Patti Locke-Lewkowich Victoria Real Estate Welcome to DFH Real Estate Ltd
 
Patti Locke-Lewkowich

Welcome to Fernwood


Fernwood is a neighbourhood near downtown Victoria, British Columbia, Canada, bounded by the neighbourhoods of Jubilee, North Park, Fairfield, Downtown, Hillside and Harris Green.

Contents

  • 1. Community
  • 2. History
  • 3. References
  • 4. External Links

Community

The neighbourhood is centered at a small square, the home of the Belfry Theatre, The Fernwood Inn (formerly The George and Dragon pub), Lucy's Cafe, Stir It Up (a Jamaican and Caribbean restaurant) and She Said Gallery. Other businesses near the core include: Stage wine bar, The Cornerstone Cafe, the Collective Works Gallery and Freedom Kilts.

Collective Works Gallery is run by 24 artists who love to share their work with their community. There are photographers, printmakers, painters, potters, sculptors and other mediums. Every two weeks there is a new show in the front area and in the back area, the other members works are always on display as well. This gallery is an exciting place to discover unusual and thoughtful artwork. The public is encouraged to meet the artist so that they can better understand the artist's work.

The Belfry Theatre has been producing plays at the center of the area since 1976. The neighbourhood is also home to Victoria High School, Central Middle School, and George Jay Elementary.

The Fernwood Community Association facilitates land use discussions between developers, residents, and the City, as well as providing facilities for various community groups and gallery space. The Fernwood Community Centre and The Cornerstone Cafe are operated by the Fernwood Neighborhood Resource Group. The neighbourhood is also home to many recreational groups, including the Fernwood United Football Club (soccer).

History

The Fernwood area was part of the territory originally inhabited by the Songhees prior to the establishment of Fort Victoria. It is believed that a Songhees village may have been located at what is today Cadboro Bay. With the establishment of Fort Victoria, a trail linking the fort to Cadboro Bay ran through the area that would become Fernwood and was used by aboriginals and Europeans. Bishop Edward Cridge described the area as it was in the 1850s as "open country without a house or field till we arrived at the Company's farm [Cadboro Bay Farm]".

Early European settlers in the area included John Work, born in Donegal, Ireland who developed the Hillside Farm on the northwest edge of today's Fernwood, and Benjamin Pearse, born in Devonshire, England . Pearse owned land between Denman Street and Pandora Avenue, bounded by Fernwood Road on the west and Belmont Avenue on the east. His home, Fernwood Manor, constructed in 1860, gave its name to the neighbourhood. After Pearse's death in 1902, Pearse's second wife, Sarah Jane Pearse resided there until her death in 1954. Fernwood Manor stood at Vining and Begbie Streets for 109 years before its demolition in 1969.

Historically, a spring in Fernwood supplied Victoria with its main source of water, hence the earlier name of the neighbourhood, Springridge. In 1875 Victoria began piping water from Elk Lake, and in 1885, the site of the original springs became the location of the Empire Brewery.

Residential development began in earnest in the 1890s, and many homes in western Fernwood and along Fernwood Road itself date from this era. In the early 1900s a large area west of Fernwood Road was used as a sand and gravel pit to supply construction materials to local builders, to the dismay of many early residents. The problem was partly solved by the construction of the present Victoria High School in 1912 on some of the lands that had been used as the sand and gravel pit.

Central Middle School stands on the site of the first public colonial school, a log schoolhouse built in 1853. The wooden building was replaced by the original Victoria High School in 1876, which was itself replaced by the construction in 1902 of a new brick school building, designed byFrancis Rattenbury, architect who designed the Parliament Buildings in Victoria and Empress Hotel. However, the increase in Victoria's population in the early 1900s made this school his building inadequate within 12 years. The present Central Middle School (formerly Central Junior High School) was designed by Victoria architect John DiCastri. The commercial heart of Fernwood developed along Fernwood road in the 1890s and early 1900s and many of the commercial buildings in the village date from this time. The building now housing the Belfry Theatre was built in 1892 as the Emmanuel Baptist Church. Another small commercial node developed along Haultain Road. Most of the Fernwood neighbourhood was built up by the end of the real estate boom of 1913.

References

  • Ellis, John J. The Fernwood Files Orca Book Publishers, 1989.

External links

  • Fernwood Neighbourhood Resource Group (formerly: Fernwood Community Centre Society)
  • Fernwood Community Association (FCA)
  • Fernwood News, quarterly newspaper by the FCA
  • Village Vibe, monthly newsletter by Fernwood NRG.
  • City of Victoria-Profile of Fernwood, Demographics, Map, Neighbourhood plan
  • City of Victoria-Community Resources Inventory, map with guide to local businesses and resources
  • The Belfry Theatre
  • Fernwood United Football Club, Soccer team and Club
  • Collective Works Gallery, A local artist collective gallery
  • Fernwood Inn
  • Freedom Kilts
  • Local area schools: http://www.victoria.ca/residents/profiles_neigh_frnwod_map.shtml.


Fernwood Neighbourhood


 Fernwood is located in the heart of Victoria, an area that historically supplied the city with its first water source. Fernwood is attractive to young and mid-aged adults, singles and families. There are four schools in the area including George Jay Elementary, Victoria and Central High Schools.

Two shopping areas serve as commercial centres for the community. One is found at the junction of Pandora Avenue and Cook Street. An eclectic village is also located at the corner of Gladstone Avenue and Fernwood Street, anchored by the historic Belfry Theatre and George and Dragon.

Home to trendy shops, cafes and galleries, this eclectic neighbourhood is recognized as one of Victoria's most engaging communities. Fernwood's boundaries reach from Bay St. in the north to Fort St. in the south and from Cook St. in the west to Shelbourne in the east.

Click thumbnails to Enlarge.
Belfry Theatre Haultain Grocery
Architecture Haultain Street
Fernwood Buildings Victoria High School
Fernwood George and Dragon
Fish and Chips Gladstone Avenue
Fernwood
 

Belfry Theatre



Fernwood Neighbourhood Information Links


For more information on the Fernwood Community, please go to http://www.fernwoodvic.ca/community.htm.

For information on local schools go to http://www.victoria.ca/residents/profiles_neigh_frnwod_map.shtml.

 


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