1887 - The Birth of The Board of Trade
The early years of The Vancouver Board of Tradecelebrating
its 120th anniversary this yearwere rocky. Funds were severely
limited and the city was small and still recovering from its devastation
in the Great Fire of June 13, 1886. But the grit and determination
that brought the earliest settlers to this area had not diminished
and, as has often been mentioned, the men and women of the new city
began to build while the destroying fires embers were still
cooling.
It helped that the Canadian Pacific Railway had
reached the city in May of 1887. Now the cityand its businesswould
really begin to grow. (The population when the train arrived
was about 1,000. At the 1891 census four years later it was 14,000.)
A few months after the railways arrival The
Board was established. Theres some uncertainty over the precise
date: The Boards own site says September 22, 1887, but at
its 50th anniversary celebrations in 1937 the president of the day,
Walter Carson, cited a date of November 24. Perhaps what
happened was that the idea of the organization was hatched
on that September date, and the formal incorporation happened in
November. There were 40 members.
The first president was David Oppenheimer,
the second was the splendidly named Ebenezer Vining Bodwell.
Bodwell has a direct connection with the present day: his grandson
is MP Garth Turner.
As an indication of The Boards fragile youth,
note that a local businessman, CPR executive William Salsbury,
stepped in at a time when members found it difficult to raise money
for rent, and donated the use of a meeting place. Salsburywho
would be the CPRs Pacific Division treasurer here for 35 yearscould
claim to be a pioneer among pioneers: hed arrived locally
on July 4, 1886, aboard the first train to Port Moody, nearly a
year before the railway got to Vancouver. He was president of The
Board in 1892. A Vancouver street is named for him.
Despite its parlous financial situation The Board
carried substantial clout from the beginning. Following its first
annual dinner on March 5, 1889 the Daily News-Advertiser,
in reporting on an event that lasted two-and-a-half hours and that
featured 43 separate menu itemsall 43 were listed on Page
Oneprinted the name of every single guest at the banquet.
They included politicians, headed by BCs Premier A.E.B.
Davie and most of his cabinet, the mayors and reeves of a dozen
towns, senators, CPR biggies William Van Horne, Thomas
Shaughnessy and Sir Donald Smith, judges, business leaders,
consuls, military men and more, in tiny print covering a third of
the front page.
The Boards original 40 members were in a
very much smaller city, and at the beginning decided to meet just
four times a year. From the beginning some of the same concerns
The Board deals with today were on the agenda: costs of transporting
goods, foreign competition, tourism and the search for new business.
The December 5, 1888 News-Advertiser reported that The Board
had received a letter from a large tanning firm in Glasgow,
Scotland as to the prospects for a tannery in Vancouver and asking
for details as to hides, bark, etc. The Boards secretary would
gather the data and pass it along to the Council at its next meeting.
Getting together every three months wasnt
quite fast enough for inquiries of this kind! At a regular meeting
in late 1901 Board member W. Godfrey (who had been president
in 1897) announced that at the next AGM he would recommend that
the Board meet monthly, instead of quarterly. 1901 was a momentous
year in another respect: The Board moved into a new home, with its
own office, where the secretary, William Skene, could be
permanently located during business hours. The new quarters
were on the second floor of the Molsons Bank Building, which
went up in 1898 and stood where Harbour Centre does today, at the
northeast corner of Hastings and Seymour. (Molsons Bank had
started in 1855 in Quebec, was taken over in 1924 by the Bank of
Montreal.)
William Skenes name stands out prominently
in The Boards early history. As secretary Skene was the Darcy
Rezac of his day. He had begun as a member of The Board, then
was hired as its administrator and toiled diligently and competently
for more than 20 years in that post. The Boards annual general
meetings during his tenure never failed to lavish praise upon him.
The Board carried a big stick even in those early
years: no fewer than four of the first 14 presidents (Oppenheimer,
Tisdall, Buscombe and Malkin) had been or would become mayors of
the city, and another (Hendry) had been mayor of New Westminster.
One tradition continues to the present day: virtually all of the
early presidents were very prominent in local business, men like
Richard Alexander, Henry Bell-Irving and James
Keith. Alexander ran the Hastings Mill, Bell-Irving led a company
that became the worlds largest salmon canner and James Keith
was a well-known realtor whose name lives on in the north shores
Keith Road.
Incidentally, many of the names that pepper the
early newspaper reports on The Boards activities (those reports
can be found here)
also, logically, turn up in Robert A.J. McDonalds detailed
history of the citys early business growth, Making Vancouver
1863-1913 published in 1996 by UBC Press.
An indication that The Board had become an established
force in the citys business world is shown in an editorial
in the December 12, 1900 Daily Province.
In a story headlined NORTHERN SERVICE the Province
wrote: If a stranger, whether possessed of business training
or not, had have been present at the meeting of the Vancouver board
of trade last night he could not have failed to grasp one of the
strongest factors in the up-building of this region. In range of
ground covered, in energy and directness of purpose, and high executive
ability, the board stands second to none in the dominion.
And as an indication of the growth of The Board
note that it began with 40 members. At that 50th birthday celebration
membership had grown to 1,450. Today membership stands at 5,600,
highest in The Boards history, and 140 times the original
number!
View the activities of The
Vancouver Board of Trade through the years by clicking
on the links below:
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David Oppenheimer, first president of The Vancouver Board
of Trade
[Photo: www.abc.bookworld.com]

Ebenezer Vining Bodwell, second president of The Board of
Trade
[Photo: Wikipedia]

Thomas Shaughnessy, after whom the Vancouver neighborhood
is named
[Photo: www.answers.com]
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