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Coal Baron Robert Dunsmuir Inspired Historians and Mapmakers
Robert Dunsmuir vs. Sir James Douglas: If Douglas–fur trader, colonial governor and statesman –was ‘the father of British Columbia’ and our greatest public figure, Dunsmuir must surely rank as his peer in the private sector. Not in terms of ‘greatness’ as most would measure it, perhaps, but in terms of status and influence. He built an industrial empire and founded a dynasty. In his day, he was the province’s Morgan, Rockefeller, Getty and Trump rolled into one. So who,...
Read MoreMy Victoria Childhood: the good old days!
Victoria sure has changed. Since Woodward’s went under, Mayfair Mall operates under the Hudson’s Bay Co. banner. The landmark Vancouver store has been converted to affordable housing, and the famous rooftop neon sign flashes again after a decade of disuse. When T. Eaton Co., long an anchor of downtown Victoria, also folded, Sears took it over. Now Sears is ‘The Bay,’ whose own heritage building has been transmogrified under new ownership. All very confusing, but these events set me...
Read MoreThe Great Chocolate Bar ‘War’
Would you believe that a handful of teenagers once took on the largest candy makers in the land? They did, you know, during the Great Chocolate War of the 1940s? They made international news, if only briefly, but the memory of their rebellion lives on… It can be satisfying, sort of, to know that some things never change. You know, ried and true stalwarts such as inflation Why, (I’m giving away my age) I can remember when a bottle...
Read MoreThe Legendary Bluenose to Sail Again
From the start, the original Bluenose earned her title, ‘Queen of the Banks.’ NEWS ITEM: “Problems turning Bluenose II’s rudder mean it’s unlikely to sail this summer.”–Times-Colonist, June 24, 2014. In July 1967 a Halifax brewing company turned back the hands of time to Canada’s most glorious chapter in sail by launching the second Bluenose whose illustrious predecessor owed her genesis to a bitter ‘Scotian defeat at the hands of New England mariners in 1920’. For years, doughty Grand...
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