For thousands of years, the Indigenous Squamish and their kin Tsleil-Waututh, of the Coast Salish, resided in the land known as North Vancouver. Slightly over 200 years ago, the people of the Squamish and Tsleil-Waututh living on the North Shore had their first glimpse of Europeans. First the Spanish arrived, giving their name to Vancouver’s Spanish Banks and, in 1792, Captain George Vancouver explored the local shores. But it was not until 1862 that the first attempt was made to harvest the North Shore’s rich stands of timber, leading to fuller settlement of the area that would later become North Vancouver.

The first industry on the North Shore was Pioneer Mills, founded in 1862 to log the huge trees of the coastal rainforest. After twice changing hands, the operation was bought by Sewell ("Sue") Prescott Moody in 1865. Near where the Saskatchewan Wheat Pool grain elevators now stand, the town of Moodyville grew up and stood as the main centre of activity on the North Shore until the mill closed in 1901. The first school was established in Moodyville. The second, Central School, opened in 1902 in a building that still stands as part of what is now Presentation House at 3rd Street and Chesterfield Avenue, the current home of the North Vancouver Museum and Archives.

In 1891, the first municipality on the North Shore was formed as the District of North Vancouver. It stretched across the North Shore from Horseshoe Bay to Deep Cove but omitted Moodyville. In the early years of this century, a real estate boom took place, with speculators – including the British poet Rudyard Kipling – eager to turn a quick dollar. A new community began to take shape. In 1902, the Hotel North Vancouver was built; in 1905, the first bank, a branch of the Bank of North America, opened. A newspaper, the Express, commenced publication in 1905 and in 1906 the British Columbia Electric Railway began streetcar service.

Industry, particularly shipbuilding, became central, with the magnificent stands of trees a rich resource for a society in which ships, houses and most other manmade things were constructed mainly of wood. The Wallace Shipyards moved in 1906 to the area just east of Lonsdale Avenue, drawn by the arrival of electricity. Over the years, this company, later known as Burrard Dry Dock and then Versatile Pacific Shipyards, became a major force in the local economy. Many of the shipyard's buildings still stand although the company has now ceased operations.

Economic prosperity and rapid growth in the Lower Lonsdale area of North Vancouver led to the establishment in 1907 of the separate City of North Vancouver, with a population of approximately 1,500. West Vancouver separated from the District in 1912. Apart from the addition of Moodyville in 1915, the boundaries of the City have not changed, even though
far more people now call the District home.

Communications with Vancouver have always been an important factor in the development of the North Shore. The first ferry service was supplied by "Navvy Jack’s" rowboat in 1866. In 1867, the Sea Foam established regular ferry service that continued until 1958. The SeaBus re-established water transportation in 1977. Rail service was slower in developing. While the Pacific Great Eastern Railway inaugurated a 12.7 mile run from North Vancouver to Whytecliff in 1914, it was not until the completion of the first Second Narrows Bridge in 1925 that rail and road links with the Lower Mainland supplemented the local ferry service.

Early plans for North Vancouver were ambitious. The City as a communications hub and industrial centre was surrounded by the more rural District, both municipalities in a magnificent geographical setting that appeared to open endless possibilities. But early grandiose plans met with a number of setbacks. The real estate boom was overtaken by a worldwide depression in 1913 and then World War I delayed many projects. The depression that began in 1929, coupled with disruptions to communications over the Second Narrows caused by ships colliding with the bridge, led to economic difficulties and severe tax shortfalls. Both the City and the District were placed in receivership in 1933. But the opening of the second road crossing, the Lions' Gate Bridge in 1938 was a significant factor in making the North Shore more accessible. And the war years led to an economic revival of North Vancouver, especially because of the many ships built in the Burrard Drydock at the foot of Lonsdale for the Canadian war effort.

In the postwar years, the City and the District of North Vancouver boomed, with most of the growth taking place in the District because of its greater land resources.

 

The following dates provide a historical and cultural context to the development of this area. These dates are not comprehensive and merely suggest the environment in which the Northshore developed from a lumber mill to what is is today.

