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This
new collection of original writing and historic photographs covers a
surprisingly broad range of topics. In Kamloops
History: Fictions, Facts, and Fragments, local historian
Wayne Norton presents some fresh perspectives, takes a second look at
a few familiar themes, and offers impressions of Kamloops as once it
wasnot so very long ago. Fictions, facts and fragmentsthere
is plenty here to interest anyone curious about the history of Kamloops.
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Released
in August 2002, this impressive collection of original writing and historic
photographs sets out to assess the history of the Crowsnest/Elk Valley
region from fresh perspectives. By examining a wide range of social
and political topics, A World Apart recalls how the small
southeast corner of British Columbia and the equally small southwest
corner of Alberta together formed a society that was unique.
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When
noted Canadian journalist Bruce Hutchinson wrote about his visit to
the Ashcroft area of British Columbia in the 1950s, he said the scenery
was "for the strong eye only." His opinion was that the harshness
of the landscape could please but few observers. With this collection
of historic articles and photographs, Pat Foster proudly steps forward
as one who delights in that landscape.
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The
Crowsnest Pass and the Elk Valley are part of a geographic region that
stretches from Calgary, Alberta to Cranbrook, British Columbia to Spokane,
Washington. Yet the economy, politics and social structure of the region
have always set it apart from its neighbours in Alberta, the United
States and the rest of British Columbia. Consequently, the often unique
historical experience of the area is usually neglected by writers of
B.C. history
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Just a few
miles north of Nelson, British Columbia, a settlement of predominately
British farmers was established after the turn of the twentieth century.
Believing the area to be ideal for growing fruit, the settlers sought
to establish themselves as gentlemen farmers. It was in this district
that Reginald Dawsonencouraged by his family, local real estate
agents, and his own vision of a genteel lifepurchased his forty
acres near the shores of Kootenay Lake in 1906.
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For more than
fifty years, victims of tuberculosis in British Columbia received treatment
at the Tranquille Sanatorium near Kamloops. Once regarded as amongst
the finest hospitals of its kind in North America, the facility closed
when drug therapies made its combination of rest, sunshine and fresh
air seem out of fashion. Today, as the abandoned buildings continue
to fall into disrepair, their demolition seems imminent. Already, the
history they represent is largely forgotten by historians, the medical
community and the residents of Kamloops.
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