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FRANCIS WILLIAM CAULFEILD
Visionary
By Philip Collings
Francis William Caulfeild was born
in England in August 1843, in a family sufficiently well-to-do
that he never had to work in an ordinary job for a day in
his life. He was educated at Rugby School and Wadham College,
Oxford, and thereafter devoted his early life to bringing
up his four children, poetry, amateur painting, carving, and
travelling. His interest in travelling is how West Vancouver
comes into his life story.
In 1898, Mr. Caulfeild was making
a leisurely tour of the farthest reaches of the then British
Empire in the company of his daughter. At Vancouver they embarked
in Captain Cates’ old boat the S.S. Defiant for a trip
along the West Vancouver shore. In due course Captain Cates
put them ashore at a lovely small cove tucked in behind the
shelter of Point Atkinson, then called Skunk Cove and used
to moor pilot boats awaiting incoming ships. Captain Cates
picked them up on his return trip. The day’s stay in
this unspoilt wilderness of rocky coast and forest made such
an impression on Mr. Caulfeild that he was determined to buy
the property and develop a village on the site. Indeed, the
project was to occupy most of the remainder of his days. The
cove became Caulfeild Cove and stamped his name permanently
on the area.
Caulfeild had firm ideas about
the nature of the development. He wanted it in the style of
an English village, with a village green, and ivy-covered
village church, and winding, narrow lanes following the contours
of the land – rather than the standard North American
grid system. He also wanted the foreshore preserved as a park,
with public access to the sea. This, together with the much
larger Lighthouse Park immediately to the west of the Cove
would ensure that everyone could enjoy the scenery...
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