Click on any letter, above, to visit specific section of Street/Place Names

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| Named after the bay, see Cadboro Bay | |||||
| This was originally a wagon trail that connected Fort Victoria to the HBC's Cadboro Bay Farm in the uplands overlooking Cadboro Bay | |||||
Calvert Crescent |
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| Origin unknown. | |||||
| Information welcomed | |||||
Camas Lane |
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| Origin descriptive, after the wild plant that thrived in local meadows. | |||||
| This was the boundary between John Tod's property and the Hudson's Bay Company's fur trade reserve (which became known as Uplands Farm) | |||||
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Cardiff Place |
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| Named after Cardiff, Wales. | |||||
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Cardigan Road |
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| Named after Cardigan, Wales. | |||||
Carnarvon Street |
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| Named after Carnarvon, Wales. | |||||
| Originally called Gordon Street, renamed in 1921 | |||||
Carrick Street |
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| Origin Unknown. | |||||
| Originally called Fourth Street, renamed in 1928 in deference to Carrick Street in Saanich to which it is contiguous | |||||
| Information welcomed | |||||
Cavendish Avenue |
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| Origin uncertain, possibly after William Cavendish, Earl of Newcastle, England. | |||||
| Originally called Beachway Avenue, renamed in 1921 | |||||
Cedar Hill Cross Road |
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| Named after Cedar Hill (Mt Douglas). | |||||
| Originally an Indian trail between Cedar Hill and Cadboro Bay. It was called Bay Road by early settlers | |||||
Central Avenue |
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| Origin descriptive. Central Avenue runs through the middle of the original McNeill property | |||||
Charlton Street |
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| Origin unknown. | |||||
| Former name of Newton Street, renamed in 1928 in deference to Newton Street in Saanich to which it is contiguous | |||||
| Information welcomed | |||||
Chaucer Street |
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| Named after Geoffrey Chaucer, English poet. | |||||
| Chaucer Street is one of many streets in the area named after English poets including Goldsmith, Milton and Byron | |||||
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Chiltern Place |
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| Origin uncertain, possibly after Chiltern Hills, England. | |||||
| This is one of several cul-de-sacs created in the Uplands during the early 1930s when many large-size lots were subdivided into medium-size lots to encourage sales during the early years of the Depression | |||||
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| Also at this time Lincoln Road (north of Lansdowne Road) disappeared to be replaced by Exeter Road and realigned Norfolk Road built to sevice newly-created medium-size lots in the eastern portion of the Uplands. | |||||
Christie Way |
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| Named after Mrs. M. Christie, a Victoria alderman. | |||||
| Mrs. Christie was responsible for the subdivision of city-owned property related to the Old Men's Home (Mountain View) | |||||
Clive Drive |
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| Named after Sir Clive Phillipps-Wolley, who built a large home Woodhall at the upper end of the street in 1891. | |||||
| Originally the access road to Phillipps-Wolley's home | |||||
Connaught Avenue |
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| Origin unconfirmed, but probably after Duke of Connaught, who visited Oak Bay in September, 1912 to bolster Commonwealth solidarity on the eve of World War I. | |||||
| Former name of Estevan Avenue between 1913 and 1921. Before 1913 it was named Olympia Avenue | |||||
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Cookman Street |
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| Origin uncertain, possibly after an early settler. | |||||
| Information welcomed | |||||
Cotswold Road |
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| Origin uncertain, probably after the Cotswold Hills, England. | |||||
Click on NAMESAKE button to learn history of namesake![]() |
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Cranleigh Place |
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| Named after Cranleigh House, a private school established in 1923 by Charles V. Milton in the former Willows Hotel building. | |||||
| The school was converted to a four-plex before being demolished in 1968 to make way for the Cranleigh Apartments at 2189 Cadboro Bay Road | |||||
Cranmore Road |
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| Named after two pre-1906 residents, Ross Crane and Albert Henry Blakemore. | |||||
| Originally called Todd (Tod?) Road | |||||
Crescent Road |
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| Origin descriptive. | |||||
Crestview Road |
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| Origin descriptive. | |||||
Cubbon Drive |
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| Named after Harold Cubbon, one of the subdividers of the former MacDonald property. | |||||
| Cubbon Drive is a short road that serves the subdivision | |||||
Currie Road |
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| Named after Lieutenant General, Sir Arthur Currie, C.B., K.C.M.G., commander of the Canadian forces in World War I. | |||||
| Originally called Longbranch Avenue, renamed in 1921 | |||||
PLACE NAMES
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