Secret of Christmas, 118 Years Ago, Still Rings True
This unusual editorial appeared in the Christmas Eve 1900 issue of The Daily Colonist. Although the Boer War was raging in South Africa the editor, one of a profession notorious for its cynicism, saw the birth of the new century as cause for hope, for peace, for progress for all humankind. That the 20th century, so recently our century, didn’t unfold as he predicted, speaks more against the frailty and failures of humankind than it does the unnamed editor’s idealism. He also alludes to a short-lived secular approach to Christmas by the leading American children’s periodicals of the day—a naysayer’s approach that we’ve seen repeated in modern times and which, too, now appears to be fading away. (i.e. ‘Christmas’ is back!) History has proved our unnamed editor to be a poor prophet but it hasn’t sullied the idealism of...
Read MoreT.W. Paterson’s latest: Treasure Lost & Found In British Columbia
29 exciting stories of lost treasure In British Columbia! Everyone likes to read stories about lost treasure. But how often do you read stories about found treasure? Well, here’s your chance! Duncan author/historian T.W. Paterson’s latest book (his 29th) is all about lost treasure—and treasure found—some of it almost underfoot. As proof, he offers numerous examples as encouragement to armchair enthusiasts who “confine their treasure hunting to television, movies and daydreams. …Few realize that, while there definitely is gold in some of ‘them thar hills,’ it can also exist, in various forms, much closer to home. “In fact, it might well be under your very nose, unsuspected, at this precise moment.” That said, he admits that, for all the great stories of treasures lost in British Columbia, the opportunities for striking it rich, at least in the monetary sense,...
Read MoreProposed B.C. Ferry Service Drew Newspapers’ ‘Wrath’
Whoever heard of such a preposterous idea? Imagine it—a daily ferry service between Nanaimo and the lower Mainland! “…To put the whole in a few words, no ferry system could be made practicable…” wrote the Vancouver Advertiser. Today, British Columbians take such service for granted; 133 years ago, the concept met ridicule and downright hostility in some quarters. How times change! “The idea of connecting the Canadian Pacific and Island [Esquimalt & Nanaimo] Railways by means of a ferry does not find favour in the eyes of our New Westminster friends,” noted an editorial in the Nanaimo Free Press, “but we are afraid they will have to bow to the inevitable.” If the Nanaimo editor is to be lauded for his prescience, it must also be pointed out that he’d arrived at this conclusion through somewhat muddled reasoning: that...
Read MoreAnger, Resentment, Rage Sparked Murders
I was young, callow and impressionable. It was this very combination of limited worldly experience that made my sitting beside a man I knew to be a convicted murderer—my first!—such an impression on me at the time. Today, I barely remember what he looked like, what he said, what he was like. It’s the circumstances of his crime that stick with me: How he’d been mercilessly razzed by a foreman until he threw down his tools, raced back to his room, grabbed his hunting rifle and returned to shoot his tormentor dead. It was his going for his rifle that made him a murderer. His anger and resentment had led to intent and then he’d followed through. This took it from being an act of uncontrollable passion which likely would have rated a manslaughter charge. Nevertheless, his sentence had...
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