Close X
Friday, November 15, 2024
ADVT 
National

Thrilling Walk With History's Spirits At Victoria's Ross Bay Cemetery

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 16 Nov, 2015 11:03 AM
  • Thrilling Walk With History's Spirits At Victoria's Ross Bay Cemetery
VICTORIA — Waves crash in the near distance and a howling wind whips between granite tombstones where giant firs, pines and elms shelter the Victorian-era burial ground that provides the final resting place for monumental figures in Canadian history. They include artist Emily Carr, Gold Rush pioneer Billy Barker and hanging judge Matthew Begbie.
 
A hike through the winding, tree-lined 40-hectare Ross Bay Cemetery includes spectacular views of the ocean with Washington state's Olympic mountains in the distance.
 
In use since 1872, the cemetery is named after Isabella Ross, an aboriginal woman whose farm once stood on the sloping property in the Fairfield neighbourhood, now steps from downtown Victoria. Ross, buried in an unmarked grave at Ross Bay in 1885, was the first woman in British Columbia to own land.
 
An interpretive plaque now marks her grave site.
 
"It's a beautiful and fascinating place," says Yvonne Van Ruskenveld, a tour guide for the Old Cemeteries Society of Victoria, which hosts regular walks through Ross Bay Cemetery.
 
"It's full of interesting people," she tells a group of school children touring the cemetery on a recent blustery fall day. "There's Emily Carr. There's Billy Barker. There's Amor de Cosmos.  On some of the tombstones, it tells you about various shipwrecks. There's lots to learn in this cemetery, and it's free."
 
Carr's grave is striking for the simple but heartwarming tributes left by people visiting the cemetery.
 
Pine cones, chestnuts and sticks of driftwood rest on top of a tombstone at the Carr family plot, which includes the artist and author and her mother, father, brother and three sisters. The tombstone includes Carr's poem, Dear Mother Earth.
 
"I think I have always specially belonged to you," it reads.
 
A glass jar near Carr's memorial plaque contains, pencils, brushes and painted rocks left behind by visitors. The plaque reads, "Emily Carr, 1871 to 1945; artist and author; lover of nature."
 
Begbie, buried at Ross Bay, was British Columbia's first Supreme Court judge. He travelled the province on foot and horseback and was known to bang his gavel and yell, "hang 'em."
 
Begbie, 1819 to 1894, asked for a small funeral and a wooden cross to mark his grave, but a large stone cross rests at the site. But his wish for this epitaph was granted: "Lord Be Merciful to Me A Sinner."
 
A large boulder from the Caribou gold fields marks the grave of William "Billy" Barker, the prospector who made the biggest gold strike of the Caribou Gold Rush in 1862. The town of Barkerville in B.C.'s central interior was named after Barker, who never made another strike like the one at Barkerville and died in poverty at the Old Men's Home in Victoria in 1894.
 
Van Ruskenveld points to a tiny stone marker rising about 25 centimetres above the ground. The tombstone shows a baby sleeping, with a tiny flower bud at the baby's curled up feet. The stone reads, "Oct. 26, 1888, Warren, son of C. and G. Powers, three months."
 
Van Ruskenveld tells the school children medicines were not always as advanced as they are today and many young children did not experience full lives, hence the unopened flower marking their graves.
 
If you want to visit Ross Bay Cemetery, the address is 1516 Fairfield Road. Check the Old Cemeteries Society of Victoria website for information about tours: http://www.oldcem.bc.ca, or send an email, oldcem@pacificcoast.net. 

MORE National ARTICLES

Economists Expect Bank Of Canada To Hold Its Key Rate At 0.5 Per Cent

Economists Expect Bank Of Canada To Hold Its Key Rate At 0.5 Per Cent
The Bank of Canada is expected to keep its key interest rate on hold Wednesday following a string of better than expected economic data.

Economists Expect Bank Of Canada To Hold Its Key Rate At 0.5 Per Cent

Chemicals, Materials Used In Drug Labs Found At Suspicious Surrey Fire

Chemicals, Materials Used In Drug Labs Found At Suspicious Surrey Fire
The fire started just after 9 a.m. Monday at a rural property on 40 Avenue, near 157 Street.

Chemicals, Materials Used In Drug Labs Found At Suspicious Surrey Fire

Goal Near For Western Canada March To Remember Missing, Murdered Women

Goal Near For Western Canada March To Remember Missing, Murdered Women
A difficult trek aimed at raising awareness of a tragic problem is less than a week from its conclusion as participants of the Walk for All Missing and Murdered have reached Terrace, B.C. 

Goal Near For Western Canada March To Remember Missing, Murdered Women

Art Or Science? Don't Ask, Says Renowned Canadian Dinosaur Painter

Art Or Science? Don't Ask, Says Renowned Canadian Dinosaur Painter
His portraits are so compelling you can almost hear his subjects tramp through the forest and smell their heaving breath.

Art Or Science? Don't Ask, Says Renowned Canadian Dinosaur Painter

SPCA Wants Quebec To Ban Keeping Dogs Tied Outside Around The Clock

SPCA Wants Quebec To Ban Keeping Dogs Tied Outside Around The Clock
The Montreal SPCA is asking the Quebec government to ban keeping dogs chained around the clock as part of an upcoming overhaul of the province's animal-rights legislation.

SPCA Wants Quebec To Ban Keeping Dogs Tied Outside Around The Clock

Harper Absolves All His Staff Except Wright In Duffy Affair

Harper Absolves All His Staff Except Wright In Duffy Affair
Stephen Harper says only one member of his staff in the Prime Minister's Office acted irresponsibly or unethically during the Mike Duffy affair.

Harper Absolves All His Staff Except Wright In Duffy Affair