About Our Victoria BC Hotel
Discover Our Fascinating History
The story of the Huntingdon Hotel and Suites (formerly known as Huntingdon Manor) and Pendray Inn and Tea House is just as fascinating as that of Victoria BC itself. Notable dates in the history of our English country-style hotel include: The southern tip of Vancouver Island which includes Greater Victoria, the San Juan, and the Gulf Islands are the traditional territories of the Lkwungen (Lekwungen) peoples. Lkwungen means “Place to smoke herring”, and to-date, unites the Esquimalt and Songhees Nations as one family. The Huntingdon Hotel and Suites and Pendray Inn and Tea House acknowledge that it is located on the traditional lands of the Lkwungen People. We pay respect to their ancestors and give thanks to allow us to live, work and play on their traditional land. We also recognize the impact of land loss and colonialism had on the Lkwungen People, effects which continue to this day.
1876
In 1876 Alexander Blair Grey had been appointed a Justice of the Peace, an important position in the growing town of Victoria, B.C. He had purchased a piece of land at the corner of Belleville and Oswego Streets and decided to build a new home (today known as the Judges House). Mr. Grey’s home created a bit of a stir in colonial Victoria, being rather large and splendid for a city, which, despite being the capital of the new province, was still a small frontier town.
1890
Around 1890, the Pendrays bought a block of property on Belleville Street. It had a small cottage on it (today known as the Middle House) and the family lived in this home while their new Mansion (today known as the Pendray Inn and Tea House) was being built beside it. The Pendray’s new home was a lovely structure, built in the Queen Anne style, with all the trappings of a grand Victorian home. Mr. Pendray commissioned two German painters, Herr Sterns and Herr Muller, to paint frescos on the ceilings of some of the rooms, including the parlour, the dining room and two of the bedrooms; you can still see them today. Panes of stained glass were shipped from Italy in barrels of molasses so that they would not break.
1913
In the meantime during 1913, Mr. Pendray died while inspecting his factory when a pipe fell 40 feet and struck him on the head, killing him instantly. Mrs. Pendray continued to live in the Mansion after her husband’s death.
1929
After Hon. Hunter’s Death in 1929, the Judges House was run by the Missionary Sisters of Notre Dame des Anges as a boarding house known as Belleville Lodge. In 1939, the Pendray’s children sold the Mansion to Mrs. M A Lewis for $4,500.Mrs. Lewis bequeathed it to the Missionary Sisters of Notre Dame des Anges, who ran the Mansion as a boarding house for young women, it was known as Loretto Hall until 1966.
1980
In the 1980s, the property was purchased and expanded with the construction of the Huntingdon Manor Hotel, styled after the first and finest Canadian Pacific Hotels.
2014
Today, the iconic property is a much-loved scenic fixture on Victoria’s Inner Harbour landscape, offering a convenient and comfortable resting place in BC’s capital city.