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British Columbia history that informs readers while entertaining them.

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It will always be Jimmy Chickens Island

Posted by on Nov 29, 2014 in Articles | 13 comments

News Item: When Charlee the American bulldog was spooked by Halloween fireworks in Victoria, she took off. Rather, she swam to Mary Tod Island off Oak Bay. I’m pleased to report that she was soon reunited with her owner, but that’s not my story which is about one of my favourite pioneers… Maps show the wooded isle off Oak Bay as Mary Tod Island but to those who know their history it will always be Jimmy Chickens Island. This...

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Sir John Franklin Expedition has strong Victoria, B.C. link

Posted by on Oct 6, 2014 in Articles | 4 comments

So they’ve finally found Sir John Franklin. Well, his ships anyway. 170-plus years after he and all of his 128 men vanished in the Arctic while searching for the legendary Northwest Passage. This is what legends are made of: The most expensive scientific expedition to that time in history, which sailed…into oblivion. Not a single survivor. Not, for years, a single clue! Ever so slowly the puzzle has been unraveled through the efforts, often heroic, of numerous explorers and,...

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Grace Islet Burial Ground Controversy is same old, same old

Posted by on Sep 1, 2014 in Articles | 3 comments

UPDATE – May 24, 2019 Two recent news reports, 100 years late though they be, confirm a seismic shift in governmental and museum attitudes towards First Nations cultural treasures. In March The Canadian Press reported that the British Columbia government has introduced new legislation that will “require people to report the discovery of sites or objects of potential heritage value to the government’s archaeology branch. It [will] be mandatory in British Columbia to report the discovery of sites or...

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Canadian $10 bill kerfuffle recalls martyred nurse Edith Cavell

Posted by on Aug 13, 2014 in Articles | 3 comments

Oops. There was a mistake on our new plastic $10 bill. It only took the Royal Canadian Mint eight months to correct, if not admit, that they goofed on their photo of Mount Edith Cavell. According to the Canadian Press, mountain climber Hitesh Doshi spotted the mistake: a mountain that was identified on the RCM’s website as 3363-metre Mount Edith Cavell in Jasper National Park was actually Lectern Peak. After laying the blame on the Canadian Bank Note Co.,...

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