Who owns Joe Fortes Vancouver?

Longtime restaurateur Bud Kanke has operated 11 restaurants in 41 years but none as long as the 27-year-old Joe Fortes in downtown Vancouver. Bud Kanke counts only three of the 11 restaurants that he has opened in the past 41 years as failures.

Was Joe Fortes black?

Joe Fortes was born in 1863 in Port of Spain, Trinidad. His father was a Barbadian “of full African blood” and his mother was “entirely or largely” Spanish or Portuguese. At 17 Fortes left Trinidad for England.

When did Joe Fortes open?

OUR HISTORY In 1885, this burly seaman landed upon Vancouver’s shores and settled into a cabin in English Bay. There, Joe quickly became one of Vancouver’s most popular citizens, serving Vancouverites in a variety of ways first as a bartender and later as Vancouver’s first official lifeguard.

What did Joe Fortes do?

“Vancouver Citizen of the Century” – Credited with saving at least 29 lives from drowning, including adults and children, as well as teaching three generations of Vancouver children to swim; in 1986 the Vancouver Historical Society formally declared Joe as “Vancouver Citizen of the Century”.

Who started Joe Fortes?

Bud Kanke
When Bud Kanke, now a legendary restaurateur, but back then something of a trailblazer, decided to start an American-style steakhouse—which served fresh oysters on the half-shell to boot—and name it Joe Fortes Seafood & Chop House, and open it in Vancouver precisely 100 years after Fortes arrived, it was a fortuitous.

How many lives did Joe Fortes save?

He reputedly saved more than 100 lives and was a celebrity in the city. In 1986 the Vancouver Historical Society named him Citizen of the Century….Vancouver Feature: Joe Fortes Saves Lives, Wins Hearts.

Published Online May 27, 2019
Last Edited May 27, 2019

Where was Joe Fortes buried?

Mountain View Cemetery – City of Vancouver, Vancouver, CanadaJoe Fortes / Place of burial

Where is Joe Fortes buried?

Was Joe Fortes married?

Fortes was content to be alone on his beach. He never married, and after settling in the bay, never lived anywhere else. In 1910, he was honoured by the city with a gold watch. When he died in 1922 (of pneumonia and a subsequent stroke), Vancouver had a funeral procession with record-breaking attendance.

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