The History of Vancouver's Strathcona: Perserverance of the People

A small area east of Main Street was the birthplace of Vancouver and its first neighborhood - Strathcona. Once a native campsite called Kumkumalay meaning "big leaf maple trees", this area became a small collect

Strathcona's present geography is bordered by Chinatown to the west, Clark Drive to the east, Hastings Street to the north and Great Northern Way (the CPR railroad) to the south.
Strathcona saw major growth from about 1886 to 1920, after William Van Horne announced that Vancouver would be the terminus for the

As a result of its increased industry and available housing, Strathcona (then called the "East End") became home for the successive waves of Canadian immigrants. Strathcona Elementary, one of Vancouver's oldest schools, was a good indication of that diversity; in the 1930s school enrollment included Japanese, Chinese, Italians, Jews and smaller numbers of Scandinavians, Russians, Ukranians and Blacks. Though there were no distinct boundaries, most of the Japanese community lived north of Hastings, the Italian community between Union and Prior Streets, the Ukranian H

Unfortunately, the "East End" name came to have a derogatory meaning and in the 1950s, urban city planners d

The Strathcona community fought back; the opposition was comprised of activists within the community like Mary Lee Chan. Chan was determined not to lose her home whic was slated for demolition. She, and others from the community (mainly housewives) formed the Strathcona Property Owner and Tenants Association (SPOTA) and protested at City Hall(www.mothertongue...). Through determination and perserv

Today, approximately 8,000 people live in the Strathcona area, 61% list their first language a

Works cited:
Info on Mary Chan and STOPA:
http://www.mothertongue.ca/community.php?id=1093574665
Heritage Register: (amended every year)
http://www.city.vancouver.bc.ca/commsvcs/Guidelines/V001.pdf
Pictures:
(from top of page)
Frank, Leonard. "Men Standing on lumber on Grand Trunk flatcar at Hastings Mill" Vancouver Public Library, Archive # 12443, 1925.
Map of Strathcona. www.city.vancouver.bc.ca/community_profiles/strathcona/www.carnegie.vcn.bc.ca/index.pl/historical_images>
"Recess at Lord Strathcona School" Author Unknown, 1960. www.carnegie.vcn.bc.ca (see link above)
"The Goergia Viaduct".
"Mary Lee Chan and her family in front of their house which was slated for demolition"
Personal photograph by: Shirley Chan, Jo-Anne Lee, Tony Westman. No Date, www.mothertongue.ca (see link above)
Docksteader, Russell. "House with Turret in Strathcona" August, 2006 <http://flickr.com/photos/ridock/22334521/>
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