By The Lynching of Louie Sam Keith Thor Carlson
BC Studies no. 109 Spring 1996 pp. 63-79
BC Studies no. 109 Spring 1996
To read the full issue online, visit our OJS site.
In This Issue
By The Lynching of Louie Sam Keith Thor Carlson
BC Studies no. 109 Spring 1996 pp. 63-79
The Rising Financial Burden of BC’s Aging Population: Is Immigration the Answer?
By H. Craig Davis
BC Studies no. 109 Spring 1996 pp. 47-59
Nowherelands: Utopian Communities in BC Fiction
By Justine Brown
BC Studies no. 109 Spring 1996 pp. 5-28
Vancouver Voters, 1886: A Biographical Dictionary
By Jean Barman
BC Studies no. 109 Spring 1996 pp. 90-1
Hail, Columbia: Robert Gray, John Kendrick, and the Pacific Fur Trade
By Christon Archer
BC Studies no. 109 Spring 1996 pp. 87-9
A Dedicated Team: Klohn Leonoff Consulting Engineers, 1951-1991
By John Kendrick
BC Studies no. 109 Spring 1996 pp. 93-5
Pilgrims in Lotus Land: Conservative Protestantism in British Columbia, 1917-1981
By Norman Knowles
BC Studies no. 109 Spring 1996 pp. 95-7
Making Law, Order, and Authority in British Columbia, 1821-1871
By Daniel Clayton
BC Studies no. 109 Spring 1996 pp. 98-102
Roaring Days: Rossland’s Mines and the History of British Columbia
By H.V. Nelles
BC Studies no. 109 Spring 1996 pp. 104-5
A Heart at Leisure from Itself: Caroline Macdonald of Japan
By Irene Howard
BC Studies no. 109 Spring 1996 pp. 106-8
By Keith Thor Carlson
BC Studies no. 109 Spring 1996 pp. 63-79
Justine Brown is a doctoral candidate in English at the University of Toronto and author of All Possible Worlds: Utopian Experiements in British Columbia.
Keith Carlson works as a historian for Stó:l&o Nation and pursues a number of independent research interests, including those that led to his article in this issue.
Craig Davis is a professor in the Department of Community and Regional Planning at UBC.
Robert T. Galois is an adjunct professor in the Department of Geography at UBC, and author of a recent book on Kwakwaka’wakw settlement.
R.C. (Bob) Harris is a retired engineer and a close student of the early cartography of BC.
Patrick Lane is an internationally-known BC poet whose most recent book of poetry is Too Spare, Too Fierce.
Kevin Paul is a young Saanich poet whose work is attracting wide interest.
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