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Rustic stone bridge over Goodacre Lake, Beacon Hill Park, Victoria, n.d.
Rustic stone bridge over Goodacre Lake, Beacon Hill Park, Victoria, n.d.
TitleRustic stone bridge over Goodacre Lake, Beacon Hill Park, Victoria, n.d.
PhotographerUnknown
Daten.d.
NotesOn verso of image: Victoria, B.C. city park bridge, 1890's. Col. T.M. Anderson Sr. Bridge in Beacon Hill park, Victoria

Filed in British Columbia--Victoria
Contextual NotesThis stone bridge was designed by John Blair (1820-1906). Born in Scotland, John Blair trained as a landscape gardener and then immigrated to St. Catherines, Ontario. He spent three years there working as a gardener before moving on to the Chicago area in 1854. Blair got his start in the United States designing the private estate of John Holland in Rockford, Illinois, followed by the design of the grounds of the Elgin Mental Health Center in Elgin, Illinois. By the 1860s Blair had become the Superintendent of Parks in Chicago where he influenced the design of a number of early parks, including Lincoln, Garfield, Humbolt, Douglas, Jefferson, Union and Ellis Parks. He left Chicago (later selling his home to an aspiring young architect named Frank Lloyd Wright) and by 1871 had settled in Colorado Springs, Colorado. Here he was employed by the founder of Colorado Springs, General William Palmer, to lay out parks, trails and major housing developments and to design Evergreen Cemetery and the grounds of General Palmer's private ‘castle', Glen Eyrie. In 1881, Blair moved to Victoria, British Columbia, eventually building a home near Duncan, B.C.

In 1889, at the age of 69, Blair entered a competition to design and build Beacon Hill Park in Victoria. By this time, Blair's signature design style was fully developed. It included the use of rock features, combined with water and trees, to create natural looking landscapes. His design for Beacon Hill Park further articulated this style. He easily won the competition and was given the sum of $25,000 to do the job. One of Blair's first decisions was to hire another Scot, George Fraser, as his foreman. (Fraser later became one of Canada's foremost hybridizers of rhododendrons.)

In carrying out the winning design, Blair and Fraser began by lining a low-lying area with rocks and creating a lake. This wetland area is now a wildfowl preserve and home to countless ducks, as well as a pair of bald eagles that nest in a cottonwood tree each year. Several local citizens were persuaded to purchase 2000 trees and shrubs from a nursery in Germantown, Pennsylvania, and today they form the basic canopy of the park. Blair's design for the stone bridge over Goodacre Lake (resembling a bridge he designed in Colorado Springs and another in Union Park in Chicago) is still intact and provides one of the focal points of the park. For over 100 years now, Beacon Hill Park has provided Victoria residents with a green retreat, a place for individuals and the community to enjoy and cherish.
Subjects (LCTGM)Stone bridges--British Columbia--Victoria; Lakes & ponds--British Columbia--Victoria; Parks--British Columbia--Victoria
Subjects (LCSH)Goodacre Lake (Victoria, B.C.); Beacon Hill Park (Victoria, B.C.); Victoria (B.C.)--Buildings, structures, etc.
Location DepictedCanada--British Columbia--Victoria
Digital CollectionAlaska, Western Canada and United States Collection
Order NumberAWC0782
Ordering InformationTo order a reproduction, inquire about permissions, or for information about prices see: http://www.lib.washington.edu/specialcollections/services/reproduction-info
RepositoryUniversity of Washington Libraries. Special Collections Division
Repository CollectionCanada Photograph Collection. PH Coll 393
Object TypePhotograph
Digital Reproduction InformationScanned from a photographic print using a Microtek Scanmaker 9600XL at 100 dpi in JPEG format at compression rate 3 and resized to 768x600 ppi. 2004.
RestrictionsFor information on permissions for use and reproductions please visit UW Libraries Special Collections Reproduction & Use page
http://content.lib.washington.edu/sc-use.html
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