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  1. Apr 20, 2022 · So to extend the translation, Vancouver means "from the cow crossing." The earliest reference to the town, according to its own histories, is in the name of a man called Fredericus van Coevorden in 1036. In 1407 it was officially made a city and for a long time held an important role as a fortified city and military stronghold (at points both ...

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › VancouverVancouver - Wikipedia

    Vancouver. Vancouver (/ vænˈkuːvər / ⓘ van-KOO-vər; Canadian French: [vãkuvaɛ̯ʁ]) is a major city in Western Canada, located in the Lower Mainland region of British Columbia. As the most populous city in the province, the 2021 Canadian census recorded 662,248 people in the city, up from 631,486 in 2016. The Metro Vancouver area had a ...

  3. History of Vancouver. The history of Vancouver, British Columbia, is one that extends back thousands of years, with its first inhabitants arriving in the area following the Last Glacial Period. With its location on the western coast of Canada near the mouth of the Fraser River and on the waterways of the Strait of Georgia, Howe Sound, Burrard ...

    • Indigenous Peoples
    • European Settlement
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    Vancouver is located in the traditional territory of the Squamish, Musqueam and Tsleil-Waututh First Nations, members of the Coast Salish linguistic group. The ancestors of these groups settled in the Vancouver area more than 8,000 years ago. For the Coast Salish people, like other Indigenous groups on Canada’s northwest coast, salmon was the prima...

    José Maria Narváez, a Spanish explorer, was the first European to see the site of what is now Vancouver in 1791. A year later, English sailor Captain George Vancouver and Spaniards Dionisio Alcalá-Galiano and Cayetano Valdés were also in the area (see Sutil and Mexicana). During these initial explorations, both the Spanish and the English made cont...

    19th Century Vancouver got its start when Canadian Pacific Railway (CPR) Vice-President William Van Horne announced that the company would extend its line 20 km westward from the statutory terminus, Port Moody, in order to take advantage of a better harbour and terminal site. The provincial government gave the CPR more than 2,500 ha of Crown landat...

    The city’s natural beauty is underscored by a backdrop of mountains, its proximity to the sea and the presence, within the city limits, of wilderness areas like Stanley Park. The original surveyors, many of them Canadian Pacific Railwayemployees, generally laid out streets according to a grid pattern that made few allowances for such natural featur...

    Vancouver’s most significant growth spurts occurred during its first five years and in the decade before the First World War, resulting primarily from immigration from the British Isles and migration from Ontario. The expansion of the 1920s is explained by the annexation of the adjacent bedroom municipalities of Point Grey and South Vancouver in 19...

    According to the 2021 census, the largest number of Vancouver residents are employed in professional, scientific, and technical services, followed by health care and social assistance, retail trade, and educational services. Vancouver’s geography is an important force shaping the city’s economy. Owing to its proximity to Asia, as well as its excell...

    Vancouver was the child of the Canadian Pacific Railway. The railway linked the city with the rest of Canada and quickly made it the country’s leading Pacific coast port. Almost from the city's beginning, trans-Pacific ships, including the Canadian Pacific's Empress liners, called regularly. Coastal steamship companies, including CP Navigation and ...

    Vancouver is the centre for an active publishing industry. Douglas & McIntyre, for example, was established there in 1971. In addition, the University of British Columbia Press is a major publisher of academic books, and many smaller publishers specialize in regional studies, self-help books and literature. The city is serviced by two daily newspap...

    Vancouver is unique among BC municipalities as it is incorporated under the Vancouver Charter (1953). This provincial statute grants the city a number of different powers than those under BC’s Municipalities Act. The city, however, remains a creature of the provincial legislature, which must approve every charter amendment. In 2009, for example, Ma...

    The Art, Historical and Scientific Association (one of the first groups organized in the city) established a museum in 1894. In honour of the 1958 BC centennial, the city began constructing a new museum, a Maritime Museum, city archives, and, with funds from lumberman Harvey R. MacMillan, a planetarium. When the Canadian Pacific Railwayopened an op...

  4. Jun 27, 2024 · How did Vancouver get its name? Vancouver was renamed in 1886 as part of a deal with the Canadian Pacific Railway. The city was originally called Granville, but it was renamed Vancouver in honor of the English explorer George Vancouver, who had surveyed the coast in 1792.

  5. Nov 7, 2022 · The city was incorporated under its new name on April 6, 1886. The port of Vancouver gained international importance because of its key position on the All-Red Route, which spanned the British Empire's global trading network. 20th Century. In the 20th century, British Columbia was perhaps the most depression-stricken Canadian province.

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  7. How did Vancouver get its name? The standard answer does not explain the intense battle and the emotions it aroused. The papers of Lord Strathcona might have given an answer but they were destroyed by his family. There were lots of reasons why Americans, Victorians, Reformers and others found the standard answer the least objectionable.

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