Did Notorious Civil War Guerrilla Leader Escape to Vancouver Island? (Part 2)

Last week I outlined William Quantrill’s career as a Confederate guerrilla leader during the American Civil War. I also described his death and the dispersal of his remains.

But there’s more to this part of the story that’s crucial to our understanding the belief that, 40 years after the end of the Civil War, John Sharp, Coal Harbour watchman, was in fact a fugitive Quantrill who’d escaped death in Kentucky.

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Did Notorious Civil War Guerrilla Leader Escape to Vancouver Island?

(Part 1) Google William Clarke Quantrill and you’ll find reference after reference to a man who’s immortalized not as a hero or great Confederate general of the American Civil War but as what we term today, a war criminal, a mass murderer. From school and Sunday school teacher to “the bloodiest man in American history” in a matter of just a few years, his was quite a career—one that ended violently at the age of 27 during a skirmish with Federal troops.

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‘Return to Sender’ – Around the World, Museums Are Relinquishing Priceless Antiquities to Their Rightful Owners

My intent this week is to focus on the growing trend of museums to surrender the priceless antiquities of ancient worlds—treasures often held by museums far from their creators and national origins—but particularly those much closer to home, right here in British Columbia.

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Jack Fannin, ‘Father’ of the Royal BC Museum

The Royal BC Museum has certainly been in the news lately—most of it bad, unfortunately. You’ve needed a program to follow recent developments, all of which have been reported in the news media and in Chronicles editorials so don’t bear repeating today. 

Instead, I’m gong to turn back the clock to the very beginning of our senior museum and archives, to the man who did so much to found the former by donating his personal collection of stuffed and mounted animals. 

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Deja vu All Over Again – Chinese Spy Balloons Recall Japanese Aerial Bombardment of B.C. Forests

It’s uncanny how history mimics if not actually repeats itself. Last month’s excitement over a series of so-called ‘scientific’ research balloons from China provided an eerie reminder of the Second World War. That’s when the Japanese attempted to ignite our forests with incendiary bombs delivered via the air currents of the aptly-named Japanese current.

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