Time Line

  • 1879

    David Hope dies in a hunting accident and his younger brother and sister, Rutherford Hope and Helen Auchterlonie, inherit his land (1881?).

  • 1877

    Thomas Edison invents the phonograph.

  • 1877

    Washington Grimmer emigrates to Canada from Australia.

  • 1876

    Rutherford Hope emigrates to Canada to join his older brother David on Pender. He begins the development of a large farm on North Pender.

  • 1874

    Indigenous and Chinese people are excluded from the provincial vote.

  • 1874

    Clam Bay Farm is established.

  • 1873

    Fanny Hooson, nee Lawson, is born on January 8th. She later becomes the first school teacher on Pender.

  • 1872

    David Hope and Noah Buckley come to Pender and each pre-empt 160 acres of land on the northwest end of 'Northern Pender Island'.

  • 1872

    On October 21, an arbitration committee in Geneva sides with the Americans and decrees the boundary between the US and Canada be drawn down Haro Strait, not Rosario Strait as preferred by the British. On November 25th, the British Forces stationed on San Juan Island withdraw.

  • 1871

    The colony of British Columbia becomes the sixth province of Canada.

  • 1871

    John Tod pre-empts land on South Pender Island.

  • 1869

    Elizabeth Grimmer, nee Auchterlonie, is born in England on February 13th. She later moves to Pender.

  • 1868

    Captain George Richards renames Pender Island, Port Browning, and Bedwell Harbour.

  • 1868

    Victoria is declared the capital of British Columbia.

  • 1867

    James Auchterlonie is born on January 11th.

  • 1867

    The Dominion of Canada is created on July 1st.

  • 1866

    The Colony of Vancouver Island and the inland Colony of New Caledonia merge to become the Colony of British Columbia.

  • 1865

    Captain George Henry Richards corrects the name 'Gulf of Georgia' to 'Strait of Georgia'.

  • 1863

    Five Quamichan First Nations murder American William Brady and injure John Henley, who is part Cherokee, at Shark Cove on April 4th. Shark Cove was at the south end of the excavated canal between North and South Pender.

  • 1863

    On April 20, a British naval gunboat fires on a Native village on Kuper Island. The naval officers believe that the village harbours the individuals involved in the Shark Cove murder and attempted murder. The British are defeated and frustratedly respond with military operations ('the war of 1863') against various Native groups in an attempt to rid the area of 'criminals'.

  • 1862

    There is a great smallpox epidemic among First Nations.

  • 1860

    Much of the Spalding Valley on South Pender is granted to John Tod.

  • 1859

    Washington Grimmer is born in England on July 24th.

  • 1859

    Captain G.H. Richards of the HMS Plumper names Portland Island, south west of Pender Island, after the flagship of the Rear Admiral Fairfax Moresby, the HMS Portland. The island then falls into the hands of the Hudson Bay Company, who soon give it to some of their workers, the industrious Kanakas (Hawaiians) who settled on Salt Spring and Russell islands. Some of the trees they plant still bear fruit today.

  • 1858

    Queen Victoria names the crown colony of British Columbia, created on the mainland.

  • 1858

    Gold is discovered in the interior Cariboo region. The Fraser River gold rush begins.

  • 1857

    In November, Captain George Henry Richards of the Royal Navy begins the survey of the Strait of Georgia in the H.M.S. Plumper and names several geographic features.

  • 1856

    The first House of Assembly is elected in Victoria.

  • 1854

    Robert Roe Sr. is born on June 4th in Scotland.

  • 1852-1854

    The Douglas Treaties take lands from First Nations tribes (James Douglas was Governor of the Colony of Vancouver Island). The Tsawout, Tsartlip, Pauquachin and Tseycum First Nations (aka 'the salt water people' or Sencot'en) have land and harvesting rights to Pender under the 1852 Douglas Treaty.

  • 1852

    Margaret Roe, nee Burnes, is born on July 12th in Scotland.

  • 1850

    The first Aboriginal Land Treaties are signed.

  • 1849

    Pender Island becomes part of the Colony of Vancouver Island, with Victoria as the capital.

  • 1848

    The California Gold Rush begins.

  • 1847

    Thomas Edison, inventor of the phonograph, is born. Edison's father was a Canadian.

  • 1846

    The Oregon Treaty divides British and American sovereignty along the 49th parallel, except for Point Roberts, South Vancouver Island, and the Gulf Islands. It is still not clear whether the boundary should be drawn down Haro Strait or Rosario Strait, placing the San Juan Islands in an unresolved position until the Pig War results in the border line being drawn down the Haro Strait. See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pig_War for more information.

