A Development Tool: W.A.C. Bennett and the PGE Railway
By John R. Wedley
BC Studies no. 117 Spring 1998 pp. 29-50
Ending the Search for the Mythical Passage of Admiral Fonte: The 1792 Voyage of Jacinto Caamano
By Freeman Tovell
BC Studies no. 117 Spring 1998 pp. 5-26
“Active voices”: A Third Generation of Studies of the Chinese and Japanese in British Columbia
By Patricia E. Roy
BC Studies no. 117 Spring 1998 pp. 51-61
The Pacific Northwest: An Interpretive History
By Laurie Ricou
BC Studies no. 117 Spring 1998 pp. 62-3
Children, Teachers and Schools in the History of British Columbia
By Dianne Hallman
BC Studies no. 117 Spring 1998 pp. 84-5
Jericho Beach and the West Coast Flying Boat Station
By Peter N. Moogk
BC Studies no. 117 Spring 1998 pp. 87-9
No Path But My Own: Horseback Adventures in the Chilcotin and the Rockies
By Leslie Kopas
BC Studies no. 117 Spring 1998 pp. 92-5
The Pacific Northwest: An Interpretive History
BC Studies no. 117 Spring 1998 pp. 62-3
The Georgia Straight: What the Hell Happened?
By Jonathan Baker
BC Studies no. 117 Spring 1998 pp. 68-70
Traders’ Tales: Narratives of Cultural Encounters in the Columbia Plateau, 1807-1846
By Robert Kubicek
BC Studies no. 117 Spring 1998 pp. 72-4
The Resettlement of British Columbia: Essays on Colonialism and Geographic Change
By Tina Loo
BC Studies no. 117 Spring 1998 pp. 64-7
Fur Traders from New England: The Boston Men in the North Pacific, 1787-1800
By James Delgado
BC Studies no. 117 Spring 1998 pp. 70-1
A Persistent Spirit: Towards Understanding Aboriginal Health in British Columbia
By Mary-Ellen Kelm
BC Studies no. 117 Spring 1998 pp. 78-80
Tsimshian Culture: A Light Through the Ages
By Jonathan Dean
BC Studies no. 117 Spring 1998 pp. 80-2
The Heiltsuks: Dialogues of Culture and History on the Northwest Coast
By Margaret Anderson
BC Studies no. 117 Spring 1998 pp. 82-4
Kindling the Spark, The Era of One-Room Schools: An Anthology of Teachers’ Experiences
By Patrick Dunae
BC Studies no. 117 Spring 1998 pp. 86-7
David Mattison has worked since 1981 for the British Columbia Archives as both an archivist and a librarian. He was introduced to the Internet in 1991 and, a year later, co-founded Canada’s first community computer network, the Victoria Free-Net, now known as the Victoria Telecommunity Network. David has also contributed to photographic and film history. His publications include Camera Workers: The British Columbia Photographers Directory, 1858-1900 (1985) and Eyes of a City: Early Vancouver Photographers, 1868-1900 (1986).
Patricia E. Roy teaches Canadian history at the University of Victoria and has written extensively on the response of British Columbians to East Asian immigrants.
Freeman M. Tovell spent thirty-five years in the Canadian Diplomatic Service and was a sessional lecturer in Canadian Diplomatic History at the University of Victoria from 1978 to 1984. He is currently completing a biography of Bodega y Quadra.
John Wedley writes on the history of resource and transportation policy in northern British Columbia. He has taught at several post-secondary institutions and is currently studying in the Faculty of Education at the University of British Columbia.
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