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Craigflower
Manor and Schoolhouse
Craigflower
Manor - BC Heritage Photo
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Craigflower was
one of Vancouver Island's first European farming communities, established
in 1853 along Victoria's Gorge Waterway. The Puget Sound Agricultural
Company, owned by the Hudson's Bay Company, established farms to reduce
the need for importing goods from abroad, and to meet the Hudson's
Bay Company's obligations to Britain to support colonization. On lands
purchased from chiefs of the indigenous aboriginal people, Kenneth
McKenzie oversaw construction of a self-sufficient settlement.
Long before
the arrival of the Craigflower settlers in the mid-1800s, the Kosapsom
families occupied this area, with their people using the Gorge waterway
and its adjacent lands for shellfish collection and processing during
the 5,000 year period prior to European contact. The descendants
of the Kosapsom are the Esquimalt Nation, whose people still harvest
shellfish, salmon and herring from the tidal waters that separate
the Manor from the Schoolhouse.
Craigflower
Manor - BC Heritage Photo
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The Kosapsom
Nation's ancestors left behind ash deposits, the shells from the
seafood they ate and used, and tools made from stone and bone. The
oldest artifact found so far is a crystal quartz microblade (like
a small stone razor blade) dating back approximately 2,500 years.
Today, the original Georgian Manor house, partly built on the old
H.B.C. post-and-beam design, still stands amid fields and gardens,
and across the bridge, the oldest remaining schoolhouse in western
Canada gives children re-enactment opportunities to experience Victorian
attitudes about schooling!
The two-storey
log home is one of the last remaining links to original settlement
farms established by the Hudson’s Bay Company circa 1850s. It is
the third oldest building in British Columbia: only Helmcken
House at the Royal BC Museum and Tod House in Oak Bay are older.
Craigflower
occupies several open hectares at the junction of Craigflower Road
(Old Island Highway 1A, almost parallel with the main Trans-Canada
Highway 1) and Admirals Road. It is just a 10-minute drive from
downtown Victoria and directly accessible from the Trans-Canada
via Admirals Road for those approaching Victoria from Duncan and
Goldstream Provincial Park. Craigflower is available year-round
for booked tours and groups. Program offerings vary widely to suit
the needs of individual tour groups. Daytime and evening programs
can be arranged for any day of the week. Please be sure to call
in advance for group visits.
Craigflower
Manor came close to destruction by fire in January 2009. The source
of the fire appeared to be a heater under the stairs. Fire crews
were credited for their quick work for containing the flames to
a hallway and kitchen on the bottom floor, saving priceless and
irreplaceable artifacts from damage in the dining room and living
room just metres away.
Alerted by a
modern-day fire alarm system, heavy black smoke billowed out of
the windows when firefighters from Colwood, Esquimalt and View Royal
arrived. Greeted by a fireball when they kicked in the back door,
firefighters prevented the flames from entering the walls, where
the fire would have traveled unimpeded to the attic and quickly
engulfed the entire house.
Craigflower
Farmhouse
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Between May 1st through to September 30th, the site will be open to the public daily (including holidays), between 11 am and 5 pm. The grounds and ancient Kosapsom
Village Site are open year round for self-guided tours.
Contact details:
Craigflower is managed by The Land Conservancy of British Columbia.
They can be contacted at telephone number (250) 479-8053.
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