Chehalis Cross
The Chehalis Cross, or Chehalis Monument,[1] is a Celtic cross memorial commemorating the eight people who died when the tugboat Chehalis sank off Stanley Park. The monument is installed west of Brockton Point in Vancouver, British Columbia.
Sinking of the Chehalis
The 18.1-metre (59.3 ft) wooden steam ship Chehalis, owned by the Union S.S. Company of Vancouver, sank at about 2 p.m. July 21, 1906, killing 8 of the 15 people on board, following a collision with the Canadian Pacific Railway's Princess Victoria, a 91-metre (300 ft) steam ship. The seven survivors were rescued by the keeper of the nearby Brockton Point lighthouse.[2]
The Chehalis had been chartered to carry passengers to British Columbia's north coast and had just embarked from North Vancouver in fine weather, passing Brockton Point while heading out of Burrard Inlet. The Princess Victoria embarked from the Canadian Pacific Railway dock in Vancouver carrying 219 passengers. The Princess Victoria corrected its course for a small launch before running over the Chehalis. The official investigation blamed the Princess Victoria for the collision.[2]
References
- ^ Vancouver, City of (7 March 2013). "Monuments and sculptures".
- ^ a b "Chehalis Cross Memorial in Stanley Park". StanleyParkVan.com. Retrieved April 15, 2018.
External links
- Media related to Chehalis Cross, Stanley Park at Wikimedia Commons
- Chehalis Cross Memorial in Stanley Park, Vancouver, BC, Canada 00034 on YouTube
- v
- t
- e
- A-maze-ing Laughter
- Aerodynamic Forms in Space
- The Birds
- Bust of David Oppenheimer
- Chehalis Cross
- Digital Orca
- The Drop
- Dude Chilling Park
- East Van Cross
- Engagement
- Freezing Water Number 7
- Gate to the Northwest Passage
- Girl in a Wetsuit
- Inukshuk
- Japanese Canadian War Memorial
- LightShed
- Nike
- Penis Satan
- Reclining Figure
- Robert Burns Memorial
- Spinning Chandelier
- Statue of George Vancouver
- Statue of Harry Jerome
- Statue of John Deighton
This Vancouver-related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e
This article about a sculpture in Canada is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e