Hatley_Park_National_Historic_Site

Hatley Park National Historic Site

Hatley Park National Historic Site

Historic estate in Colwood, Canada


Hatley Park National Historic Site is located in Colwood, British Columbia, in Greater Victoria. It is the site of Hatley Castle, a Classified Federal Heritage Building. Since 1995, the mansion and estate have been used for the public Royal Roads University. From the 1940s to 1995, it was used for the Royal Roads Military College, a naval training facility.[1][hat 1]

Quick Facts Location, Type ...
Hatley Castle, August 2009
Hatley Castle, garden side
Main Hall of Hatley Castle

The extensive grounds of the historic site have formal gardens, former farmland, and trails through mature stands of first and second-growth forest, including large Douglas fir and western red cedar.[2]

History

Hatley Castle and Gardens

In 1906, B.C.'s Lieutenant Governor, James Dunsmuir, who was of Scottish descent, purchased the property. He and his wife Laura commissioned the renowned Canadian architect Samuel Maclure to build a 40-room mansion in the Scottish baronial style; the Tudor revival style was popular in the Edwardian period.[3] The Dunsmuirs created many beautiful formal gardens using the services of renowned American garden designers Franklin Brett and George D. Hall of Boston, Massachusetts. The Dunsmuirs named their estate "Hatley Park", in the tradition of British and European private estates. The castle became a landmark and was occupied by descendants of the Dunsmuir family until after the Great Depression, in 1937.[1]

Following the death of Laura Dunsmuir in 1937 the estate was sold to the Government of Canada in 1939. The government sold off some of the land and during five days in June 1939, "Maynard & Sons" conducted a public auction of the mansion's contents totaling 927 lots.[4]

A Historic Sites and Monuments Board of Canada plaque reads:[5]

Hatley Park. This superb example of an Edwardian park was laid out for James and Laura Dunsmuir in the early 20th century. At its centre stands a Tudor Revival mansion, whose picturesque design is enhanced by a rich array of decoration and fine craftmanship. The grounds, featuring a variety of native and exotic vegetation, unfold from formal gardens to recreational spaces, farmlands and forests. Acquired by the Canadian armed forces in 1940, Hatley Park evolved to meet the needs of Royal Roads Military College in a manner that has preserved its essential Edwardian character.

The Royal Roads Military College band consisting of 15 pipers and drummers and 30 brass-and-reed musician recorded an LP in 1983–1984. Petty Officer First Class Gabby R. Bruner, RRMC bandmaster from 1979 to 1985, composed "Hatley Park" as the official quick march for the RRMC and "Dunsmuir Castle" for the Visit of Queen Elizabeth to RRMC in 1983.[6]

In 2008, the 100th anniversary of Hatley Castle was celebrated.[7]

Planned royal residence

At the outbreak of the Second World War, contingency plans were made for King George VI, his wife, Queen Elizabeth; and their two daughters, Princesses Elizabeth and Margaret, to reside in Canada in the event of an invasion of Britain. The family's primary options were stately homes in England, bt Victoria, BC, was the backup site in the event that German troops reached the Midlands.[8][9]

The federal Crown-in-Council purchased Hatley Castle in 1940 for use as the King's royal residence.[10] The royal family and British government decided against the former leaving the UK during the war and the King and Queen stayed in London, while the Princesses were located at Windsor Castle.[9][11]

Royal Roads Military College

The Canadian government adapted the mansion as a naval training facility. From 1948 it was known as the Royal Roads Military College. It is named for the Royal Roads body of water, which forms the entrance into Esquimalt Harbour from the Strait of Juan de Fuca, lying to the east of the facility. The military college was closed in 1995 and the estate leased to the Province of British Columbia. That same year, the castle and grounds were designated a National Historic Site of Canada.[12]

In September 1995, Royal Roads University was opened as a public, degree-granting university. It leases the campus from the Department of National Defence for $1 per year. The university manages all stewardship responsibilities related to the site, including site management, operations, heritage preservation and restoration, and educating the public about the site's history and natural resources.[13]

Hatley Gardens

In 1912, the Dunsmuirs engaged the American landscape architects Franklin Brett and George D. Hall of Boston, students of Frederick Law Olmsted, to develop a landscape for the entire site. They prepared a classic design for an Edwardian park that included the overall layout for the entire property. The plan organized the estate into four distinct landscape zones, progressing from a series of nine formal 'garden rooms' near Hatley Castle, to recreational spaces, then to agricultural lands, and finally to the forest surrounding the estate. During the Dunsmuir era, approximately 100 gardeners and groundskeepers tended the estate. During the years when the cadets attended Royal Roads Military College, the Department of National Defence employed approximately 50 gardeners and groundskeepers to maintain the property; a testimony to their commitment to retain the integrity of the estate.[14]

The Edwardian estate is located on southern Vancouver Island and has views of the Olympic mountains in USA. The gardens are an 565-acre (2.29 km2) estate, including the house's park, and are also a popular wedding location.[15] Today, Royal Roads University employs five full-time gardeners, one arborist, a garden curator, seven seasonal gardeners and groundskeepers, and one manager. As the university does not receive any federal, provincial or municipal funding to maintain the site, the gardeners must make choices about the areas that can be best presented. They have made the Japanese, Rose and Italian gardens the showcase areas of the property.[citation needed]

Admission fees era

In June 2006, citing the unfunded costs of heritage preservation, the university started charging admission fees to its main heritage gardens, an area that makes up less than five per cent of the 565-acre (2.29 km2) campus. This prompted some public controversy for the $12 for adults in the summer and $6 during the winter fees, which helped subsidise $550,000 yearly maintenance costs (a fee which since risen), but the garden fee only brought $40,000 a year.[16] It also introduced a $15 four-month summer garden pass for residents of Greater Victoria, in addition to the free pass offered to residents of Colwood.[citation needed] As of 2019 the fee was cancelled and the gardens are free to visit.[17]

Use in TV and film

Hatley parks and castle has been the venue for dozens of films and T.V. shows for over 80 years.[18]

Buildings

The Register of the Government of Canada Heritage Buildings lists nine recognized buildings and one classified building on the grounds of the Hatley Park National Historic Site.

More information Building (Year built), Significance ...

See also


References

  1. "History". hatleycastle.com.
  2. "Gardens". hatleycastle.com.
  3. "Residence of James Dunsmuir, British Columbia, Architect: Samuel MacLure". Construction (Toronto). 9 (7). Victoria: 214. July 1916.
  4. "Inside the Shropshire house where the Royal Family planned to shelter if Britain was invaded during the Second World War". Country Life. 24 November 2019. Retrieved 27 November 2019. if the enemy reached the Midlands, the plan was to rush the Royal Family to Holyhead for transport to Canada by the Royal Navy.
  5. "Speech by Iona Campolo, Retired Heads of Mission Association's Gala Dinner". Office of the Lieutenant Governor. Archived from the original on 2004-06-27.
  6. Jack Knox (23 July 2019). "Royal Roads uproots heritage gardens fee". timescolonist.com.
  7. "Over 8O Years of Filming". hatleypark.ca. Retrieved 3 December 2021.
  8. "Heritage building upgrades helping Royal Roads students excel". www.royalroads.ca. Retrieved 7 September 2018.

Note

  1. Information about Hatley Gardens copied with permission from Hatley Park website

48.4343°N 123.4724°W / 48.4343; -123.4724 (Hatley Park National Historic Site)


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