The 300-block of West Hastings (at Homer), looking
Transcription
The 300-block of West Hastings (at Homer), looking
The 300-block of West Hastings (at Homer), looking east, 1911. As Bella, Amy, and Algie would have known it when they returned to Vancouver in 1911. Photo by Philip Timms. Vancouver Public Library VPL 6707 Chapter Three Bella, Algie, and Amy M other (Lenora Amelia, or “Amy”) was born on New Year’s Day, 1889, in Morden, Manitoba, a small town about 120 kilometers southwest of Winnipeg on the new transcontinental CPR line. Like thousands of other “Ontario English,” her father, Robert Wilson, along with his brother David16 — both doctors — had come out west with their wives several years earlier in search of economic opportunity, eventually settling in Morden. After suffering a series of political setbacks, David succumbed to the lure of Vancouver and its mild climate and in 1889 moved his family to the West Coast where he started a new practice. In early 1893, Robert and his wife, Mary Isabella (“Bella,” née Wallace), soon followed with four-year-old Amy, five-year-old Wallace, and their piano. They had scarcely settled into their new home on the corner of Robson and Thurlow An excerpt of the eulogy given at Robert Wilson’s funeral. 15 ag “Today I deem it a privilege, but a very sorrowful privilege, to stand here and as the representative of all who knew him, do honour to Robert Wilson, whose life was one record of truth and uprightness. When I have said that, I have said the best that can be said for any man. The life he lived is the best funeral eulogy that can be pronounced beside his bier. Unostentatious, unselfish, forbearing, forging, gentle as his master, singularly free from censoriousness and captious fault-finding, never given to anger, with the courage of a gentleman, a persistent devotion to his calling, a tender lover-like fondness for his wife who feels as none other the bitterness of this hour, an attachment to his children that almost displaced the word ‘government,’ and an undying affection for his relatives, we seldom see the like.” 16. Dr. David Henry Wilson (1855–1926) was born near Huntley, Ontario. After graduating from medical school in Toronto, he became the personal physician of Sir Charles Tupper, one of the Fathers of Confederation. He moved west and in 1879 started practicing medicine in Nelson, Manitoba. When the CPR bypassed Nelson, Wilson put his house on skids and dragged it to the new townsite of Morden. From 1883 until 1888 he was an MLA in the Manitoba Legislature, serving as Provincial Secretary and Minister of Public Works. He helped incorporate the Manitoba Medical College where he also taught. In 1888 he resigned from the government and the following year moved to Vancouver, where he practiced medicine until 1894. He was the founding president of the Vancouver Medical Association and president of the Conservative Association of British Columbia. A prominent member of Vancouver society, he was also on the executive of three loan and insurance companies. B ella , A lgie , and A my * 21 As a young child in the prairie town of Morden, Amy dreamed one night that she heard a roaring in the distance. As it grew louder she saw a herd of thundering bison headed straight for her. When it reached little Amy it parted in the middle around her, leaving her amazed and unhurt. A baby bison then stopped beside her, sat on its heels, looked around, and said, “The earth is the Lord’s and the fullness thereof (Psalm 24:1).” And went on its way. Wallace (left) and Amy. Undated, probably while they were still in Morden. 15 ag streets when tragedy struck. On May 24, 1893, Robert died. He was just forty-one. The next few weeks were trying for Wallace and Amy. Neither of them had known their father well as he had been busy with his medical practice. Bella reassured them that he had gone to heaven — a happy place — and yet she kept weeping uncontrollably. One event stuck in young Amy’s memory. Each day friends and acquaintances would call at their home, dropping off notes of condolences that the maid then took upstairs to the grieving family. One day Amy heard an angry outburst from her mother’s room. Bella, looking out the window, was shocked to see that one of the callers had arrived wearing bright red, rather than the traditional black.17 A few months later Bella moved her young family back to Ottawa to be nearer to her parents, who owned a farm at Bells Corners. The next few years were happy times for the children. They spent most of their weekends in Bells Corners with their grandparents, enjoying the freedom and surprises that farm life offers. During the winter Bella would bundle both the children in huge buffalo rugs for the trip back and forth. One Sunday in springtime, little Amy — dressed in her white, lace-trimmed, Sunday best — 17. A more complete account of this time can be found in The Other Side of Silence by Mary McAlpine (pp 50–52). 