NEWS
ARTICLE
By Andrew Mitchell
The
Pique News Magazine
Article on file at: Archives
Association of British Columbia
July 19, 2001
Whistler's past goes online: The life and times of Myrtle
Philip immortalized in a digital collection
Whistler Museum and Archives
Article written by Andrew Mitchell and reprinted with permission
from the Pique NewsMagazine,
Whistler (July 2001)
Before there was a Whistler, there was a woman by the name of
Myrtle Philip -- you probably know the name because theres
a school and a community centre named after her, but you may not
know her history that well.
Thanks to a joint effort by the Whistler Museum and Archives,
a grant from Canadas Digital Collections, and the work of
Pepper Sunlight Productions, a Vancouver-based multimedia company,
you can learn all about Whistlers first pioneer and resort
operator.
Together with her husband, Alex, the two Philips built a fishing
lodge in 1913 on the shore of
Alta Lake, at the site of what is now called Rainbow Park. In
its day, the lodge was world
renowned, the most popular resort destination west of the Rockies.
Myrtle was an accomplished outdoorswoman, taking guests horseback
riding, swimming, boating, hunting, skiing and skating, and as
the community around the lodge grew, she helped it along where
she could. She helped to found the first school, and guided Whistlers
development into a mountain resort by keeping natural values front
and centre.
By the time she died in 1986, at the age of 95, she had seen
Whistler transform from a lake in the woods with no permanent
population to speak of to an international ski resort. She also
took lots of pictures. Which is what the Myrtle Philip Collection
at Canadas Digital Collections is all about.
"Now we have the collection in a form that people can look
at instead of having it locked away in a vault," says Pat
Gemmill, the curator and archivist for the Whistler Museum and
Archives. "Its a beautiful collection that really captures
what it was like to live in Whistler back then."
The Myrtle Philip Collection is an educational Web site, including
almost the entire photographic collection bequeathed to the Whistler
Museum and Archives by Myrtle Philip herself in 1986. The total
collection consists of over 2,000 vintage photographs chronicling
the life and times of Whistlers pioneers, and over a thousand
of the pictures are now available on Canadas Digital Collections
Web site at http://collections.ic.gc.ca/.
It took more than six months and $20,000 to scan and archive
the pictures, which are organized under seven different subheads.
"The Life of Myrtle Philip" is a collection of Myrtle
Philip pictures taken through the years, telling her story and
the story of Whistler.
"Rainbow Lodge" is a collection of pictures taken at
the fishing lodge through the various stages of its development,
from a simple outback fishing lodge to a spa with cabins where
people came to relax and take part in numerous activities.
The "Recreation" collection shows the different activities
that people did, and in some cases still do, when they come to
Whistler. The list includes horseback riding, mountain climbing,
hiking, fishing, boating, swimming, skating, and skiing.
"Alta Lake Adventures" is about the weird and different
side of Whistler, like the pet bear at Rainbow Lodge and the towns
first plane crash.
"Way of Life" gives you an idea of what hardships early
settlers faced while making their living catering to tourists
and adventurers, and surviving the snow and torrential rains.
"Then and Now" is a point-by-point comparison of Whistler,
comparing the views then to the views now, from the development
of the mountains, to the development of Alta Lake.
There is also a "Photo Album" collection that allows
you to look at the other collections in a more logical order.
"This is an educational site, but we feel its of interest
to anyone who lives or visits Whistler," says Gemmill. "Everybody
wonders what it used to be like, and its amazing to see
whats changed and what stayed the same.
"They had some good times, the settlers, and in a lot of
ways they were the same adventurers who still come to Whistler
today."
© 2001 Pique NewsMagazine, Whistler
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