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
Measles, 1847-1850: The First Modern Epidemic in British Columbia
By Robert M. Galois
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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