Barkerville in Context: Archaeology of the Chinese in British Columbia
By Douglas Edward Ross
BC Studies no. 185 Spring 2015 pp. 161-193
A New Take on an Old Town: New Directions in Research on Barkerville and the Cariboo
By Christopher Douglas Herbert
BC Studies no. 185 Spring 2015 pp. 13-27
Eldorado Vernacular: Barkerville and Its Buildings
By Jennifer Iredale
BC Studies no. 185 Spring 2015 pp. 27-49
Barkerville’s Thomas Robson Pattullo in Life and Death: The Memorial Album as Aide-Memoire
By Don Bourdon
BC Studies no. 185 Spring 2015 pp. 49-79
The Hudson’s Bay Company in Barkerville
By Ramona Boyle, Richard Mackie
BC Studies no. 185 Spring 2015 pp. 79-109
“Into That Country to Work”: Aboriginal Economic Activities during Barkerville’s Gold Rush
By Mica Jorgenson
BC Studies no. 185 Spring 2015 pp. 109-137
By Tzu-I Chung
BC Studies no. 185 Spring 2015 pp. 137-161
Okanagan Geology South: Geologic Highlights of the South Okanagan, British Columbia
By Wayne Wilson
BC Studies no. 185 Spring 2015 pp. 232-33
Home to the Nechako: The River and the Land
By Jonathan Swainger
BC Studies no. 185 Spring 2015 pp. 203-05
Mac-Pap: Memoir of a Canadian in the Spanish Civil War
By Todd McCallum
BC Studies no. 185 Spring 2015 p. 220
Conversations with a Dead Man: The Legacy of Duncan Campbell Scott
By Keith D. Smith
BC Studies no. 185 Spring 2015 pp. 225-26
Chinuk Wawa: Kakwa nsayka ulman-tilixam ɬaska munk-kəmtəks nsayka/As Our Elders Teach Us To Speak It
By Dave Robertson
BC Studies no. 185 Spring 2015 pp. 199-200
Father Pandosy: Pioneer of Faith in the Northwest
By Timothy P. Foran
BC Studies no. 185 Spring 2015 pp. 201-02
Encounters in Avalanche Country: A History of Survival in the Mountain West, 1820-1920
By Heather Longworth
BC Studies no. 185 Spring 2015 pp. 212-13
Flight was in his Spirit: The Life of Harry Burfield
By David A. Rossiter
BC Studies no. 185 Spring 2015 pp. 209-12
The Wired Northwest: The History of Electric Power, 1870s-1970s
By Meg Stanley
BC Studies no. 185 Spring 2015 pp. 214-17
We Are Born with the Songs Inside Us: Lives and Stories of First Nations People in British Columbia
By Sarah Nickel
BC Studies no. 185 Spring 2015 pp. 226-27
Fishing the Coast: A Life on the Water
By Kenneth Campbell
BC Studies no. 185 Spring 2015 pp. 217-18
Native Art of the Northwest Coast: A History of Changing Ideas
By Maria Tippett
BC Studies no. 185 Spring 2015 pp. 193-95
Milk Spills and One-Log Loads: Memories of a Pioneer Truck Driver
By Patrick Craib
BC Studies no. 185 Spring 2015 pp. 213-14
Stalled: The Representation of Women in Canadian Governments
By Janni Aragon
BC Studies no. 185 Spring 2015 pp. 231-32
Tales from the Back Bumper: A Century of BC Licence Plates
By Ben Bradley
BC Studies no. 185 Spring 2015 pp. 221-22
We are Our Language: An Ethnography of Language Revitalization in a Northern Athabaskan Community
By Ewa Czaykowska-Higgins
BC Studies no. 185 Spring 2015 pp. 195-96
Don Bourdon, Curator of Images and Paintings at the Royal British Columbia Museum, has had a long career in museums and archives in Alberta and British Columbia. He first visited Barkerville fifty years ago where he developed a taste for root beer and a soft spot for the Theatre Royal.
Ramona Boyle teaches World History and Literature at Webber Academy in Calgary. She has a BA in Sociology and Political Science from Trent University, and a BEd (with Distinction) from the University of Victoria, as well as a master’s degree in International Relations and Diplomacy from the UK. Her peculiar fascination with Barkerville probably comes from the fact that the people who built the town, and particularly the Hudson’s Bay Company, were adventurers like herself!
Tzu-I Chung is Curator of History at the Royal British Columbia Museum. She was the recipient of the Exemplary Diversity Scholar Award from the University of Michigan, 2009-2010, and the John and Joan Walton Innovation Fund, 2013-2014. Her museum project, the Centre of Arrivals, is part of the RBCM’s long-term commitment towards exploring and representing the stories of multicultural immigrants in British Columbia through research, collection, and exhibits. Her recent publications can be found in Museum and Society (forthcoming in 2015), Aspects of Transnational and Indigenous Cultures, and other public venues. Her current research focuses on the intercultural food history of British Columbia within the context of historical, cultural, and economic exchange between North America and Asia, and on transnational migration theories.
Christopher Herbert is an assistant professor of History at Columbia Basin College in Pasco, Washington. He has previously published in BC Studies and the Pacific Historical Review. He is currently working on a transnational comparison of identity and empire during the British Columbia and California gold rushes.
Jacqueline Holler is an associate professor in the Departments of History and Women’s Studies and Gender Studies at UNBC. She is an historian of early colonial Mexico who also teaches contemporary Latin American history and teaches and conducts research in the area of Gender Studies. She is author and co-author of books and articles on colonial Latin American history; her primary research interests lie at the juncture of gender, sexuality, emotion, health, and religion.
Jennifer Iredale is the Director of the Heritage Branch for the Province of British Columbia. She has written articles for the British Columbia Historical News, including “Beauty, Spirituality, and Practicality: Women and Art in Colonial British Columbia,” in 35 no. 4 (2002) and “Cecilia Douglas Helmcken,” in 28 no. 4 (Fall 1995). She was also a contributor to “A Woman’s Place”: Art and the Role of Women in the Cultural Formation of Victoria, BC, 1850s-1920s, edited by K. Anne Finlay and published by the Maltwood Art Museum and Gallery in 2004.
Mica Jorgenson is a doctorate student at McMaster University. Based on research conducted at Barkerville, British Columbia, and Timmins, Ontario, her dissertation is an environmental history of transnational technologies, ideologies, and economies affecting late-nineteenth century gold rush landscapes. Mica grew up in the Wells/Barkerville area, and completed her MA at the University of Northern British Columbia in 2012.
Richard Mackie is associate editor and book reviews editor at BC Studies and adjunct professor in the Department of Geography at UBC. He is author of Trading Beyond the Mountains: The British Fur Trade on the Pacific, 1793-1843 (UBC Press, 1997), as well as two histories of logging on Vancouver Island, Island Timber (2000) and Mountain Timber (2009), both published by Sono Nis Press.
Douglas Ross received his PhD in Archaeology in 2009 from Simon Fraser University, where he is currently a part-time instructor. His research interests focus on the everyday lives of Chinese and Japanese immigrants in western North America and his recent book, An Archaeology of Asian Transnationalism (University Press of Florida, 2013), explores patterns of cultural persistence and change and diasporic identity formation among Asian labourers at the Ewen Salmon Cannery in Richmond, BC.
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