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The British Columbia Historical Federation has provided a collective voice for its member societies since 1922. ____________________________________________________ This issue of the Buzz is archived at https://tinyurl.com/2xb652av ____________________________________________________
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Possessing Meares Island wins Lieutenant-Governor’s medal
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Barry Gough has became the second person to win the Lieutenant-Governor’s Medal for Historical Writing twice, for his book Possessing Meares Island: A Historian’s Journey into the Past of Clayoquot Sound. Gough also won the award, presented by the BCHF, in 1984. Click the link below to learn the runners-up, as well as the winner of the Community History Book Award.
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Nikkei National Museum wins BCHF Storytelling Award
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The BCHF has recognized the Nikkei National Museum and Cultural Centre in Burnaby with its first annual Storytelling Award for the online exhibit Writing Wrongs: Japanese Canadian Protest Letters of the 1940s, which brings together and interprets Japanese Canadian letters written in protest of their dispossession and dispersal during the Second World War.
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Advocacy Award goes to Dr. Keith Thor Carlson and Naxaxalhts’i
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The BCHF has presented its inaugural Advocacy Award to Dr. Albert “Sonny” McHalsie (Naxaxalhts’i) and Dr. Keith Thor Carlson, who are synonymous with Truth and Reconciliation in the Fraser Valley. They work
in tandem with Stó:lō communities, Elders and Knowledge Keepers to
uncover and share the past about the Peoples and lands of S’óhl Téméxw.
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Laila Axén presented with Cultural Resource Accessibility Award
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Laila Axén is the inaugural winner of the BCHF Cultural Resource
Accessibility Award, honouring excellence in cultural resource management work
which aims to help connect British Columbians with their history.
Axén founded the Swedish Heritage in British Columbia Museum and Archives in 2017.
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Explaining Settlers to Ourselves wins Best Article Award
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Lydia Kinasewich named W. Kaye Lamb scholarship recipient
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This year’s recipient of the W. Kaye Lamb $1,000 scholarship from the BCHF is Lydia Kinasewich
of UNBC for her paper called From Health Resort to Pleasure
Resort: Re-Constructing Harrison Hot Springs as a Tourist Destination,
1920-30. This was in the third and fourth year category.
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Award of Recognition: Marlin (Marl) Brown
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Marlin (Marl) Brown of Fort Nelson is a recipient of a BCHF Award of
Recognition. The founder of the Fort
Nelson Historical Society in 1977, Marl was a pillar as the first
and only curator of the Fort Nelson Heritage Museum until his passing in
2021.
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Certificate of Merit: Bill Wilson
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Bill Wilson of Nanaimo is the recipient of a BCHF Certificate of Merit. Wilson is the author of numerous works about soda manufacturers and brewers of British Columbia, including the recent Soda Kings of BC & the Yukon volumes.
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Certificate of Merit: Kevin Eastwood and Siren Screen
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Kevin Eastwood and Siren Screen Productions are the recipients of a BCHF Award of Recognition for British Columbia: An Untold History. This four-part historical documentary highlights the people, forces and events that shaped BC.
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BCHF 2022-23 board sees changes in key roles
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The
June 4 annual general meeting of the BC Historical Federation saw a new
board acclaimed for 2022-23, including a shuffle of some key positions.
We have a new president, vice-president, secretary, treasurer, and four new directors. In all, there are five new faces and nine returning people.
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A fond farewall to outgoing BCHF directors
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We are bidding adieu to three members of the BCHF board and thanking our outgoing president, who will be staying on to guide us as past president, and our past president, who becomes honorary president.
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BC History summer issue highlights Landscapes of Injustice
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The summer issue of the magazine will be hitting mailboxes soon. It features the Landscapes of Injustice Project, which is a research and public history project exploring the dispossession of Japanese Canadians as part of their forced displacement and internment in the 1940s.
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Help us win $20,000!
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Each June the BCHF participates in the Great Canadian Giving
Challenge put on by CanadaHelps, a non-profit organization that makes it
easy for Canadian charities to accept online donations. Donations to the BCHF this month will enter the organization into a national draw for $20,000.
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The BCHF offers a number of advertising opportunities in our e-newsletter, which is distributed to our entire membership monthly. Advertisements are jpeg images sized to 600 px wide for electronic distribution. To submit an ad, contact Greg Nesteroff: greg@bchistory.ca
Members enjoy discounted advertising rates. Choose 12 months for the best deal:
1-3 months = $100 each ($100-$300 annually)
4 months = $90 each ($360 annually)
6 months = $80 each ($480 annually)
8 months = $70 each ($560 annually)
12 months = $50 each ($600 annually)
Rates for non-members are as follows:
1-3 months = $150 each ($150-$450 annually)
4 months = $140 each ($560 annually)
6 months = $130 each ($780 annually)
8 months = $120 each ($960 annually)
12 months = $100 each ($1,200 annually)
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British Columbia Historical Federation
Box 448, Fort Langley, BC, V1M 247 • info@bchistory.ca The BCHF Secretariat is located on the unceded traditional territory of the Coast Salish speaking Peoples. The BCHF is on Facebook. Join the conversation.
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