Langley Centennial Museum
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Object Description
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Object ID
2015.048.001
Title
Murrayville Soccer Team.
Date
1915.
Description
1 photograph : b&w ; group portrait of the Murrayville Soccer team; the young men are arranged in three rows, outside on a grass field; most are wearing light coloured shirts; the back row shows four men standing, with Ed Berry second from left; the middle row has three men kneeling, and the front row has four men seated; the man on the left in the front row is the most casually dressed and appears to be wearing shorts while the rest are wearing pants; there is a ball on the ground in front of the man second from the left; Bill Berry is unidentified but is also in the photo, and ___ Hagelstein is the young man in the centre.
People/Subject
Berry, Edward Weldon (Eddie)
Edward Weldon Berry was born in Ontario February 6, 1894, and is the oldest son of Lydia and John Walter Berry. Edward was a graduate of arts at UBC. He was a Rhodes scholar at Oxford University and was attending St. John's College until his death January 23, 1920 at the age of 26. The cause of death was heart failure, caused by having sustained shell shock and gassing in WWI. Lieut. Berry had served overseas at the Somme, Vimy Ridge, and Passchendaele, before being gassed at Loos in 1917.
Murrayville (B.C.)
Paul Murray was born in Ireland in 1811 and immigrated to Canada with his family at the age of eighteen. the Murray family settled in Oxford County, Ontario, and ten years later Paul married Lucy Bruce. They bought land in Zorra and had seven children together. In May 1874, after his children were grown, Paul left Ontario and relocated in B.C., accompanied by three of his sons. Their first home in Langley was a roughly built shelter they made for themselves from a gigantic fir tree, and after his wife and two of hisdaughters arrived, they all lived there together. After these humble beginnings, Murray opened a hotel on Old Yale Road to service travelers making their way into the interior, building up a reputation as one of the finest carpenters in the area. The corner where the hotel was eventually came to be known as Murray's Corners, as the family had 160 acres of land on each corner. Murray's Corners eventually came to be known as Murrayville, and all of Paul's sons worked on Old Yale Road, building more hotels and other businesses to increase commerce. Paul was an ordained church elder, dring a time when there were no official churches and services were held in a small schoolhouse on the corner of Glover Road and Old Yale Road. Holding the title of founder of Murrayville, Paul Murray died in 1903. Murray's Corners did not officially become Murrayville until 1911, when the local post office changed its name to Murrayville Post Office.
soccer
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Argus v4.4.0.36 - Langley Centennial Museum