22 % C hapter T hree Not much is known about the origins of the Wilson and Wallace families. The Wilsons were originally lowland Scots. Robert’s father Thomas immigrated to Canada from Ireland about 1935, married Sarah, and became a successful farmer in Carleton County, near Ottawa. The Wallace family had immigrated to County Cavan, Ireland, from Scotland before coming to Canada and settling in Bells Corners, a farming community just west of Ottawa. 15 ag decided to look at the pigs. Leaning a little too far over the railing of the pigpen, she fell head first into the mucky pen! These idyllic visits came to an abrupt end in 1896 when Bella’s mother and father both died. In their wisdom, they had stipulated in their wills that Bella’s two brothers should inherit the farm while Bella should receive their cash and savings — she was a widow with two children to raise. The brothers never forgave their parents for this. They felt that they should have received the farm and the money, and then they could have doled out to Bella whatever she needed. Bitterly resentful, the brothers came to view Bella as their enemy and never spoke to her again. With this inheritance, Bella became financially secure — not affluent, as she had to be prudent about how she spent her money — but secure. The children never wanted, but some things such as a private school education were beyond their reach. Music, however, was a passion that Bella and the children could indulge in. Although raised a Baptist, Bella would sing and play instruments with just about anyone, including a music-loving Catholic priest! The night before Dr. David Wilson, my great-uncle, circa 1883 when he was a member of the Manitoba Legislative Assembly. Archives of Manitoba. Used with permission. her wedding she slipped away from her parents’ farm and visited the local priest, a good friend with a musical bent, and together they passed the evening playing duets. Amy inherited that love of music. One afternoon when she was about five, she disappeared from their home in Ottawa. Bella raised the alarm among the neighbours and soon everyone was out looking for little Amy. Finally a woman ran up to the distraught mother and said, “The Salvation Army band passed by here a while ago and a wee girl in a big bonnet was following it.” Sure enough, little Amy, mesmerised by the music, had fallen in step behind the B ella , A lgie , and A my * 23 Right: Wallace and Amy. Undated. Far right: Bella. Undated. procession and trotted off with it. (She continued to follow music for the rest of her life.) Amy’s childhood seemed to be divided between music and school. She took pleasure in the musical afternoons that Bella held in their home, while Wallace — or Algie as he was affectionately called, his middle name being Algernon — slipped off to play, unsupervised, along the 24 % C hapter T hree banks of the Ottawa River. Shy by nature, Amy never really enjoyed public school, although she managed quite well. When the time came to write the final high school exam she was sick and so received permission to write the exam at home. Although she earned good marks, she fretted that the authorities might think she had cheated as she had not been supervised. From the time he was about ten, Wallace’s dreams and aspirations largely guided the family — not surprising, as Bella had often told him that he was the man of the house. While walking along an Ottawa street with his mother one spring day, he caught sight of a doctor’s brass plate outside his home. Turning to Bella, he told her that he was going to have one of those plaques on his house one day. In spite of this determination he was boisterous and mischievous, much to the despair of his mother and her brother-in-law David, who on occasion visited from Vancouver. One evening Uncle David and his young daughter Alix arrived in Ottawa on the transcontinental train and took a horse-drawn cab to Bella’s house. Upon arrival, the door of the carriage burst open and young Algie threw himself in, landing at the feet of his startled uncle and cousin and welcoming them to Ottawa! Although Wallace succeeded in his studies, graduating from the University of Toronto in 1909 and entering medical school, his propensity for prankish behaviour continued. One evening after studying late, he talked his friends into dressing up a laboratory skeleton in a pair of trousers, shirt, tie, and coat and hat. They then carried their macabre “companion” over to a nearby pub where they propped him up in the window of a cab, which they paid to wait just outside the entrance. Settling in with some drinks, they passed the evening watching the reactions of the often inebriated patrons as they staggered into the street! Meanwhile, eighteen-year-old Amy had left Ottawa in mid-1908 for an extended visit to London and Europe. Wallace’s graduation photo from the University of Toronto. I