Oak Bay, British Columbia Explained

Oak Bay
Official Name:The Corporation of the District of Oak Bay[1]
Settlement Type:District municipality
Pushpin Map:Canada British Columbia
Pushpin Label Position:none
Pushpin Map Caption:Location of Oak Bay in British Columbia
Subdivision Type:Country
Subdivision Name:Canada
Subdivision Type1:Province
Subdivision Name1:British Columbia
Subdivision Type2:Regional district
Subdivision Name2:Capital
Leader Title:Mayor
Leader Name:Kevin Murdoch
Leader Title1:Governing Body
Leader Name1:Oak Bay Municipal Council
Leader Title2:MP
Leader Name2:Laurel Collins (NDP)
Leader Title3:MLA
Leader Name3:Murray Rankin (BC NDP)
Established Title:Incorporated
Established Date:1906
Area Footnotes:[2]
Area Total Km2:10.53
Population As Of:2016
Population Total:18,094
Population Density Km2:1,717.7
Timezone:Pacific Time Zone
Utc Offset:−8
Timezone Dst:Pacific Daylight Time
Utc Offset Dst:−7
Coordinates:48.4262°N -123.3169°W
Elevation M:34
Postal Code Type:Postal code span
Area Code:250, 778

Oak Bay is a municipality incorporated in 1906 that is located on the southern tip of Vancouver Island, in the Canadian province of British Columbia. It is one of thirteen member municipalities of the Capital Regional District, and is bordered to the west by the city of Victoria and to the north by the district of Saanich. It is an eastern residential suburb of Victoria.

History

Oak Bay is part of the traditional territories of the Coast Salish people of the Songhees First Nation. The people that came and went in the millennia before are unknown. Evidence of their ancient settlements has been found along local shores, including Willows Beach, where an ancient Lkwungen seaport known as Sitchanalth was centred around the mouth of the river commonly known as Bowker Creek.[3] Sitchanalth is hypothesized to have been destroyed by the great Tsunami of 930 AD.[4] Much of this neighbourhood is built upon an Indigenous burial ground.[5]

Oak Bay takes its name from the Garry oak tree, which is found throughout the region, and also the name of the large bay on the eastern shore of the municipality, fronting onto Willows Beach.

John Tod, in 1850, built on a 109acres farm that is today the oldest continuously-occupied home in Western Canada. Tod was the Chief Fur Trader for the Hudson's Bay Company for Kamloops, one of the original appointed members of BC's Legislative Council.[6] [7] [8] Originally developed as a middle class streetcar suburb of Victoria, Oak Bay was incorporated as a municipality in 1906. Its first Council included Francis Rattenbury, the architect who designed the Legislative Buildings and Empress Hotel located on the inner harbour in Victoria. Rattenbury's own home on Beach Drive is now used as the junior campus for Glenlyon Norfolk School. In 1912, the former farm lands of the Hudson's Bay Company were subdivided to create the Uplands area, but development was hampered by the outbreak of World War I. After the war, development of expensive homes in the Uplands was accompanied by the construction of many more single-family dwellings in the Estevan, Willows and South Oak Bay neighbourhoods.

The Victoria Golf Club is located in South Oak Bay. It was founded in 1893, and is the second oldest golf course west of the Great Lakes. It is a 6,120 yard links course on the ocean side, and claims to be the oldest golf course in Canada still on its original site. The course is reported to be haunted.[7]

The Royal Victoria Yacht Club was formed on June 8, 1892, and moved in 1912 to its current location, at the location of the old Hudson's Bay Company cattle wharf.

In 1925, the Victoria Cougars won the Stanley Cup at the Patrick Arena in Oak Bay, defeating the Montreal Canadiens in four games.[9] The arena was soon after destroyed by fire in 1929. Nowadays, the Victoria Cougars are the Detroit Red Wings of the National Hockey League.

The Oak Bay Marina, built in 1962, was officially opened in April 1964. It replaced the Oak Bay Boat House built in 1893. The breakwater was built in 1959 and funded by the federal government.

There have reportedly been sightings of a sea monster known as the Cadborosaurus off Oak Bay, with both reports dating back to before European settlement in the area.[10]

Demographics

In the 2021 Census of Population conducted by Statistics Canada, Oak Bay had a population of 17,990 living in 7,807 of its 8,168 total private dwellings, a change of from its 2016 population of 18,094. With a land area of, it had a population density of in 2021.[11]

Ethnicity

Panethnic
group! colspan="2"
20212016[12] 2011[13] 2006[14] 2001[15] 1996[16]
European15,04015,35515,51516,20016,03016,240
East Asian1,1101,0808106451,000845
South Asian370285325180120205
Indigenous34525519026012090
Southeast Asian2501901551857510
Latin American1209545654535
Middle Eastern11511585801080
African1005560257085
Other/Multiracial1804575352010
Total responses17,64017,47517,38517,68517,48517,595
Total population17,99018,09418,01517,90817,79817,865

Religion

According to the 2021 census, religious groups in Oak Bay included:[17]

Film studio

During the 1930s, Oak Bay, British Columbia was the original "Hollywood North" where fourteen films were produced in Greater Victoria between 1933 and 1938.[18] In 1932 Kenneth James Bishop leased an off-season exhibition building on the Willows Fairgrounds that was converted to a film sound stage to produce films for the British film quota system under the Cinematograph Films Act 1927[19] and films were produced with Hollywood stars such as Lillian Gish, Paul Muni, Sir Cedric Hardwicke, Edith Fellows, Charles Starrett and Rin Tin Tin Jr. Film production was curtailed when the Cinematograph Films Act 1938 specified only British made films would be included in the quota. The Willows Park Studio films include:
1933

1935

1936

1937

1938

1942

Education

Oak Bay is the home of the University of Victoria, a public research institution in the Capital Region District. While much of the University of Victoria campus is located within the District of Oak Bay, parts of it are also located in the adjacent municipality of Saanich.

