|

William
Head Quarantine Station - showing large wharf complex
BC
Archives Image
E-06994
Two "heads" are within
our pioneer area, "William" and "Albert," William Head
being named after Sir William E. Parry, famed British Arctic navigator and
explorer. Albert Head was named in honour of Albert, Prince Consort,
beloved husband of Queen Victoria. Albert Head, the original Quarantine
Station, was found to be very inadequate shortly after its opening in
1883. Insufficient water supply, lack of accommodation for non-ailing
passengers, and its easy accessibility by land, were some of the reasons
for its bad report, so William Head was chosen as the site for the
inspection and control of communicable diseases of people entering Canada.
Ships great and small dropped anchor for inspection through the years till
finally modern drugs and international health practices made the station
redundant. Such famous square-riggers as the Glory
of the Seas and Thermopylae were "cleared" in their time. One of
the smallest trans-Pacific vessels to clear was the Chinese junk Amoy, owned by Captain George Waard, the intrepid
Danish seaman who sailed his Chinese-built junk from an Amoy shipyard to
William Head, together with his Chinese wife, six-year-old son and three
Chinese seamen. The Amoy, after
being "cleared" by the station, tied up at the float below the
Empress Hotel for some time and attracted thousands of visitors. The
largest "visitor" to the station was of course, the Queen
Elizabeth who,
during World War II "cleared" on her way to Esquimalt. The peak
year of 1927 saw 1,068 ships inspected.
The station covered 106 acres,
and comprised 42 buildings. Thirteen families were housed on the grounds
as staff, who had their own school-cum-chapel. Transportation was often
laid on to Victoria by water, on the steam tender Madge.
D.G.S.S.Madge BC Archives Image E-0700
The hospital could accommodate 49
patients and first class detention accommodation for 120, second class for
90, and third class from 500 to 800. During World War I a total of 80,000
Chinese were passed through William Head in batches of 8,000 to 10,000.
They formed labour battalions to work behind the lines and did much of the
cleaning up after hostilities ended.
|
Chinsese
Coolies arriving at William Head
BC Archives Image
01591 |
 |
The supervising of Bentinck
Island, just off William Head, which held lepers for many years, came
under the medical officer at the station. Before Bentinck Island was
opened in 1924, lepers were confined to D'Arcy Island, off Swartz Bay,
which was first used in 1891. No treatment was extended to the sufferers
in the early days, and their deplorable existence, which sometimes lead to
escapes, prompted authorities to move the colony to Bentinck Island. As
time progressed so did treatment methods and humanitarian care. As
medicine progressed, the containment of leprosy was accomplished by new
treatments and the island "colony" was closed in 1956. William
Head was closed as an inspection station in 1958 and reopened the
following year as a Federal Minimum Security prison. When the Quarantine
Station was first opened there was no road to it, the only access being by
water. In Dr. W. McNaughton-Jones' report in 1893 he recommended that a
telephone be installed to the station, and that the road within the
grounds be connected to link with the Metchosin area. Before long a
cemetery on the grounds received the mortal remains of many nationalities
and is still carefully tended. The station was
also
a brief stop-over for liberated prisoners of war at the end of World War
II, returning from Japanese prison camps. At
the present time it is being operated under the name of the "William
Head Institute," a federal medium security penitentiary.
Source: FootPrints Pioneer Families of the
Metchosin District, Marion I. Helgesen editor
|