call it “Staring into the Future.” Undated. In those days any family who had the financial means and a minimum of social connections arranged to send their daughters to Europe for several months to acquire a cultural background and intellectual polish. Amy was fortunate in that her Uncle Dave (as he was affectionately known to the family) and Aunt Annie offered to take her along with their two younger daughters, Alix and Isabel. After meeting up with the Wilson’s oldest daughter Kathleen, who was attending finishing school in Dresden, B ella , A lgie , and A my * 25 Germany, they would all spend several months touring Europe.18 This visit to Europe lasted a year and the four girls had a wonderful time, although Amy suffered bouts of homesickness and confessed in letters to her mother that she sometimes felt like the poor relative — her aunt and uncle were affluent. However, they went out of their way to treat Amy as one of their daughters. After a few weeks in London19 they departed for Florence, where they stayed in the elegant and very expensive Pensione Villa Trollope before renting an apartment for several months. Amy took singing and piano lessons with some advanced Amy and the Wilsons on board the ship bound for Europe, 1908. Left to right: Uncle Dave, Aunt Annie, Amy, and Isabel. In front of Uncle Dave is young Alix, holding a doll. teachers and also became proficient in Italian. Her talent for writing is very much apparent in the myriad of letters she wrote to her mother and brother Algie. (Undated, shortly after she arrived in Florence) Italians are the noisiest people I ever came across. They just love to shout and roar, just to hear themselves. They must think it fascinating. Kitty yesterday saw a man on the street deliberately open his mouth and the next moment he was singing at the top of his voice — she nearly collapsed. . . . Every morning the noise is awful. The roads are all cobblestones — and it is nothing but rattle rattle, bang bang, yell yell, hammer hammer. Just now a man in the street is letting out a wonderful volume of tone. Casa Petrarca, Grand Canal, Venice May 21, 1909 Here we are, dearest people, in Venice, the City of our dreams!! I am too excited for words! — It is all so perfectly heavenly — enchanting, that all the adjectives descriptive, in English or any other language would not suffice to tell you how perfect it all is. I am sure that I shall never be done rhapsodizing on “la bella Venezia,” the 18. Uncle Dave had another pressing but unspoken reason for the trip. He wanted to consult with European specialists about a disease — syphilis — he had contracted from a young woman whose baby he had delivered. Many years later Gordie Tupper, (David’s grandson) told me this; amused that this pillar of Vancouver society should have contracted such an unacceptable disease. 19. Uncle Dave was sick during their time in London, and the girls took turns caring for him. Amy took the opportunity to ask her uncle for advice on what Wallace should do once he graduated — work in Toronto or move out to Vancouver. He said that Wallace would have to make up his own mind. 26 % C hapter T hree jewel of the sea. But I must do things in order or my letters would be frightfully topsy-turvy. Supposing they went backwards, or from the middle to either end instead of circumspectly commencing at “At two we took a train for. . . etc.” Well, at the station at Florence we had a rush, for the train came in full from Rome . . . The first part of the journey we passed through so many stuffy tunnels, but after we left Bologna and were refreshed by a lunch of sweet-biscuit cake and cherries, Malaga wine, and ice water from a thermos bottle, we felt that our backbones were intact and that Venice really was at the end of the way! As the day wore on into evening and the shadows began to fall over the Italian landscape — a landscape of green and trees festooned and trailing with grapevines — it was fascinating for Kitty and me to stand arm in arm in the open window and watch the “picture” as we whizzed by — near Venice we passed through the ancient town of Padua — Algie, do you still remember Shakespeare? And at last we saw beneath us the reflection of thousands of lights in the water — and knew we were at last in Venice!! We passed through the station gates onto a platform — but instead of a dusty road, clanging trams, and the shouts of cabbies — we heard the soft slush of water as it washed over the stone steps and SAW the black gondolas coming up to the wharf, dark gondoliers in Amy during her stay in Italy, 1908/1909. white blouses and caps — standing, bent to the oars — altogether indescribable — only to be felt and not written. All the gondolas are black, some beautifully carved and adorned. The gondolier stands at the back and off you go — all our luggage in the front— and we ourselves at the back, wide-eyed B ella , A lgie , and A my * 27