June 9, 1921

Duncan ratepayers voted down a bylaw that would have extended electricity to outlying areas at a cost of $7500. Of 320 potential voters 90 made it to the polls and voted 68-21 against. Apparently Council had been sure of approval but “a vigorous campaign was waged against the measure immediately preceding the voting,” reported The Leader.

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Beachcombing: Mysteries Cast Up By the Sea

I’m becoming a believer in coincidence. I’d no sooner decided to write about beachcombing and secrets that have been given up—or withheld—by the sea than an article in the Times Colonist caught my eye. Researchers from Universite du Quebec a Rimouski are trying to determine if a letter that washed up in a bottle onto a New Brunswick beach in 2017 is genuine.

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May 26, 1921

Another week without drama—no major or gory crimes to report, no automobile fatalities, just plain everyday news about people going peacefully about their business. (Sigh.) There were three cases in county court. The first involved F.G. Elliot of Victoria who’d refused to pay E.W. Paitson all he owed him for a load of cedar shakes, claiming he’d been put to the extra expense of having to resize them to meet his needs as they didn’t conform to their agreed upon dimension. Judge Barker found for Paitson: as there was only $50 remaining to be paid of the contracted $550, he thought it too late to renegotiate and dismissed Elliot’s counter claim.

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May 19, 1921

I really do apologize to any Chronicles readers who may find news of the Cowichan Valley of a century ago to be, well, boring. I mean what a dull world it was in 1921—no ‘murdered and missing women’ to report, no pandemic, no illicit drug problem, no homelessness. Just, yawn, news about local people going about their lives and doing their best to make a living, to make a home for their families, to build a nation...

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Editorially speaking...

I’d written it off as another victim of time and ‘progress’ but, no, the old Thorne cabin, for a century and more a landmark at the southern entrance to Duncan, is alive and well. Sort of, anyway, having been, to quote the present owner, “carefully disassembled”. He’d approached me, via the Cowichan Valley Citizen, to ask if I had any historical information about the cabin and/or photos.

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The Case of the Wrong Saddlebags

One of my favourite pioneer storytellers, D.W. Higgins, whom we’ve met before in the Chronicles, wrote two books during his retirement. Both were based upon a series of articles he’d written for the Daily Colonist about his 40-year career as a journalist and newspaper editor during the province’s eventful founding. In the latter book, published in1905, he tells a fascinating tale of a brutal robbery and murder in B.C.’s Cariboo gold fields.

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Editorially speaking...

Can’t remember if I already told you about this one but...there are some great new B.C. historical websites out there; in fact, they seem to springing up like mushrooms. The latest, on my radar at least, is Daryl Ashby’s Vancouver Island – Early History Group on Facebook. In the past week he has touched on two subjects of particular interest to me, Nanaimo’s Pioneer Cemetery and the No. 1 Mine disaster, Canada’s second worst colliery catastrophe. I’ve been researching the latter for 20 years

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Charlie Cogger’s Tom Sawyer-style Summer on the Cobble Hill Frontier (Conclusion)

As I explained last week, every blue moon the Mountain comes to Mohammed. By which I mean that a story, fully researched, comes to me. Such is this week’s tale by Robin Garratt of England. In 2010, by which time he and his wife were in their 70s, they visited the Cowichan Valley for two weeks. Robin wanted to learn more about his maternal grandparents’ brief employment at Hill Farm in Cobble Hill just prior to the First World War.

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