VICTORIA BC CANADA
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The Legislative Buildings
Victoria B.C., Canada's "Garden City" is located on the southern tip
of
Vancouver Island. The city has something to offer for everybody. Unlike
its
larger, more metropolitan cousin Vancouver, this was never an industry
town, where whiskey ruled and retired loggers came to soak away their
days.
Owing to a substantial Colonial naval influence (still present with a
Canadian naval base in nearby Esquimalt), and being the European centre
of
the Pacific Northwest last century, Victoria has retained a more
refined
appearance, evident in its plentiful gardens and tea houses. When the
city
was made capital of the newly formed Province of British Columbia in
1866,
all primary government buildings were constructed there. Many of these
remarkable slices of the middle and late Victorian period still
dominate
the skyline today. The Parliament Buildings, completed in 1898 by
Francis
Rattenbury are the most obvious example. The old Customs House on Wharf
Street where gold seekers and immigrants came by the thousands to a
rich,
promised land still stands as a reminder of the old boom days. Chinese
railway labourers and immigrants helped to create the city's colourful
Chinatown with a magnificent gateway entrance and some narrow, seedy
alleys.
Known as "The Garden City" for it's year-round growing season, a brief
introduction does not do the city justice. From boating, to cricket,
high
tea to ancient Indian history, Victoria is, for obvious reasons, a
popular
destination for tourists, and for those looking to enjoy peaceful life
to
its fullest.
Thanks to my grandson-Keith D Freeman for this introduction.
The Inner Harbor
The Old Customs House
The Gates of Harmonious Interest
The 'Famous' Hanging Baskets
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