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Oak Bay, British Columbia

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Oak Bay is a municipality in the Capital Regional District on Vancouver Island in the province of British Columbia, Canada. It is an upscale suburb east of the city of Victoria. The population is about 18,000. The current mayor of Oak Bay is Christopher Causton, re-elected in 2005 by acclamation. Oak Bay has a reputation throughout Victoria as a hold-out for older residents and wealthy people, because of a combination of a few things:

  • The upscale area of the Uplands, Victoria, with underground wiring and many multi-million-dollar houses, many of them Arts & Crafts and Faux Tudor style,
  • A large number of retirement homes and communities (in fact, many of the municipality's most controversial issues have involved the construction and/or renovation of upscale retirement condominiums),
  • Travelling to Oak Bay, within Victoria is referred to as "going behind the tweed curtain", a reference to Oak Bay's association to the United Kingdom. Oak Bay has multitudes of English-style tea rooms, restaurants, antique shops, and other establishments geared towards seniors, and
  • A long-standing opposition to large commercial development.

The center of Oak Bay is the Oak Bay Village. The name "Oak Bay" is derived from the the original name of McNeill Bay, which is located in the south of the municipality. It, in turn, took its name from the Garry oaks, which are plentiful throughout the region.

History

Prior to the arrival of Europeans, Oak Bay was home to the local Coast Salish people of the Songhees First Nation. Evidence of their encampments has been found along local shores, including Willows Beach. Following the establishment of Fort Victoria on the Inner Harbour, the Hudson's Bay Company established Cadboro Bay Farm to supply food for the small settlement. Cattle Point (where the cattle would reach shore after being pushed off the passing cargo ships), between Cadboro Bay and Willows Beach recalls the early history of this area. Early European settlers of the area included John Tod, whose home still stands and is reputed to be haunted.

Oak Bay was incorporated as a municipality in 1906. Its first Council included Francis Rattenbury, the architect who designed the Parliament Buildings and Empress Hotel located on the inner harbour in Victoria. Rattenbury's own home on Beach Drive is now used as the junior campus for Glenlyon Norfolk School. In the 1920s the former farm lands of the Hudson's Bay Company were subdivided to create the Uplands area, but development was hampered by the Great Depression. After World War II development of expensive homes in the Uplands was accompanied by the construction of many more modest dwellings in the Estevan, Willows and South Oak Bay neighbourhoods. In addition to being an attractive retirement area, Oak Bay has also long appealed to families with young children. Two public elementary schools and Oak Bay High, a comprehensive public high school, are located within Oak Bay, as well as the junior schools for Glenlyon Norfolk and St. Michael's University School. Oak Bay boasts a sandy beach (Willows Beach), the Oak Bay Marina and the Royal Victoria Yacht Club located on the shore of Cadboro Bay.

Half the expansive campus of the University of Victoria (founded in 1963) is located within the boundaries of the District of Oak Bay. The other half is found in the adjacent District of Saanich, British Columbia.

Neighbourhoods

  • Gonzales
  • Uplands
  • Willows Beach
  • Windsor Park

External links

The History of the Municipality of Oak Bay, by G. Murdoch, taken from the Corporation of the District of Oak Bay website


Communities on Vancouver Island         Edit this list

Ahousat | Bamberton | Bamfield | Black Creek | Bowser | Campbell River | Cassidy | Cedar | Central Saanich | Chemainus | Clo-oose | Coal Harbour | Cobble Hill | Colwood | Comox | Coombs | Courtenay | Cowichan Bay | Crofton | Cumberland | Duncan | Errington | Esquimalt | Fanny Bay | Gold River | Harewood | Highlands | Holberg | Honeymoon Bay | Jordan River | Kildonan | Koksilah | Ladysmith | Lake Cowichan | Langford | Lantzville | Malahat | Merville | Mesachie Lake | Metchosin | Mill Bay | Nanaimo | Nanoose Bay | Nitinat | North Cowichan | North Saanich | Oak Bay | Parksville | Port Alberni | Port Alice | Port Hardy | Port McNeill | Port Renfrew | Qualicum Beach | Quatsino | Royston | Saanich | Saltair | Sayward | Shawnigan Lake | Sidney | Sooke | Tahsis | Telegraph Cove | Tofino | Ucluelet | Union Bay | Greater Victoria | Victoria | View Royal | Westholme | Winter Harbour | Woss | Youbou | Zeballos

Neighbourhoods in Greater Victoria, British Columbia
Victoria: Chinatown | Cook Street Village | East Burnside-Gorge | Fairfield | Fernwood | Harris Green | Hillside | Humboldt Valley | James Bay | Jubilee | North Park | Rockland | Victoria West
Saanich: Beaver Lake-Elk Lake | Broadmead-Sunnymead | Cadboro Bay | Cedar Hill | Cloverdale | Cordova Bay | Glanford | Gordon Head | Gorge-Tillicum | Interurban | Lake Hill | Maplewood | Marigold | Mount Douglas | Mount Tolmie-Lansdowne | Prospect Lake | Royal Oak | Strawberry Vale | Swan Lake | Ten Mile Point | Town and Country-Burnside | West Saanich
Other areas: Belmont Park | Brentwood Bay | Broom Hill | Cloak Hill | Colwood Corners | Craigflower | Dean Park | Deep Cove | Durrance Lake | East Sooke | Florence Lake | Glen Lake | Goldstream | Gonzales | Gorge Vale | Happy Valley | Hatley Park | Island View | Kemp Lake | Lands End | Luxton | Matheson Lake | Mill Hill | Millstream | Otter Point | Pat Bay | Ravenwood | Rockheights | Rocky Point | Royal Roads | Saanichton | Saseenos | Songhees | Swartz Bay | Thetis Lake | Uplands | Whiffen Spit | William Head | Willis Point | Willows Beach | Windsor Park | Work Point

The content of this page is retrieved from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oak_Bay under GFDL