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Mungo Martin: ‘10 times a chief’
So his people called the bespectacled old man in mackinaw who worked for years in the cold wind of an open shed in Victoria’s Thunderbird Park. It was fitting title for this remarkable self-appointed guardian of a heritage threatened by extinction. The late Chief Mungo Martin’s unique story began at the opposite end of Vancouver Island, at historic Fort Rupert where, as a youngster, he began his apprenticeship in the secret art of carving at his father’s side. A...
Read MoreMount Bolduc bomber wreck a WW2 Tragedy
For the better part of an hour, Tuesday, Nov. 16, 2003, they weren’t alone. For almost an hour that Remembrance Day, six young airmen who died for their country on a lonely mountain peak west of Cowichan Lake, April 25, 1944, were saluted in a special graveside service by military personnel and civilians. It was a deserving and moving tribute for FOs John Ernest Moyer and Ambrose Moynagh, W01 Lawrence Kerr, WO2 Brimley George Henry Palmer, Sgt. Harry Arthur...
Read MoreBeing a Canadian Didn’t Come Naturally!
I didn’t encounter Canadian history in school until grade eight. Grade eight! By then it was far too late. Not even the heroism of Champlain, Wolfe, Radisson and Grosilliers–‘Radishes and Gooseberries’–or the Iroquois massacring missionaries could draw me back into the fold. From day one it had been cowboys and Indians in my comic books: Gene Autry, Roy Rogers, Hopalong Cassidy, Red Rider, the Cisco Kid and the Lone Ranger. Every Saturday it was off to Yates Street,...
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