Thunderbird Park
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Thunderbird Park is a park in Victoria, British Columbia located next to the Royal British Columbia Museum. The park is home to many totem poles (mostly Gitxsan, Haida, and Kwakwaka'wakw) and other First Nations monuments. Also located within the park are a carving studio, St. Anne's Schoolhouse (built 1844), Helmcken House (built in 1852 by John Helmcken), and Mungo Martin House (Wawadit'la), a traditional Kwakwaka'wakw "big house" built in 1953 by Kwakwaka'wakw Chief Mungo Martin. The park is part of the Royal BC Museum Cultural Precinct, an area around the museum that contains a number of historical sites and monuments.
[edit] History
Totem poles were first erected on the site in 1940 as part of a conservation effort to preserve some of the region's rapidly deteriorating Aboriginal art. The site was opened as Thunderbird Park in 1941. By 1951, many of the poles had greatly decayed, and in 1952 the Royal BC Museum began a restoration program with Chief Martin as its head carver. Martin died in 1962 and was succeeded by renowned carver Henry Hunt. Other artists who have worked as part of the program include Richard Hunt, Godfrey Hunt, Tony Hunt, Jonathan Hunt, Tim Paul, Lawrence Bell, David Gladstone, David Martin, and Bill Reid. All of the original poles were replaced with new versions by 1992, and some of the originals are now preserved within the museum.
[edit] External links
- Thunderbird Park – A Place of Cultural Sharing (Official website) URL accessed 2006-06-24
- Royal BC Museum Cultural Precinct URL accessed 2006-06-24
- To The Totem Forests (Note that the totem pole layout shown here is out of date) URL accessed 2006-06-24