First Nations Settlement Sometime after the end of the glaciers, First Nations peoples arrived in the region. Archaeological evidence documents the occupation by
Coast Salish peoples in this area of the Strait of Georgia for over 4,000 years. The island is within the territory of the Tla'amin (
Sliammon) First Nation. In the language
Ayajuthem spoken by the Tla'amin peoples, the whole island is known by two names:
Ihohs (previously spelled
Áyhus), meaning 'double-headed serpent' and
Kayaykwon which is an allusion in Ayajuthem to the three main water sources found in the island. The western tip of the Island—named Indian Point by colonial settlers—is called Thetik or Thah teq in
Ayajuthem, meaning 'broken off'. The area known by locals as The Meadow is called
T’it’may in
Ayajuthem, meaning 'wild cherry trees'. The area of the spring at Beacon Point is called
Xixajayis in the
Ayajuthem language. Over 13 archaeological sites, protected by the
BC Heritage Conservation Act, have been registered on the Island, including a large habitation and use site on the eastern edge, a signal site atop the high south-southwesterly crest of the island, and numerous ancestral remains. In June 1792 the Spanish ships
Sutil and
Mexicana, under
Galiano, and the British ships
Discovery and
Chatham, under
Vancouver sailed by the island on their way to Desolation Sound. On or about June 25, 1792, Vancouver gave the name "Savary's Island". In early July a boat survey team led by
Peter Puget and
Joseph Whidbey charted Savary Island and spent at least one night on shore, meeting a group of Indigenous people at island's eastern end. Puget did not refer to the island as Savary, instead simply calling it "Indian Island".
European settlement (Late 19th century) Permanent European settlement on the island did not begin until well into the 19th century. In the 1870s the government subdivided the island into lots for homesteading despite Indigenous establishments on the island. Jack Green, the first non-Indigenous permanent resident, was an early settler who built a cabin and store in or about 1886. Green Point (now known as Mace Point) was named for him. In or about 1893 Green and his friend and business partner, Taylor, were murdered on Savary, during a store robbery. The events of the robbery and murder mirror the robbery by the
Flying Dutchman in
Union Bay. Green's murderer, Hugh Lynn of the
Lynn Valley clan, was eventually captured in a multi-thousand mile, multinational chase and sent to the gallows.
Development (Early 20th century) The first hotel seems to have been "The Savary", built in 1914, near the Government Wharf. This hotel remained in operation until 1932 when it was destroyed in a fire. At the other end of the island, the Ashworth family built the Royal Savary Hotel at Indian Point. Gradually, private boats and water taxis from
Lund provided the most common access to the island. The steamship services ended in the 1940s (Union Steamships) and 1950s (Gulf Steamship Line). For a brief time an airstrip was operating on the island, but it was later closed due to safety concerns (two children were killed while riding on
ATVs). The main air access to Savary has been by seaplane and boats that come from Lund, a nearby town. In the summers, many island commuters from away come and go on seaplanes, especially on Friday and Sunday evening flights.
Shipwrecks Over the years there have been several shipwrecks (including the Union Steamship Steamer Capilano in 1915) and aircraft crashes (including a small single engine crash in Seaweed Bay in the 1960s). The incidents include: an RCAF Hurricane fighter that crashed off Savary in 1943; lone survivor (12-year-old Fred Ilott) of the PowRivCo Tug Teeshoe sinking who washed up on Savary in the 1950s (
Teeshoe: A Powell River Story by Filmmaker Jan Padgett); a Cessna on the airstrip; two fishboats, one in the Gulf and one in Malaspina Strait, each with loss of life; and a Gulf ship that sank on Dinner Rock in 1947. There have also been swimming and pleasure boating incidents over the years. In the 1960s human remains were found on Savary and these were transferred to the Laboratory of Archaeology at
UBC. These ancestral remains were returned by UBC to the Tla'amin (Sliammon) First Nation in a repatriation ceremony for burial at Sliammon in June 2006. In 1982 the
Royal Savary Hotel was demolished. Since then several
B&Bs have opened on the island. ==Geology and soils==