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Taylor Lake

Taylor Lake Road, 100 Mile House, British Columbia, Canada

Formally Recognized: 2017/04/01

Taylor Lake; Nikkei National Museum and Cultural Centre 2013-71-1-1-36
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Other Name(s)

Taylor Lake
Taylor Lake Internment Camp

Links and documents

Construction Date(s)

Listed on the Canadian Register: 2021/05/27

Statement of Significance

Description of Historic Place

The historic place consists of a collection of what were known as self- supporting internment sites created through a special program established by the BC Security Commission. The Bridge River, McGillivray Falls, Minto Mine and East Lillooet sites are located together in the Lillooet Land District of B.C., and were accessible by the Pacific Great Eastern Railway from Squamish. Taylor Lake is located near 100 Mile House in B.C.'s interior, while Calhoun Farm is located near Tappen, on Shuswap Lake between Salmon Arm and Kamloops.

Heritage Value

The collection of self-supporting Japanese internment sites or camps together have historic, aesthetic, cultural and spiritual value because they are an enduring record of Japanese Canadian internment in B.C. between 1942 and 1945, because of their unique organization and operation which made them different from other internment sites, and for the individual history and nature of each site.

Together, the self-supporting internment sites are significant because of their organization, unique to these places, through which family groups who had the financial ability to support themselves, or were able to leave the Protected Area before the deadline of April 1, 1942, became part of the category of self-supporting families and could live and work in these selected internment sites.

While still considered enemy aliens by the government and living in poor conditions, internees in self-supporting camps paid for their relocation to these sites that provided a less restrictive, less punitive environment, and where they were able to work, operate shops and businesses and place their children in school.

The different social and economic contexts and types of accommodation at the self-supporting sites are important because they illustrate both the fortitude and resiliency of the internees, and the complexity and diversity of the internment camp system.

Originally built in the 1920s, Bridge River is associated with gold mining and the construction of the Bridge River hydroelectric project, and Japanese Canadians were housed in abandoned workers' barracks. At McGillivray Falls, located just outside the 100-mile protected area, internees were hired to work at a local sawmill near D'Arcy, inside the protected area.

In East Lillooet, Japanese Canadians self-organized the Lillooet Japanese Self Supporting Community, and suffered hardship during the construction and occupation of un-insulated tar paper shacks, the isolation of the place and the lack of work. Calhoun Farm represents the independent settlement of Japanese-Canadians in the Shuswap area of B.C., where internees worked on the farm of Henry and Hilda Calhoun, a cooperative effort that helped alleviate the lack of farm labourers during World War II. Minto was a semi-abandoned mine site, while accommodation at the logging camp at Taylor Lake consisted of bunkhouses and a cookhouse, with internees employed by the local pulp and paper company.

While life at the self-supporting sites was one of profound hardship, at many of these sites vegetable and flower gardens, schools, tea preparation, food production, bathhouses, baseball games and other signifiers embodied Japanese Canadian life and culture during the period of internment.

Like all internment sites, the self-supporting sites evoke the hardships, memories and stories of the Japanese Canadians who lived there, assisting with the education and understanding about what happened in British Columbia during World War II. Recognition of each internment site acknowledges Japanese Canadian struggles, tenacity and resilience in the face of racism, discrimination and dispossession.

Character-Defining Elements

Not applicable

Recognition

Jurisdiction

British Columbia

Recognition Authority

Province of British Columbia

Recognition Statute

Heritage Conservation Act, s.18

Recognition Type

Provincially Recognized Heritage Site (Recognized)

Recognition Date

2017/04/01

Historical Information

Significant Date(s)

1942/01/01 to 1945/01/01

Theme - Category and Type

Governing Canada
Military and Defence

Function - Category and Type

Current

Historic

Residence
Group Residence

Architect / Designer

n/a

Builder

n/a

Additional Information

Location of Supporting Documentation

Province of British Columbia, Heritage Branch

Cross-Reference to Collection

Fed/Prov/Terr Identifier

EiRh-29

Status

Published

Related Places

n/a

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