1775
Admiral Quadra sails from Mexico to Alaska and claims the Pacific Coast for Spain
1778
Captain Cook sails up the west coast and becomes the first European to set foot on what is now the western shore of Canada
July 5, 1791
Spanish explorer Narvaez anchors off Isla de Langara now called Point Grey
June 12, 1792
Captain George Vancouver arrives, charts and names Point Grey, the Strait of Georgia, Point Atkinson, English Bay and Burrard Channel.
1793
Alexander Mackenzie becomes the first European to reach the west coast of Canada by land at what is now Bella Coola.
July 2, 1808
Simon Fraser becomes the first European to reach the area now known as Vancouver by land.
1827
Hudson Bay Company trading post Fort Langley on the Fraser River is established.
June 15, 1846
The 49th parallel as the border with the US is extented west of the Rockies.
1846
Vancouver Island is made a Crown Colony with Fort Victoria as its capital.
1858
Gold Rush on the Fraser
August 2, 1858
Crown Colony on the mainland of British Columbia is established.
February 14, 1859
Qeensborough becomes the capital of the colony. Name is changed to New Westminster on July 20, 1859.
1859
Colonel Tom Moody constructs first road in the area, now known as North Road, connecting New Westminster and the Burrard Inlet.
July 16, 1860
City of New Westminster incorporated.
1862/1863
Pioneer Mills (later Burrard Inlet Mills) constructed and opens on the north shore of Burrard Inlet
1865
Sewell Prescott Moody purchases Burrard Inlet Mills and established Moodyville, the first European settlement on the inlet.
July 1865
Captain Edward Stamp establishes Hastings Mill the generally accepted origin of what becomes Vancouver.
1866
Colonies of British Columbia and Vancouver Island are united under the name of British Columbia.
March 28, 1867
The British North America Act (Canada's constitution) becomes law.
July 1, 1867
Canadian Confederation - Canada is born.
September 30, 1867
John Deighton "Gassy Jack" arrives at Hastings Mill and opens first public saloon.
May 25, 1868
Capital of colony is moved from New Westminster to Victoria on Vancouver Island.
1868
Regular ferry service begins between Moodyville and Brighton (Hastings Mill)
April 11, 1869
First telegraph message is sent from Moody's Mill on the North Shore to Hastings Townsite to New Westminster.
1870
First school on Burrard Inlet opens at Moodyville.
1870
Vancouver Townsite is named.
July 20, 1871
British Columbia joins Canada and becomes a province.
1882
Electricity is installed at Moodyville, said to be the first electrical system north of San Francisco.
December 12, 1883
First local telephone call is made between Port Moody and New Westminster.
November 7, 1885
The last spike is driven at Craigellachie in the Rockies. The transcontinental rail system is complete.
April 6, 1886
City of Vancouver incorporated, based in area around Gastown, population about 1000.
June 13, 1886
Fire destroys most of Vancouver.
May 23, 1887
First transcontinental train arrives in Vancouver - Engine #374. This engine is on display at the False Creek Community Centre.
June 13, 1887
S.S. Abyssinia arrives in Vancouver from Yokahama loaded with tea and silk. Cargo is placed on transcontinental train and arrives in New York a week later and in London a week after that. This series of events establishes Vancouver as a trade gateway.
August 8, 1887
First streetlights are turned on in Vancouver.
September 27, 1888
Official opening of Stanley Park by Mayor David Oppenheimer
October 29, 1889
Dedication of Stanley Park by Lord Stanley, Governor General of Canada.
June 28, 1890
The Vancouver Electric Railway and Lighting Company officially begins operations.
1890
The landmark now known as The Lions are named.
1891
Municipal incorporation of the District of North Vancouver, from Indian Arm to Howe Sound.
May 1894
Serious flooding in the Fraser Valley.
August 15, 1895
Mark Twain lectures at the Vancouver Opera House.
August 2, 1897
A Kinetoscope exhibition at Market Hall shows motion pictures and Edison's wonder speaking phonograph.
March 28, 1898
The first long-distance telephone in Vancouver goes into operation.
October 31, 1902
The Pacific Cable opens.
May 13, 1907
The city of North Vancouver is incorporated, separating from the District of North Vanocuver.
1909
Ferry service begins from Vancouver to West Vancouver.
1912
Municipal incorporation of West Vancouver, separating all land west of the Capilano River from the district of North Vancouver.
1914
First Pacific Great Eastern Railway train departs from North Vancouver for what is now Horseshoe Bay area.
January 15, 1917
The Ballet Russe opens at the Vancouver Opera House. Amongst the performers is Nijinski.
January 1, 1922
Traffic in Vancouver is switched to the right-hand system.
1925
Second Narrows Bridge opens.
1926
Grouse Mountain Chalet opens.
August 27, 1929
The Graf Zeppelin visits Coal Harbour.
November 30, 1933
Approval granted by Vancouver for the building of the Lions Gate Bridge.
November 11, 1938
Lions Gate Bridge opens.
November 5, 1939
Dial telephone established in Vancouver.
September 1, 1950
Park Royal in West Vancouver, the first shopping centre in Canada, opens
November 19, 1954
Cleveland Dam opens, flooding the valley above the Second Canyon of the Capilano.
1960
The new Second Narrows Bridge opens.
1977
Seabus ferry service begins between downtown Vancouver and the Northshore.