Langley Centennial Museum
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Object Description
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Object ID
1973.013.141
Title
White porcelain pitcher.
Description
A plain white porcelain pitcher. It has a handle with raised ceramic patterns around the top where the handle joined with the pitcher. The pitcher has a crack in the side that appears to have been repaired. The bottom has a makers mark in blue ink for "Royal Iron Stone China. Johnson Bros. England" with a royal warrant in the centre.
People/Subject
Annand/Rowlatt Residence
The Annand/Rowlatt Residence is located at 710 204 Street, in the south-west corner of Campbell Valley Regional Park. Alexander Joseph Annand and his family immigrated to British Columbia from Nova Scotia in 1885. The following year he moved his family to a small house located in the Campbell Valley area. This larger, balloon-frame house was professionally built by Dan Craig with mill-cut lumber during 1888. Mr. Annand moved in the next year with his wife and three children. At that time the house was estimated to be worth $300. W. F. Taylor purchased the property in 1905 and subsequently leased it out to Mr. Len Rowlatt, who in turn bought it from Taylor in 1914. Len Rowlatt lived in the house for the next fifty-eight years. He sold the estate to Greater Vancouver Regional District Parks in 1969 but continued to live in the house until his death at the age of 85. The residence gained Municipal Heritage Site status in 1981 and was subsequently restored by the Langley Heritage Society.
Container
Pitcher
Rowlatt, Leonard (Len)
Leonard Rowlatt, known as Len, was born to Arthur and Mary (née Hall) Rowlatt on 22 May 1887 in Spaldwick, Huntingdon, England. The Rowlatt family lived in Easton. Len came to Canada with his older brother Joe around 1907. In 1905, W. F. Taylor bought Alexander Joseph Annand's Campbell Valley property and later leased the north 80 acres and house to Len Rowlatt, who subsequently purchased the farm in 1914 and lived there until his death. In 1914 the long distance engagement between Len Rowlatt and his fiancée Effie, who was living in England, ended. Len Rowlatt married Isabella Maddison, then living in Hall's Prairie, on 29 Oct. 1917 in New Westminster, BC. After marrying, the couple lived on Campbell River Road (later 8th Avenue) in Langley, BC. Len farmed in Langley, predominantly as a milk producer. In addition to farming, Len earned a reputation as a water diviner (well witcher). Len also participated in the Cloverdale Rodeo and other events, such as parades, in the Langley area during which he would bring his surrey (four-wheel two-seated horse-drawn carriage) out for public use. People throughout British Columbia asked Len for assistance in finding water. In 1968 Len began to sell his land, selling a large portion to the Greater Vancouver Regional District, with an agreement that he could continue to live on the property. Len Rowlatt died in Murrayville, BC on 5 Apr. 1973.
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