Other Locations, not Hatley Park
- CA RRU 025-001-6-01
- File
- 1890-1990
Part of Hatley Park Collection
Other Locations, not Hatley Park
Part of Hatley Park Collection
Part of Hatley Park Collection
Part of Hatley Park Collection
Part of Hatley Park Collection
Part of Hatley Park Collection
The upper Japanese garden at Hatley Park was designed by Japanese landscape architect Isaburo Kishida. The garden was installed in 1909 and developed by Tadashi Noda from 1913-1927.
Hatley Park Grounds and Gardens
Part of Hatley Park Collection
Images in this file show the some of the other buildings on the estate besides the castle and Japanese gardens.
Part of Hatley Park Collection
When James Dunsmuir purchased the Hatley Park land in 1907, he acquired some surrounding property to expand the estate and hired Samuel Maclure to design the large family home, now known as Hatley Castle. In 1911, unsatisfied with the estate layout, Dunsmuir hired Brett and Hall, a Boston-based landscaping company, to develop the estate and model farm.
Part of Hatley Park Collection
Part of Hatley Park Collection
Part of Hatley Park Collection
File contains pictures of newly completed estate buildings and other Hatley Park images from the Jameson family collections.
Part of Hatley Park Collection
Part of Hatley Park Collection
People, not Dunsmuir family members
Part of Hatley Park Collection
Brett and Hall estate development
Part of Hatley Park Collection
Part of Hatley Park Collection
Part of Hatley Park Collection
The Hatley Park estate was so named in 1889 when the land was purchased by Roland Stuart and Charles St. Aubyn Pearse. The name derives from the ancestral home of the Pearse family in England. Pearse died in 1901 and Stuart had a number of other business partners and tenant farmers who helped manage the estate.
A large fire destroyed the property in 1905 and shortly after, Roland Stuart put the estate up for sale.