Langley Centennial Museum
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Object Description
Object ID
2017.048.027
Title
IGA Heritage Market in Fort Langley.
Date
2 May 2003.
Description
Colour slide of the parking lot of I.G.A. Heritage Market in Fort Langley. The parking lot has a white tent erected in some of the parking spots out front of the business. To the left of these tents are two sandwich boards, one which isn't fully visible and one that reads "PORK/ SHOULDER/ BUTT/ STEAKS/ BUY ONE/GET ONE/ FREE!" in red and blue text. Behind these signs is a chain link fence with an orange sign on it advertising for I.G.A. Underneath the white tents are produce stands that are red-pink. There is a sign hanging from the white tents that reads "Welcome to the MARKET" and another beside it that reads "HERITAGE MARKET." Both signs have green text on white backgrounds. Behind the white tents is a green and white awning, attached to the wood shingled roof of the store.
People/Subject
Fort Langley (village)
IGA grocery store (Fort Langley)
The Fort Langley IGA is on the site of Coulter and Berry's General Store, built by David Moss Coulter and John W. Berry in about 1897-1898. The men owned another store in Murrayville, and while Berry ran the other location, Coulter ran this one in Fort Langley. While this store was being built, Coulter rented the old Hudson Bay Co. store for a few months, and he and his family lived above and behind it as well. When this new store was built, Coulter and his family moved into the Drummond House (next door where Frontier Hardware is) for a couple of years before their house was built just south of the store. A small post office is later built between the store and the house, and Coulter is later known to be the only postmaster to be in charge of 3 different post offices all in the same building as the name changed - Langley, Langley Fort, and Fort Langley.
The Coulter and Berry partnership dissolved in 1916. Coulter sold the store in about 1923, but remained the postmaster until June 29, 1926.
The next store owner, F. C. Jones, became the Postmaster on September 17, 1926. The store burned down in the late 1920s but F. C. Jones rebuilt and remained the Postmaster until April 15, 1944.
Louis Poelvoorde took over the store in or before 1944, and his wife, Mrs. J. M. Poelvoorde became the Postmaster from May 1, 1944 until December 22, 1947.
A 2,880 square foot warehouse was built in 1969 and was Tommy's Lucky Dollar Store. This was followed by the construction of a 7,268 square foot retail store in 1970, which became the IGA in 1975. The IGA burned down on January 4, 2011.
IGA opened in about 1975.
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Argus v4.3.6.40 - Langley Centennial Museum