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British Columbia history that informs readers while entertaining them.

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The Outrageous Francis O’Bierne Alienated All Who Knew Him

Posted by on Jul 13, 2020 in Articles | 2 comments

To those unfortunate enough to have known the outrageous Francis O’Bierne personally, he was just “Mr. O’B.”—or worse. For many years (perhaps mercifully) his real identity was a mystery. Not until CBC actor and writer Tommy Tweed did some historical sleuthing in the 1970s was the cantankerous Francis O’Bierne’s identity revealed. Tweed’s interest in this son of a bishop and student (if not graduate) of Cambridge, was because of Francis O’Bierne’s dubious role in provincial history–as one of the...

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Arts and Culture Came Hard to Nanaimo Pioneers

Posted by on Jun 30, 2020 in Articles | 0 comments

There was a time when arts and culture in Nanaimo were all but non-existent. Some early efforts to improve upon this sad status quo were doomed to, at best, minimal progress and, at worst, resounding failure. Among those who really tried were the founders of the Mechanics’ Institute on Bastion Street. If you think this was a school for mechanics, by the way, you’d be wrong. It was indeed a place of learning but in a totally different way....

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Old Photos Found at Flea Markets Make Me Sad

Posted by on Jun 13, 2020 in Articles | 0 comments

How many times I’ve found them over the years: old photos, scrapbooks and other very personal family memorabilia at flea markets and garage sales. All for sale, of course. Their very presence at these venues and the fact that they’re for sale like any other commodity always bothers me so I often ‘rescue’ them. These old photos are (or were or should be) some family’s treasured keepsakes. What are they doing on a dealer’s table, lumped among household goods...

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Cowichan Poet Robert McLay Honoured No. 1 Mine Victims

Posted by on Jun 1, 2020 in Articles | 0 comments

BACKGROUND: When Cowichan settler Robert McLay took pen in hand to honour the lost miners of Nanaimo’s No. 1 Mine, he did so as not just as a poet but as a former coal miner himself. His firsthand knowledge of the dangers of working underground made his tribute from the heart even more meaningful… As many Nanaimo residents prepared to sit down to dinner May 3, 1887, an explosion shook the workings of the Vancouver Coal Co.’s No. 1...

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