Museum       Archives       Exhibits       Education      History        Links       Site Index
 

 

 
Colonial Settlers : William & Ann Hall
The Land

Colonial Settlers

Community of Villages

Pre-emptions

Agriculture

Timelines

Image Gallery

 

William Hall (1827-1913) was born in England in 1827. Hall attended medical school but left before qualifying and joined the Royal Engineers where he learned his trade as a stone mason. He married English born Ann Bucklelow (1824-1897) in 1846, prior to his 1848 posting to Gibraltar. He served in the Crimean War from 1854 to 1856. Hall, accompanied by his wife and first three children, arrived in the Crown Colony of British Columbia in 1859, as a member of the Royal Engineers. Five more children were added to the Hall family after 1858. Hall's duties included constructing parts of the Cariboo Road, through the Fraser Canyon, and the Hope-Similkameen road.

During this initial period the family moved from Sapperton (New Westminster) to Yale where Mrs. Hall operated a boarding house.

In 1863, the Columbia detachment of the Royal Engineers disbanded. Hall chose to stay in the colony to claim a free military grant of 150 acres. Hall's original land holdings were located on Unsworth Road. By 1878, however, the Halls had moved their residence to property on the West End of Chilliwack Mountain.

Hall continued to practice his trade as a stone mason and worked on the construction of many local homes, and carved gravestones.

Formal portrait of Corporal William Hall Portrait of Mrs. Ann Hall, late 1860's P148- Formal portrait of Corporal William Hall

P3733- Portrait of Mrs. Ann Hall, late 1860's

 

Museum       Archives       Exhibits       Education      History        Links       Site Index

The Chilliwack Museum and Archives owns copyright of this digital collection. This digital collection may only be used for educational non-commercial purposes including any fair dealing for the purposes of private study or research, or use in schools. The Copyright Act of Canada prohibits unauthorized use of this digital collection.