
It’s hard to imagine Cordova Bay without the McMorrans. Eric’s father, George McMorran, arrived here from Ontario in 1890, when his family took a job managing the Rithet farm (now the Broadmead district), and they spent their summers camping down on the sands of the vast bay, crossing paths with a few Songhees natives hunting for deer and digging for clams. (A shell midden near today’s Agate Park marks the site of a Songhees village dating back 1,000 years.)

To capitalize on the traffic, George and his friend Fred Dougall subdivided some land near the beach in 1909, naming Doumac Avenue after their real-estate company. The McMorrans built an official campsite on Agate Lane in 1910. Thanks to the growing popularity of automobiles – the car-dealing Plimley family had property at Cordova Bay too – and the opening of a nearby station for the Canadian Northern Pacific Railway, which ran from the city to Sidney and Patricia Bay along today’s Lochside Trail, the campground was always full.

McMorran’s tea room became the hub of Cordova Bay. In 1926, George added a post office. A few years later, he had the neighbourhood’s first telephone, and pressed his sons into service, delivering messages for customers. In 1928, he built a motor court across the street, renting out cabins for $50 for the summer.

After World War II, Eric and his brother Bruce started running McMorran’s. The consummate host, Eric wore a tuxedo, and greeted every one of his guests at the door. He had a special sprung floor built for the ballroom, with intersecting maple planks so the dancers could spin with the grain of the wood. (“Even today, I insist that anyone coming from the beach wipe their shoes so they don’t grind up that floor,” Eric says.) McMorran’s on a Saturday night was the most romantic spot in town, especially when they’d turn off the house lights, and let moonlight flood the dance floor.

McMorran’s dance nights remained popular for decades. But as entertainments multiplied and the population aged, the dances couldn’t sustain the business. In 1994, Eric’s son Wallace returned from 20 years managing Canadian Pacific hotels, and the family poured a fortune into seismically upgrading the building and adding the Charters restaurant. Cordova Bay was no longer an exotic, must-visit destination, however, and the surrounding suburbs didn’t provide many regular customers. Last fall, Wallace decided to put the property up for sale.
“Things change, but whatever happens to it, we hope that it continues to contribute to the village of Cordova Bay,” says Wallace. In commemoration of all they have contributed already, on Saturday, April 3, the McMorrans will hold one last open house. Vintage cars will fill the parking lot, a swing band will play in the ballroom, and Eric McMorran will be there, to greet visitors for one last spin on that maple dance floor.
(Thanks to the Saanich Archives for use of the above photos.)

UPDATE (March 11, 2011): The McMorran’s building will be revived this summer as the Beach House. Read the news here.
Thanks for this, Ross. I guess it's a sign of incipient aging when the phrase that comes to mind is, "end of an era..." My parents danced at McMorran's in the fifties. I went there for lunch-breaks in the early 1970s when I was a student at Claremont Secondary up on the hill above Cordova Bay. And my daughter, who lived for a time just along the beach from McMorran's went there for a few special meals with my parents. A pleasure to read your piece.
ReplyDeleteTheresa Kishkan
Thank you so much for this lovely story. It's so great to hear about the history of our local community at Cordova Bay. We will miss our close neighbours, McMorran's, as many of our golfers, condo owners, residents and tenants frequent this place of local heritage. I have recently added you to our Sayward Hill Blog and look forward to our future Blogs and Comments - Ingrid Jarisz, Sayward Hill, Jawl Dev. Corp.
ReplyDeleteThis is a brilliant little piece of local history. McMorran's is not a part of "my" Victoria, which is pretty limited, admittedly. The dude who trucked the Fable Cottage to Denman Island is something I understand completely, however...
ReplyDeleteThank you for this re the Fable Cottage. My uncle, Brock Robertson, put the original roof on it.
ReplyDeleteAnd, as for McMorran's, my family once owned it as "The Little Arctic," and I have photos with the name atop the building. I'm not sure if this was prior to McMorran's purchasing it, but it would have been in the early 1920s, as far as I can tell from the photos I have.
Marilyn
I just found this story, and I love it. Thank you so much for this. I am sad to see it go being a McMorran is very important to me and its allways nice to read about my family history. And reading about my dad`s grandfather and all the things that they have done. And I loved seeing all the old photos, I was deffinitly given some old menus from my grandfather :)
ReplyDeleteChelsea McMorran
I grew up in Cordova Bay in the 60 s our family owned the Seaview motel My dad built our fist house on Gloria Place road just off Cordova Bay rd just up from McMorrans. I attended Cordova Bay elementary, Royal Oak and Claremont. Still a wonderful area not to mention the beautiful beaches
ReplyDelete