Seymour Narrows
Seymour Narrows is a precarious body of water that flows with tidal rushes up to 16
knots (30 kmh) between
Vancouver Island's central east coast and Quadra Island, which
Vancouver called
one of the vilest stretches of water in the world,
perhaps, because the infamous Ripple Rock lurked just below the surface.
1
By the mid-20th century this vilified twin-peaked rock damaged and sunk 119 vessels
until, in 1958, it was packed with dynamite and decapitated in the world's largest non-nuclear peacetime
explosion.2
- 1. Andrew Scott, The Encyclopedia of Raincoast Placenames (Madeira Park, BC: Harbour Publishing, 2009), 538.
- 2. B.C.'s Deadly Ripple Rock Blown Up, Canadian Broadcasting Corporation Digital Archives.
- 3. Scott, Raincoast Placenames, 538.
Mentions of this place in the documents
-
Paget, C. to Rogers, Baron Blachford Frederic 29 June 1863, CO 60:17, no. 6387, 33.
-
The Colonial Despatches: Duncan Cove
-
The Colonial Despatches: Seymour Hill
-
Hamilton, George Alexander to Hawes, Benjamin 14 September 1848, CO 305:1, no. 1809,
319.