Langley Centennial Museum
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Object ID
2019.015.025
Title
Official Opening of the Fort-to-Fort Trail.
Date
8 Aug. 1996.
Description
Colour slide depicting the setup for the official opening of the Fort-to-Fort Trail in 1996. There is a white tent set up on the left of the image, an open white tent set up in the background of the image, with a cannon in front of it; what appears to be a tee-pee set up in the right of the image, with a child to its left; and three people standing in front of the tee-pee. They have what appear to be surveying equipment in front of them. There is a man wearing a uniform on the left, a person wearing a vest, boots, and a hat in the middle, and a man wearing a long dark coat and bowler hat on the right. The man on the left is named Simon, and he is portraying a Royal Engineer. The man on the right is Roger Roberts, president of the Friends of the Fort; he is portraying Judge Mathew Baillie Begbie. The Fort Langly National Historic Site re-enactors took part in the official opening of the Trail.
People/Subject
Begbie, Mathew Baillie
Sir Matthew Baillie Begbie (9 May 1819 - 11 June 1894) was a British-born Canadian judge. Begbie served as a Judge of the Supreme Court, Colony of British Columbia 1858 to 1866 and then, in the same capacity in the Supreme Court, United Colonies of Vancouver Island and British Columbia from 1866 to 1870. He was Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of the United Colonies from 1870 to 1871 and, following British Columbia joining confederation in 1871, he served as the first Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of the new Province of British Columbia until his death in 1894. In the years after his death, Judge Begbie become known, inappropriately, as the "Hanging Judge". Begbie spent the first thirty-nine years of his life in Great Britain. During these years his life was filled with social and intellectual activities. He received his first degree from Cambridge University where he studied mathematics and the classics. He was involved in a great number of extracurricular activities, including singing and acting in amateur productions, playing chess, rowing, and tennis. After Cambridge Begbie went on to study law at Lincoln's Inn. He established a successful law practice in London before heading to British Columbia. Begbie came to Fort Victoria, in 1858 in the midst the influx of prospectors and others brought about by the Fraser Canyon Gold Rush which greatly expanded the population of the what became, as he arrived, the Colony of British Columbia. During that influx, and the following Cariboo Gold Rush of 1861, Begbie played a crucial role in the establishment of law and order throughout the Colony of British Columbia. He was knighted by Queen Victoria at Balmoral Castle in 1875. During his years on the bench, Begbie travelled throughout British Columbia, on foot and later on horseback administering justice in sometimes informal circumstances but he is said to have always worn his judicial robes and wig when court was in session. During his early years, he played a role in government including drafting legislation. He spoke several languages and is said to have been able to conduct trials in several aboriginal languages without the use of an interpreter. Mt. Begbie (left)He was an active naturalist, recording observations during his travel, including drawing maps and bridge construction drawings. He sang opera. He continued his judicial duties well into his last illness dying in Victoria, British Columbia on June 11, 1894. The funeral procession marking his death is said to have been unprecedented and intended to mark the passing of a man regarded as British Columbia's first citizen. Mount Begbie, the most prominent mountain seen from Revelstoke, was named in his honour. There are two other Mount Begbies in British Columbia; they are little more than hills although the one in the marshlands south of 100 Mile House has also given its name to the Begbie Summit, the highest point on the Cariboo Highway. There are also two lakes and a creek also named for Judge Begbie. Begbie is interred at Ross Bay Cemetery in Victoria, British Columbia.
Term Source: www.wilkipedia.org
British Royal Engineers
During the 1958 B.C. Centennial "Changes of the guard" ceremonies were held in Fort Langley May 21 - 28, where a group of British Royal Engineers in replica 1858 costumes symbolically passed on their duties to the Royal Canadian Engineers under the command of Captain B. Breiville.
Fort-to-Fort Trail
The Fort-to-Fort Trail is a walking trail created in 1996 as a collaborative project between the Township of Langley, GVRD East Area Parks, the Langley Heritage Society, and the Fort Langley Business Improvement Association (BIA). The trail connects the Fort Langley National Historic site and Fort Langley village to the site of the old Fort at Derby Reach.
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Argus v4.4.0.36 - Langley Centennial Museum