Renfrew-Collingwood Community News

News stories from the Renfrew-Collingwood community in East Vancouver


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Collingwood Corner: Tyne Apartments at 3437 Kingsway

BY LORETTA HOUBEN

A fresh new business named Zim Manufacturing Co., April 1935. Photo by Stuart Thompson, Vancouver Archives
A fresh new business named Zim Manufacturing Co., April 1935. Photo by Stuart Thompson, Vancouver Archives

I’m always on the hunt for old photos that reveal life as it was here in Collingwood in past decades. The Vancouver Archives website is a gold mine for such searches. However, it’s difficult to locate the images as the search engine is tricky to use, and sometimes the photos are incorrectly labelled.

While browsing the archives website recently, I discovered Tyne Apartments in 1978, located at 3437 Kingsway, near the current Tim Horton’s building.

Tyne Apartments, 1978. Vancouver Archives photo; CVA 1093-04480

I didn’t recognize it, so I turned to Google maps to see if it was still standing. I like to use Google maps to find out if a building has been torn down. Google maps is invaluable in my research, because sometimes the building is still standing, and then I can take a photo of it for my records. Otherwise, I save and keep a record of Google’s image in my files.

I looked up Tyne Apartments in the BC Directories, to see how far I could trace it. This part of my research takes many hours. I began with 1955, and worked my way back to 1935, when the building was owned by Isaac D. Chappell. In 1936 he was the manager of Zim Manufacturing and Soap Company.

I typed that name into Google search and found another photo of this building at 3437 Kingsway in 1935 in the Vancouver Archives! You can clearly see the Zim name on the side of the building. The building was vacant from 1930 to 1934. I’m not sure when it was built.

In 1938, the building shared another business; “Uphol (upholstery) and carpet cleaning,” owned by G. W. Henderson. By 1939, according to the directories, the Zim Company was gone.

I wonder if Zim was a good cleaning agent. Today, in 2024, I use a cleaner named “Vim,” but I don’t think there is any relation to Zim! In 1940 the building was first listed as Tyne Apartments and had eight units. It appears it lasted until the 1970s, as the second photo was taken in 1978. The building was gone by 2015, according to Google maps.

Copyright 2024 Renfrew-Collingwood Community News


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Collingwood Corner: The Birds’ Paradise

Albert Jones playing violin at 5207 Hoy Street. Photo from the Vancouver Archives CVA371-1215

BY LORETTA HOUBEN

Thanks to Allen Doolan, a subscriber and moderator on one of the Nostalgic Vancouver Facebook groups I’m in, I recently discovered that a bird aviary was once in the Collingwood area at 5207 Hoy Street.

The bird aviary was quite well known and was even mentioned in a letter to the editors in the February 24, 1941 edition of Life magazine. The owner was Charles E. Jones, who was also briefly the 26th mayor of Vancouver until passing away September 1, 1948.*

Charles E. Jones. From the Vancouver Archives CVA371-1191

I can’t find out much about Charles Jones, but he certainly loved birds. If you visit the Vancouver Archives online, you will be able to see many postcards of the birds. Some of them will make you smile! I’ve included my favourites here.

Dog resting at the aviary with feathered friends. Photo from the Vancouver Archives CVA371-1193

The old house on Hoy Street that once contained these delightful creatures is still standing. It was built in 1910, and still has its original charm with a lovely garden. I’ve often been drawn to this house while walking in the neighbourhood, and now I know why. What a fascinating history it has.

According to the B.C. Directories online, “Birds Paradise” was listed along with Charles Jones’s name in the 1939 edition. I think it may have been a lucrative or at least a most interesting pastime for him. He was listed as retired in 1932, but in later editions of the B.C. Directories, he is listed as alderman, and then he is mayor in 1947.*

Postcard. From the Vancouver Archives CVA371-1199

The letter to the editor of the Life magazine in 1941 from Clyde Ragsdale states that Charles Jones “revived a childhood dream when he created this sanctuary, where thousands of birds, wild and domestic, representing some 35 species, from Chinese nightingales and Indian bulbuls to South American finches, have found haven.”

Copyright 2019 Renfrew-Collingwood Community News

*This article was corrected September 29, 2020. The Charles E. Jones who owned the aviary did not become mayor of Vancouver. That was another Charles E. Jones.