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British Columbia history that informs readers while entertaining them.

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Working on Pendray’s dairy farm in Saanich

Posted by on Jun 12, 2014 in Articles | 9 comments

Dairy farms and milk delivered in bottles (with their distinctive musical jingling against the wire baskets) is part of my DNA. As a Saanich lad, growing up beside Swan Lake, I was surrounded by family dairy farms. In fact, our back fence was of barbed wire because it was the southern boundary of Charlie Pendray’s farm. I think he called himself Swan Lake Dairy although his brother Tom Pendray, with the property next to his that wrapped around the...

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Victoria’s ‘Pampered’ Louis the parrot ‘postponed push for people’

Posted by on Jun 10, 2014 in Articles | 8 comments

Contrary to legend, his daily tot of brandy was for ‘medicinal purposes only’. One could write a book–someone probably has–about strange bequests. More than one last will and testament has bedeviled and bemused, and one in particular that intrigued Victorians for many years, was that of Miss Victoria Wilson. At the time of her death in 1949, she owned an old mansion on some of the primest real estate in downtown Victoria. Described as a “kindly if eccentric spinster,”...

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Cumberland’s Chinatown gone but not forgotten

Posted by on Jun 10, 2014 in Articles | 6 comments

The locals laughed when American collectors began hauling away bottles by the truckload… Here’s irony for you. Fifty years after collectors razed Chinatown to the ground in search of bottles, pottery and curios, the Village of Cumberland is out to recreate some of its Asian heritage with Coal Creek Historic Park. According to Drew Penner in the Comox Valley Echo, “The 40-hectare property containing Chinatown and No. 1 Japanese Town was given to the Village of Cumberland by Weldwood...

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Capital Iron & Metals was a marine Mecca

Posted by on Jun 6, 2014 in Articles | 6 comments

Ah, the good old days when I had my first–my only–real job in the editorial room of what was then The Daily Colonist. God, how I hated it. But that’s another story for another time… Several years ago, I attended the film, The Shipsinkers, a just-released documentary that followed a team of Canadians who contract to sanitize and sink ships as artificial reefs. (We have evidence of their work in Nanaimo waters.) Much of the film dealt with their...

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