Oak Bay also hosts a number of academically focused public and private secondary schools which are part of School District 61. There is one public elementary school, Willows Elementary, one public middle school, Monterey Middle School, and one public high school, Oak Bay High School, with the largest student population in the Greater Victoria School District.[26] Residents in the South Oak Bay area may also register their children at the nearby Margaret Jenkins Elementary (in Victoria). In addition to public schools, there are two private schools located in Oak Bay, Glenlyon Norfolk School and St. Michael's University School.

Neighbourhoods

Parks and recreation centres

Parks

Public safety

See also

References

Oak Bay, British Columbia: in Photographs 1906-2006 (book)

Only in Oak Bay Oak Bay Municipality: 1906-1981 (book)

Notes and References

  1. Web site: British Columbia Regional Districts, Municipalities, Corporate Name, Date of Incorporation and Postal Address . British Columbia Ministry of Communities, Sport and Cultural Development . . November 2, 2014 . July 13, 2014 . https://web.archive.org/web/20140713004716/http://www.cscd.gov.bc.ca/lgd/infra/library/Name%20Incorp%202011.xls . dead .
  2. Web site: Oak Bay, District municipality [Census subdivision], British Columbia and Capital, Regional district [Census division], British Columbia ]. . January 23, 2017 . February 8, 2017.
  3. Web site: Capital Regional District Victoria BC . CRD. 30 October 2013. 26 January 2017.
  4. News: Doughton. Sandi. Ancient quake and tsunami in Puget Sound shake researchers. 29 January 2016. The Seattle Times.
  5. Web site: When Victorians Used to Dig Up Indigenous Bones for Fun. 2020-08-16. The Capital.
  6. Web site: Tod House.
  7. Book: Ghosts: True Tales of Eerie Encounters. 9781926971186. Belyk. Robert C.. 2011-07-06.
  8. Book: If These Walls Could Talk: Victoria's Houses from the Past. 9780920663783. Green. Valerie. 2001.
  9. Web site: Fame . Hockey Hall of . HHOF Silverware Trophy Tour . 2023-03-09 . Hockey Hall of Fame.
  10. Woodley . M. . Naish . D. . Shanahan . H. . 2008 . How many extant pinniped species remain to be described? . Historical Biology . 20 . 4 . 225–235 . 10.1080/08912960902830210 . 14824564 . 0891-2963.
  11. Web site: Population and dwelling counts: Canada, provinces and territories, and census subdivisions (municipalities), British Columbia . . February 9, 2022 . February 20, 2022.
  12. Web site: Government of Canada . Statistics Canada . 2021-10-27 . Census Profile, 2016 Census . 2023-03-03 . www12.statcan.gc.ca.
  13. Web site: Government of Canada . Statistics Canada . 2015-11-27 . NHS Profile . 2023-03-03 . www12.statcan.gc.ca.
  14. Web site: Government of Canada . Statistics Canada . 2019-08-20 . 2006 Community Profiles . 2023-03-03 . www12.statcan.gc.ca.
  15. Web site: Government of Canada . Statistics Canada . 2019-07-02 . 2001 Community Profiles . 2023-03-03 . www12.statcan.gc.ca.
  16. Web site: Government of Canada . Statistics Canada . 2019-07-02 . Profile of Census Divisions and Subdivisions, 1996 Census . 2023-03-03 . www12.statcan.gc.ca.
  17. Web site: Government of Canada . Statistics Canada . 2022-10-26 . Census Profile, 2021 Census of Population . 2022-11-09 . www12.statcan.gc.ca.
  18. Web site: The Oak Bay Encyclopedia. dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20041121215705/http://www.webturf.com/oakbay/history/encyclopedia/w.shtml . 2004-11-21 .
  19. p. 30 Gasher, Mike Hollywood North: The Feature Film Industry in British Columbia UBC Press, 2002
  20. Web site: The Crimson Paradise. . 14 December 1933.
  21. Book: The Dunsmuir Saga. 9781926706061. Reksten. Terry. December 2009.
  22. Web site: Willows Park Studio, Victoria, British Columbia.
  23. Web site: Secrets of Chinatown - RBCM Archives.
  24. Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine: Web site: Secrets of Chinatown = The Black Robe (1935) . YouTube.
  25. Web site: Secrets of Chinatown (1931).
  26. Web site: School Enrolment Numbers - the Greater Victoria School District No. 61.
  27. Web site: Oak Bay - the Victoria Real Estate Board. 2020-11-21. www.vreb.org.
  28. Web site: Fire Department.
  29. Web site: Van Reeuwyk . Christine . 2021-05-29 . Oak Bay cop targets police history, aims to share . 2023-03-07 . www.oakbaynews.com . en-US.
  30. Web site: History of OBSR Society / CCGA(P) Unit #33 . Oak Bay Sea Rescue Society . 2012-12-29.