplies from New Westminster were being sent in wagons 1 At this time most Vancouver residents had gathered at Hastings Mill or False Creek 1 Mayor MacLean instructed the survivors to gather at Westminster Bridge to await the relief supplies 1 An impromptu bivouac was set up with tents and lean tos made with large branches 1 At around midnight supplies arrived from New Westminster and Port Moody an eastern township on the Burrard Inlet 1 Damage edit Between 600 and 1 000 buildings were destroyed by the fire 1 with few surviving the blaze 2 The Regina Hotel at the north of the city survived as did the Bridge Hotel at the south east 2 A side building of the Bridge Hotel was used as a makeshift morgue 2 According to Alderman Gallagher a Vancouver businessman who witnessed the fire and the aftermath there were 21 bodies or parts thereof found immediately after the fire while others were discovered during the cleanup and rebuilding 2 The exact number of dead is unknown mostly because Vancouver s population at this time was constantly changing due to its rapid expansion as well as the transient nature of many of the mill workers 1 3 Newspaper reports editThe Quebec Daily Telegraph reported the fire June 15 1886 10 It reported five people dead 1 000 homeless and a total loss of an estimated one million dollars 10 The Day in New London Connecticut reported the fire June 15 1886 with 50 people dead 1 000 homeless and a total loss of one million dollars 11 The Manistee Weekly Times in the June 15 1886 edition outlined the events of the fire and attributed the blaze to the Canadian Pacific Railway 12 It also reported that liberal and prompt aid was expected from Canadian Pacific 12 The fire was reported in the June 16 1886 edition of the Toronto World 13 It reported 12 lives had been lost outlined the events of the fire and included a response from the Toronto mayor promising immediate aid 13 The Montreal Gazette reported June 18 1938 that a George H Keefer of Cobble Hill B C claimed he was responsible for setting the Great Vancouver Fire 14 This claim is not verified by any other sources 14 nbsp Postcard of CPR Hotel Vancouver c 1908 The front left portion of the building was built following the fire Rebuilding edit The day after the fire the manager of the Hastings Mill Richard Alexander announced free lumber for anyone rebuilding their homes and businesses after the fire 1 Impromptu emergency shelters were set up in the few surviving structures 1 Several blocks of ice found beneath the wreckage of the Deighton House ice shed provided drinking water to residents 1 The city council set up a temporary tent city hall 1 A few months later one of the first brick buildings in Vancouver became the city hall building 1 The day after the fire to address looting Mayor MacLean appointed three special constables Jackson Abray V W Haywood and John McLaren to join constable John Stewart as the first Vancouver police force 1 3 The police force operated out of the city hall tent whilst Vancouver was rebuilt 1 nbsp City Wharf at Cordova and Hastings Streets c late 1886In the days that followed the residents of Vancouver set up white canvas tents and small huts 4 and searched the wreckages of their homes and businesses looking for any surviving objects 1 The CPR Hotel was the first building to be completely rebuilt 4 Within two weeks Cordova St from Carrall to Abbott streets was filled with businesses reopening in basic structures 4 The City Council organised the main streets to be planked 4 15 Within six months 500 buildings had been rebuilt with many of the new buildings being made from brick 4 Population growth edit After the fire the City Council focused on urban development to promote the growth of the city 16 The Canadian Pacific Railway played an important role in the growth of Vancouver 6 16 It brought demographic and economic growth and was the largest property owner 6 16 In the years following the fire the population of Vancouver continued to grow expanding from several hundred people to 2 000 people within a year and 13 000 people within six years 16 See also editList of fires in Canada List of disasters in CanadaReferences edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd Smith Lisa 2014 Vancouver is ashes the great fire of 1886 Vancouver B C Canada ISBN 978 1 55380 320 1 OCLC 866622127 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link a b c d e f g h Matthews James 1958 The Inauguration of Civic Government in Vancouver Vancouver Historical Journal 1 26 70 via archive org a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q McDonald Robert A J 1996 Making Vancouver class status and social boundaries 1863 1913 Vancouver B C UBC Press ISBN 0 7748 0555 2 OCLC 180704404 a b c d e f Vancouver Reconstruction British Columbia Historical News British Columbia Historical Federation 19 9 11 1986 via archive org Matthews James 1960 The Burning of Vancouver Vancouver Historical Journal 3 2 70 a b c d McDonald Robert 1990 Vancouver s Four Hundred The Quest for Wealth and Status in Canada s Urban West 1886 1914 Journal of Canadian Studies 25 3 55 73 doi 10 3138 jcs 25 3 55 S2CID 151869211 Early Transpacific Chinese Travelers and Today s British Columbia Curious curious royalbcmuseum bc ca Retrieved May 28 2020 Robert Kerr The Ship that Saved Vancouver hec lrfoundation org uk April 14 2018 Retrieved May 3 2022 a b Community celebrates history with canoe ceremony Ammsa com Retrieved September 3 2019 a b The Vancouver Fire Aid For Sufferers The Quebec Daily Telegraph June 15 1886 Retrieved May 20 2020 50 Lives Lost The Day June 15 1886 Retrieved May 20 2020 a b Death In The Flames The Manistee Weekly Times June 15 1886 Retrieved May 20 2020 a b The Vancouver Fire The Toronto World June 16 1886 Retrieved May 20 2020 a b Origin of Vancouver s Fire in 1886 Revealed The Montreal Gazette June 18 1938 Retrieved May 20 2020 Turnpikes and Toll Roads in Nineteenth Century America eh net Retrieved May 28 2020 a b c d McDonald Robert A J 1983 The Business Elite and Municipal Politics in Vancouver 1886 1914 Urban History Review 11 3 1 14 doi 10 7202 1019011ar ISSN 0703 0428 JSTOR 43559103 Further reading editSmith L Vancouver is Ashes Vancouver Ronsdale Press 2014 McDonald R Making Vancouver Vancouver UBC Press 1996 Matthews J The Burning of Vancouver Vancouver Historical Journal 1960 3 2 70 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Great Vancouver Fire amp oldid 1199708855, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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