Coombs is a small community on Vancouver Island in the Regional District of Nanaimo, British Columbia, situated on provincial highway 4A approximately 10km (10miles) west of Parksville. According to the 2021 census, Coombs is home to 1672 people.[1]
Coombs is known for its Old Country Market (also known as Goats on the Roof, which features a family of goats living on the roof), Butterfly World (which includes a small indoor tropical rainforest), the 106 year old Coombs Fall Fair, and the Coombs Bluegrass Festival held every B.C. Day weekend.
The area was named after Commissioner Thomas Bales Coombs, head of the Salvation Army movement in Canada in the early 1900s.[2] The Salvation Army honoured Coombs' retirement in 1911 by naming the new colony after him. Commissioner Coombs never visited the area.
In 1908, Walter Ford built a log house that is still standing today on the Alberni Highway.[3]
The community was established in 1910 under a Salvation Army emigration plan, in which people were relocated from crowded cities in Great Britain to Canada.[4] Walter Ford, of Ford Logging from Duncan, and his brother-in-law John West, were tasked with preparing Errington for the arrival of the newcomers from England.[5] The newcomers were led by Ensign Crego. Crego was trained in farming skills.
In 1911, the General Store was built, which also served as the Post Office. This building functioned as a general store until 2021, and is now a store selling Dutch products.[6]
In 1910, a log cabin that had previously been the residence of Willian Buss was used as the first school house.[7]
In 1912, the French Creek School opened at the request of the Coombs' Salvation Army Colony. The school was the first government built school in the area.[8] The school closed in 2014.[9]
In 1913, the first annual Fall Fair was held in neighbouring Hilliers.[10]
In 1921 the Coombs Community Hall opened.[11]
In 1923 the Fall Fair was moved to Coombs.[12]
Under the Köppen climate classification, Coombs is located at the northernmost limits of the cool dry-summer subtropical zone (Csb) or cool-summer Mediterranean climate, due to its dry summers.[13]