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Ladysmith is a town located on the
49th parallel on the east coast of
Vancouver Island British Columbia, Canada
. The
local economy is based on forestry, tourism and agriculture. A hillside location
adjacent to a sheltered harbour form the natural characteristics of the community.
As of 2006, the population was 7,538. The area of the town was 8.43 square kilometres.
Total private dwellings were 2,833. Population density was 828.5 people per square
kilometre.
Ladysmith is also known for its annual "Festival of Lights" in which
the entire commercial sector and many homes are decorated with strings of colourful
lights for six weeks in celebration of Christmas.
Ladysmith is the nearest town to the birthplace of actress Pamela Anderson.
History
Ladysmith was founded by James Dunsmuir about 1898, a year after
he built shipping wharves for loading coal at
Oyster Harbour
. Dunsmuir, owner of coal mines in the
Nanaimo
area, needed a location to house the families of his miners. He chose to build the
community at
Oyster Harbour
, some twenty miles south of his Extension British Columbia mines. Many buildings
were moved from Extension and
Wellington
by rail and by oxen.
Ladysmith, British Columbia was named after Ladysmith, South Africa,
which was named after "Juana Maria de los Delores de Leon Smith" also known as "Lady
Smith", the Spanish wife of Sir Harry Smith, the Governor of the Cape Colony. Dunsmuir
thought this would be a fitting tribute at the conclusion of the Boer War. In addition
to commemorating the end of the war by naming his town after Ladysmith, Dunsmuir
also chose to name the streets of the community after generals who fought victoriously
in the Boer War. Included in this honour are Generals Buller,
Kitchener
, Baden-Powell,
Methuen
and Symonds.
The Town of
Ladysmith
was incorporated June 3, 1904.
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