Stanley Park is one of the main attractions
in the city of Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, with around eight million
visitors every year. It covers about a thousand acres of a promontory on the
north side of the city, looking across Vancouver Harbour to North
Vancouver. The park was opened in 1888
and named in honour of the then Governor-General of Canada, Lord Stanley of
Preston. The collection of totem poles
at Brockton Point, to the south-east of Stanley Park, is one of the most
popular features of the park.
When the park was first created, the
promontory’s natural woodland was used by a number of First Nation people,
including the Musqueams. A plan was drawn up in the early 20th
century, by the Art, Historical and Scientific Association, to create an
“Indian village” as a tourist attraction, but fortunately this voyeuristic
proposal was soon dropped. However, the plan included moving several totem
poles to the park from other places in Canada. In 1922 the first four poles
were bought from a site at Alert Bay on Cormorant Island to the north of
Vancouver. These were created by the Kwakwaka'wakw people, who have also contributed some of the
later additions.
In 1962 the poles were moved to their
present position against a wooded backdrop, protected by a narrow water feature
to guard against vandalism, looking out across the water towards the high-rise
skyline of downtown Vancouver. Some of the poles are original and date back
about a hundred years, but others have been replaced by replicas or newly
commissioned poles. There are now eight poles in the collection, none of which
relate to the original occupiers of the site, but three gateways carved by
Musqueam people were added in 2008 to make good this anomaly.
The full story of the totem poles is told
in the exhibition mounted in the visitor centre close to the site. Visitors can
learn the significance of the poles and what each element means. The poles were
not objects of worship, nor were they merely decorative, but represent the
traditions and culture of the communities that created them. They do have a
religious significance in that the carvings of animals and birds relate to the
spirit world. Typical representations are of grizzly bears, wolves, beavers and
ravens. Some poles include boxes to contain the remains of a dead chief, and
some were originally part of a chief’s house or would have stood just outside
to tell the story of the chief’s achievements.
The most vividly painted totem poles at
Brockton Point are relatively recent and are startling works of art in their
own right. On one pole the Thunderbird spreads his wings, carved and painted in
1955 by Ellen Neel, who is believed to have been the first woman to
carve totem poles professionally. On another pole the Quolus bird perches on
the head of Red Cedar-bark Man, who was revered by the Kwakwaka'wakw people for having given them the secrets of
canoe building.
The totem poles
at Stanley Park have much to tell about the people who created them, and form
an open-air textbook of native culture for those who are willing to learn what
they mean. There are other sets of totem poles in the region, most notably at
Alert Bay mentioned above, but the Stanley Park collection has the advantage of
accessibility, being easily (and freely) visited by anyone living in or
visiting British Columbia’s largest city.
© John Welford
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