  • 1846

    The division of Canada and the US leads to the Salish Nation, based on the Saanich Penninsula, losing its freedom to fish in their traditional territory, which included the San Juan Islands.

  • 1843

    Rutherford Hope, after which Hope Bay is named, is born on January 24th.

  • 1843

    In order to protect its northern holdings from the Americans, Fort Victoria is established under auspices of Hudson Bay representative James Douglas, on the prime anchorage of the Inner Harbour at what is now Bastion Square.

  • 1835

    The S.S. Beaver arrives on the West Coast from England, built for the Hudson Bay Company. She served frequently as a floating fur trading post and was chartered to the Royal Navy to continue the survey of the coast when Captain Richards returned to England in 1863. Under the command of Master Daniel Pender she continued this work until 1870.

  • 1795

    British Royal Navy Captain George Vancouver negotiates title of Vancouver Island from the Spanish, who considered it low value wilderness.

  • 1792

    Captain George Vancouver misnames the Strait of Georgia the 'Gulf' of Georgia and establishes British jurisdiction in the region.

  • 1791

    A Spanish expedition led by Francisco de Eliza charts the Gulf Islands in the 45-foot topsail schooner Santa Saturnina, under the command of second pilot Jose Marie Narvaez, and the 85-foot San Carlos. They name Pender 'Ysla de San Eusevio' after the 31st pope of 309 AD. Saturna Island is named after the Santa Saturnina, and Narvaez Bay is named after her captain.

  • 1670

    The British Crown gives the Hudson Bay Company a Royal Charter, which ultimately leads to it assuming de facto control over all of what is now Western Canada.

  • 1592

    Juan de Fuca, a Greek employee of the Spanish, blunders into the strait named after him. His Greek name was Apostolos Valerianos.

  • 1579

    British explorer and privateer Sir Francis Drake may have entered the Straight of Georgia, marking the first face-to-face contact between Europeans and Northwest Coast people.

  • 1513

    Vasco Nunez de Balboa claims the Pacific coast for Spain.

  • 1492

    Christopher Columbus, an Italian hired by the Spanish royalty, visits North America.

  • 800 to 200 years ago

    The tradition of above-ground tree burials and box burials develops. Unmarked in-ground and shell-midden interments continue. Differences in burial type mark differences in social position.

  • 1,200 years ago

    The widespread presence of defensive sites and fortifications indicates an increase in inter-tribal warfare within Coast Salish territory.

  • 1,400 to 800 years ago

    Social class distinctions in First Nations society are apparent in the elaborate earthen mound and stone cairn burials in the Gulf of Georgia region.

  • 2,500 years ago

    The local abundance of yellow and red cedar is similar to that of today.

  • 5000 years ago

    First evidence of Coast Salish people on the Pender Islands, according to artifacts found at the Pender Canal excavation sites. The Salish Nation probably existed in the region much earlier and was centered on the Saanich Penninsula. The Salish called the Penders 'S,DAYES', which means 'wind drying', referring to the drying of salmon.

  • 5,500 to 5,000 years ago

    The sea level and climate reach their modern position and stabilize. Salmon runs increase significantly, providing an abundant and reliable source of food for ancestral Salish people. Aboriginal society is developing complex social structures. The domestic Coast Salish woolly dog, raised for its sheeplike fur, appears in the archaeological record of this time.

  • 6,800 years ago

    Mount Hood erupts, blanketing the northwest coast in a thick layer of volcanic ash.

  • 10,000 to 8,000 years ago

    The Fraser Glaciation period comes to a close. Aboriginal people leave the first lasting traces of their occupation at sites in the lower Fraser River canyon and the Lower Mainland. The local climate becomes significantly warmer and dryer than it is today.

  • 12,500 years ago

    Melting glaciers separate into valley ice flows. Pine, hemlock and alder begin to grow in the otherwise barren landscape. The sea level is about 160 meters above where it is today. The climate is colder and wetter than at present.

  • 15,000 years ago

    Our region is under as much as 1600 meters of glacial ice, with only the mountain peaks showing above the ice. The sea level is as much as 200 meters above what it is today.

  • 1971

    Shortly after this, taking inspiration from Islands Trustee Bob Allison, PIRAHA’s Hall Steering Committee started looking for a site for a community hall. Land was donated by Karl Hamson in the mid-nineties and the community started raising money and building the hall, completing it in the year 2000.