Called to Action

When Alex Jurgensen pledged in 2010 that Camp Bowen would not disappear, he wasn’t making a speech—he was answering a calling. That promise, made not only to his fellow campers but to the community of visually impaired individuals, has since grown into a mission: to preserve a Bowen Island tradition and ensure its future for…

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Talent Shows & Campfire Songs

Talent Shows and Campfire sing-alongs were, and continue to be, a big part of the camp experience and created support within the community. Steve Barclay: “I can remember talent nights where people would get up and do a little performance and some of the performances were (better than others) but those kids got just as much…

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Raising the Totem Pole

The raising of the totem pole on Bowen Island, to mark the 75th anniversary of the B.C.-Yukon Division of the CNIB, was very significant event for both the blind and indigenous communities. This totem found its way to Bowen Island to be raised after being originally carved from a centuries-old log in the Shíshálh Nation…

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Community

Bowen Island offered a safe and welcoming place for the blind. In a 1974 newspaper article Joe Lewis wrote: “The moment a blind person sets foot on this island he is aware of being in totally different world. There is no traffic, confusion, no crowds, no noise. It’s different that’s all”. A 1981 letter written…

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Confidence and Connection

The overwhelmingly positive reviews of the lodge prove its positive impact in creating spaces of relaxation and entertainment for the blind community: “I want to go back every summer. It gives me something to look forward to for the rest of the year”. “It’s a wonderful place” says 80-year-old Miss Florence Richards, her face reflecting…

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Designing with Empathy:
Paradise for the Blind on Bowen

The Bowen Island lodge was a ground-breaking Canadian National Institute for the Blind (CNIB) project established in 1963 and offered a unique opportunity for blind and low vision individuals to experience a holiday in an incredible natural environment specially adapted to their needs. The lodge was built to offer a perfect blend of summer holidays…

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A Legacy of Inclusion

A legacy of inclusive design During the Union Steamships era, the Fraternal Order of Eagles sponsored fishing camps for the blind. This captured the attention of Captain M.C. Robinson, who was the CNIB director for British Columbia and Alberta. He had become blind at the age of eighteen while serving in the First World War…

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Origins of a Legacy

The blind and low vision community is an important part of Bowen Island’s history as well as its current social and cultural life. Bowen has been home to the blind and visually impaired since the beginning of its development. During the steamship era of Bowen’s history, the Terminal Steamships (1902 – 1920) and Union Steamships…

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Ellen Dorman

During the 6 decades she spent on Bowen, no-one was more central to the island’s community than Ellen Dorman. Born Margaret Ellen King in 1910, Ellen planned from childhood to train and work as a nurse. By 25, she was running McKay Private Nursing Home…

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Annie Laurie Wood

Annie Laurie Wood, born Annie Laurie Parker in Nova Scotia and known to some islanders as “Granny Wood,” came to Bowen early in her life. She was orphaned when still very young and grew up in Minnesota, but she arrived on the island in…

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Muriel Neilson

Muriel James Neilson was born in 1909 in Winnipeg, Manitoba. A brilliant student, she earned degrees in English, Chemistry, and Math. However, upon graduation the Great Depression hit, which made job prospects few and far between. So Muriel took a job as…

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Frances Cannon

Frances Cannon (nee. Caldwell) was an inspirational record-breaker in the world of open water swimming. Born in Trail, B.C. in 1941, she began swimming at a young age. She drew inspiration from Marilyn Bell, trained under Ann Meraw, and completed swims like…

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Rosa Helenius

Born in 1934 in Masset, Haida Gwaii, Rosa Fanny Harris saw a good deal of B.C. before moving to Bowen. Until the age of five, she lived with her Haida mother and English father in Masset. They then moved to Prince Rupert, then Hazelton, then back to…

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Gail Taylor

Gail Taylor (nee. MacLeod) was born in Winnipeg, Manitoba, in 1943. She completed school there, and started her career on a high-flying note – as a stewardess on Canadian Pacific Airlines. Unfortunately, bouts of motion-sickness cut that…

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Norma Dallas

Born Norma Ann Currell in 1939, Norma Dallas ’s connection to Bowen Island is lifelong. Though she first set foot on the island at two years old, her family’s history on the island stretches back much further, to when her aunt Lena Farrell’s family began travelling to…

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Lilian & Maisie Adams

For all their years on Bowen, the Adams sisters were as inseparable as they were essential to the community at Tunstall Bay. Lilian Eleanor and Mary Bethel “Maisie” Adams, born approximately 1908 in Vancouver’s West End. They grew up comfortably in town with…

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Judi Gedye

Judi Gedye is the longtime chair of the Bowen Island Heritage Preservation Association (BIHPA) and a frequent volunteer across many committees and community groups. In 1980, she moved to Bowen in search of a quiet home to decompress from…

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Kae MacNeil

Kae MacNeil met her husband Charlie when he came down with an ulcerated throat while she was working as a nurse. Initially, she didn’t intend to remain on Bowen. She moved to the island in 1946 to take care of her mother, who had delivered Bowen’s papers…

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Helen Holte

First arriving on Bowen as a summer vacationer with her family in the ’30s, Helen Holte returned to the island later in life when she married the taxi driver, Ralph Holte. In her spare time she became a founding member of the Historians. However, Helen’s primary focus…

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Peggy Proudlock

Margaret “Peggy” Proudlock, raised on the Proudlock property on Grafton Road, made friends in every corner of Bowen over the course of her life. She lived on the island for most of it, working at Doc Morgan’s, the Pub, and Canadian Institute for the Blind. Later in her…

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