Dramatic headlines for Jan. 15, 1903 proving that it was a great news story is the fact that these headlines are from the Winnipeg Free Press which had picked up the story by wire.
Read MoreThere was a solemn ceremony at the Canadian Bank of Commerce on Station Street to unveil a bronze memorial honouring local staff who’d served in the recent Great War. Attending were…
Read MoreCoincidental to the B.C. government having declared a state of emergency because of raging wildfires on the Mainland (July 21, 2021) fire was the subject of the leading news story for the day in 1921, too.
Read MoreThe most gripping story on this front page, SOUTH SEA TRAGEDY, is a real heartbreaker. Poor Maj. J.D.H. Roe, formerly a stalwart of the Duncan Board of Trade. Talk about jinxed!
Read MoreA stroll along Ladysmith’s Sixth Avenue is a stroll into the past—Boer War era.
Read MorePerformed at Chemainus Theatre amid rave reviews, the Other Guys Theatre Company’s Good Timber was “a terrific local history lesson” built around (to quote the Cowichan NewsLeader Pictorial) “the logging camp poems of former Chemainus sawmill worker Robert E. Swanson [featuring] many historic clips of Cowichan’s logging days.” Bob who?
Read MoreAh, the age of innocence. A century ago, the Leader heralded Dominion Day with photos of Sir John A. Macdonald and the Hon. George Brown. Fathers of Confederation, they’re wreathed and flanked on each side by Union Jacks.
Read MoreIn his prime actor John Wood was hailed as an actor who “stood alone on the Pacific Coast”. But when he died he became an embarrassment to almost all who knew him when the circumstances surrounding his death touched off a furor that only ended in a crowded courtroom...
Read MoreOf the eight headlines on this front page is the most eye-catching—and the most anticlimactic. MESSAGE FROM MARS is such a letdown—it’s about a performance by the Victoria Dramatic and Operatic Society in the Agricultural Hall. Ho hum...
Read MoreGrowing up in Saanich (okay, Victoria) as I did, the CPR’s fabled B.C. Steamships’ Princess ships are part of my DNA. From the beginning I was drawn to the Inner Harbour and the comings and goings of these beautiful black and white pocket liners with their buff funnels and checker board logos.
Read MoreThe big news stories of the day were the 20th annual provincial convention of the King’s Daughters of B.C. and a Press Convention in Vancouver.
Read MoreWe like to think that history repeats itself. Maybe yes, maybe no. But there’s no doubting that history does an about-face from time to time. You couldn’t find a greater contrast between these two news stories, which occurred 143 years apart, if you tried.
Read MoreDuncan 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.
Read MoreEven though he’s been dead for almost a century, one of British Columbia’s most infamous con men is back in the news. dward Arthur Wilson, aka Brother XII, may be long gone but the legends of the religious cult he founded at Cedar-by-the-Sea (Cedar) and on DeCourcy and Cortez Islands in the 1920s live on.
I’ve commiserated, in recent weeks, with readers who find the news of 100 years ago to be, shall we say less than exciting when compared with today’s sensational and depressing headlines. Well, cheer up, there was real exciting news…
Read MoreI’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.
Read MoreAnother 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.
Read MoreYou could say that today’s story began at the foot of my driveway. That’s where, upon returning from my daily walk along the old CNR Tidewater Line by my house, I saw a man standing by my mailbox. As I approached it became apparent that he was waiting for me.
Read MoreI 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...
Read MoreWe must go way back to Sept. 23, 1916. On that Saturday, Cowichan Lake’s Doreen Ashburnham and Anthony Farrer were walking along a forest trail on the South Shore, bridles in hand, to their pastured ponies. They almost ran into the cougar, “lying quite still in the pathway”.
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