History

  • Tibetans in Exile

    Creator

    Twigg, Alan

    Abstract

    Alan Twigg has here recovered the amazing story of how George and Ingeborg while travelling in northern India in 1961 encountered many of the Tibetan refugees who had fled over the mountain passes. