Donor History
Mary Winspear
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Bodine's
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Charlie White
In May 2000, the Sanscha Community Cultural Centre Foundation’s Honouring the Past – Building for the Future Campaign received a generous gift from Charlie White, well known sports fisherman, author, television personality, entrepreneur and inventor.
To those who know him, Charlie is a man with a twinkle in his eye, a clear sign of the inspired genius and unbounded energy that has helped him to build a remarkable personal history that goes far beyond North Saanich, the community he and his wife Darlene call home. In his lifetime, Charlie is no stranger to creating lasting legacies and his gift towards the Charlie White Theatre at the Mary Winspear Centre fit right into his life long pattern.
“In my life I have taken risks, faced many challenges and been fortunate to have been able to work and be successful in areas I’ve enjoyed – those closest to my heart. Throughout it all I’ve always felt it was important to contribute in a positive way to those around me and to give something back to the community that has been so supportive of me over the years. I think the Mary Winspear Centre at Sanscha is of critical importance for our area. The new Centre gives people of all ages a central place to come together to learn, to share experiences with one another and to grow as individuals. It is a privilege for my wife Darlene, and I, to help contribute to its success,” explained Charlie.
Throughout his lifetime,
has created his own incredible legacy of legendary accomplishments. Starting in the early 1950’s, Charlie started a TV listings guide that later became TV GUIDE. Closer to home, Charlie was the genius behind the establishment of CHEK TV and then CHAN-TV, which eventually became BCTV. In the early 1960’s Charlie owned and operated CFAX radio. Then, inspired by his love of the underwater world, Charlie built Victoria’s Undersea Gardens and then three more such attractions in Seattle Washington, Newport Oregon and Santa Barbara California. Charlie went on to invent the Scotty Downrigger, which has become the sports standard when trolling for fish. More recently, Charlie’s work has focused on the production of documentaries on the underwater life of salmon and other species of fish and sea mammals – shot on location throughout the world, the underwater footage with his remote controlled underwater camera. His 39 episode television series, “Charlie White’s Underwater World”, has plated across Canada, the USA, Europe and Japan.
Charlie’s support of community has been long and lasting and constant. In the mid 1960’s he served as co-chair of the North Saanich United Way Campaign and was a major supporter of the Pier on Bevan. He has been a United Way “Leader of the Way for over a decade. Charlie’s list of accomplishments and contributions to the community goes on and is undoubtedly, not yet complete.
Perhaps it is his special ability to see opportunities where others don’t and to create new frontiers of discovery from these glimpses of the future is what sets Charlie apart. “I believe the Mary Winspear Centre is critically important for our area and for Greater Victoria overall, now and for the future,” says Charlie, “I feel humbled just to be able to be a part of the ongoing history associated with the Sanscha site and in my way help protect and continue this community legacy for generations to come.”
Photo #1: Charlie & Darlene White With Richard Holmes, Chair Of Sanscha Community Cultural Centre Foundation, At The Event, 2006
Photo #2: Charlie White Fishing
Thomas A. Lebbetter, M.D.
1926-2001
Thomas Alexander Lebbetter was born in Yarmouth, Nova Scotia. His family moved to Ottawa when he was a teenager. Tom joined the Canadian Navy at 17 and performed active duty near the end of World War II.
After the war, he attended Saint Francis Xavier University where he received his Bachelors degree and then the University of Manitoba for his Doctor of Medicine degree. He received his certificate of specialty in Urology in 1961, while training at the Royal Victoria Hospital in Montreal, and later his fellowship.
Although a specialist, he moved to Sidney in 1975 and began a general family practice. This was a blessing for him and for the community. He became a true “old school” physician, always approachable, always with time to spend for any and every patient. His twenty-six years in the community was marked by dedication, friendships, humour and compassion. A generous father, a patriotic Canadian, he was a modest and religious man. “Dr. Tom” was a friend this town will miss.
Myfanwy Pavelic
“This area is truly a special place with a spirit and quality of life not found elsewhere in the world. I have chosen to lend my support to this project because I feel our Community and Cultural Centre should reflect the sense of pride those of us living here feel. I also consider it a priority to nurture the cultural development of my community”
Myfanwy Pavelic was an Island Girl. She was born as Myfanwy Spencer in Victoria, on April 27, 1916 and passed away in 2007. Her grandfather, David Spencer, opened the first dry goods store in Victoria; and his home was donated by Myfanwy’s aunt to become the present home of the Greater Victoria Art Gallery.
Myfanwy was one of Canada’s best known portrait artists. She had done portraits of Queen Elizabeth and Prime Minister Trudeau, plus many famous musicians, and others who were close to her during her life. She also completed several self portraits, the first of which she drew when she was just 8 years old. This was the same age that she met the artist Emily Carr who became a close friend and mentor.
“She is a very acute, perceptive, empathetic, strong, sensitive, artist”
- Pat Bovey, past director of the Greater Victoria Art Gallery
In addition to her love of art, music was also a love of Myfanwy’s and she became an accomplished pianist. With her heart rooted in Sidney, she traveled the world to study both music and art. New York eventually became her second home and it is here that she met and fell in love with her husband, Nikola Pavelic. Nikola was a Doctor of Law, and the son of a former Prime Minister of Yugoslavia. They married in 1948, and moved to Sidney in 1950 where they had their daughter Tessa. In 1956 they moved to New York again, and for the next 13 years divided their year between New York and their home in Sidney. With her husband’s continuing strong interest in and support of her work she built her “dream studio” on their ‘Spencerwood’ home site in 1969.
She joined a significant group of Victoria artists during the 1970’s called the Limners. In 1975 she became a member of the Royal Canadian Academy, and in 1984 received both an honourary Doctorate from the University of Victoria and the Order of Canada. This was followed by the Order of British Columbia in 2001.
In the year 2000 Myfanwy Pavelic generously donated 50 pieces of her art to help support both the Victoria Symphony and the dream of constructing the Mary Winspear Centre in Sidney. She combined her love of music and her love of her community for a tremendous fundraising effort. Some of her admirers and supporters of the Mary Winspear Centre bought 4 of her works and donated them back to the Mary Winspear Centre to be hung in a separate glass fronted room complete with a board room table and chairs next to the Myfanwy Pavelic Gallery. What a memorable place to hold a meeting- surrounded by art works of a truly great and generous artist.
Myfanwy Pavelic had many philanthropic activities. She supported the Sanscha Hall (Mary Winspear Centre) in Sidney, the Victoria Symphony, Art Gallery of Greater Victoria, Metchosin Summer School of the Arts, Sooke Fine Arts Organization and the University of Victoria.






