
One of Europe’s most powerful and wealthy men was an Okanagan tourist in 1893
PENTICTON – More than 120 years ago the man whose assassination is widely blamed for the start of the First World War paid a visit to the Okanagan.
Archduke Franz Ferdinand was to be Emperor-King of the Austro-Hungarian Empire when he was shot in 1914. Before many years before that, he was an early tourist to the South Okanagan.
iNFOnews.ca’s Steve Arstad has explored the journey in a four part series and here we offer some highlights.
Recently translated notes by Jean-Claude Brunner, a translator in Vienna, Austria, offers a glimpse into the life and thoughts of one of Europe’s wealthy elite travelling through pioneer era Penticton and the Okanagan.

To preface; Franz Ferdinand liked hunting.
He reportedly killed 240,000 animals over his life, and his visit to Penticton from Sept. 11 to Sept. 16, 1893 was to see what the region offered.
There were “lakes full of game, including geese, ducks and grebes in a ‘delightful’ landscape,” Ferdinand wrote, but the promise of mountain sheep and bears fueled his interest.
He hired First Nations people to guide his entourage, but the local attitude towards schedules frustrated Ferdinand.
READ MORE: Penticton pioneer Tom Ellis fails to impress Austrian Archduke
"Unfortunately, here too, punctuality seemed to be an unknown virtue, as when I left my cabin after 9 O’clock neither pack horses nor Indians were to be seen,” he wrote.
However it wasn’t all complaining about the locals, he also took note of the changing world the First Nations were adjusting to.
“Forced to put away their weapons and displaced from their hunting grounds once so rich in game to designated places, reservations, this people is decaying more and more and faster,” he wrote. “For whose blossoming apparently freedom is a vital requirement as the evils of civilization have reached it much faster than the blessings of civilization.”
READ MORE: Archduke's cold forces early end to Penticton hunting trip

Ferdinand also wrote about environmental concerns. Despite shooting thousands of animals, he was worried pioneers in the region were overusing the local lumber.
“It hurts to see these mighty patriarchs of the wood be destroyed in vain and on thousands of hectares to see only the remains of former beautiful stocks as withered trunks rising into the sky that are charred at the bottom," he wrote.
It seems Ferdinand wasn’t a fan of Thomas Ellis, the pioneer, either.
READ MORE: Archduke's Penticton hunting trip comes to a stormy conclusion
While the two didn't see eye-to-eye from the archduke’s arrival, it was the departure that appears to have brought out the worst in Ellis.
When the entourage prepared to leave and sold off most of their gear, Ferdinand writes Ellis jumped at the opportunity to get cheap equipment and booze. He then got drunk on the spot and cheered when the steamship crashed into the dock as it left.
In the end the prolific hunter left with a few trophies of his trip, shooting a few quail and osprey, but no bears or sheep. The most notable thing he caught in the South Okanagan? A cold that cut short his trip.
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