Stanley Park is a 4 km² (1 000 acres) urban park bordering downtown Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. The park features many huge Douglas-fir, Western Redcedar, and Western Hemlock trees. These trees can be up to 100 metres (300 ft) tall and over a hundred years old. It is estimated that 8 million people visit the park yearly. The Project for Public Spaces ranked Stanley Park as the sixteenth best park in the world and sixth best in North America *.
In 1886, Vancouver’s City Council agreed to petitioning the Government of Canada to lease the large, 1,000 acre (4 km²) military reserve on the peninsula northwest of downtown. This area had been logged many times since the first pioneers settled in the area and required some work before it was presentable. At Brockton Point, the city’s first graveyard was closed for the development of the park. Soon after establishment of this official "greenspace", the Vancouver Board of Parks and Recreation, was created.
On September 27, 1888 the park was officially opened, where it was named after Lord Stanley, Governor General of Canada at the time. The next year on October 29, Lord Stanley himself, the first Governor General to visit British Columbia, officially dedicated the park. An observer at the event wrote:
In 1908, 20 years after the first petition for the lease, the federal ministry of defence renewed the lease of Stanley Park to Vancouver for 99 years, renewable (till 2007).
In 1994, when plans were developed to upgrade Stanley Park's Zoo, Vancouver voters decided in a referendum to phase out the zoo. The zoo began much earlier with a bear kept on a chain, but grew into a collection of over 50 animals, including snakes, wolves, emus, buffalo, kangaroos, monkeys and Humboldt penguins. The Stanley Park Zoo closed completely in December 1997 after the last remaining animal, a polar bear named Tuk, died at age 36. He had remained after the other animals had left because of his old age. The polar bear pit, often criticised by Animal rights activists, was converted into a demonstration salmon spawning hatchery.
The Vancouver Park Board now maintains over 192 parks at over 12.78 km² of land, but Stanley Park remains, by far, the largest.
Since then many more additions to the walkway have been built. The current unofficial Seawall starts at Canada Place, runs around Stanley Park, along English Bay beach, around False Creek, and down to Kitsilano Beach in the south. This is a favourite destination for walking, running, cycling, and inline skating. There are two paths, one for inline skaters and cyclists and the other for pedestrians. The section around the park is one-way for cyclists and inline skaters, running counter-clockwise.
During the 1860s to early 1880s, early settlers along Burrard Inlet used the island, along with Brockton Point, as a burial ground and cemetery. Burials ceased when the Mountain View Cemetery opened in 1887, just after Vancouver had become a city. In 1930 the island was offered to the city by the federal government to be used as a park, but a park never materialized.
Slightly hidden, this sculpture is found just west of the crossroads of trails that enter into Stanley Park from the swimming pool located at Second Beach. The sculpture was created in the mid-1990's and depicts the silhouetted head of an aboriginal person against its own image. The sculpture was chiseled into a stump that remains from one the large trees in the area.
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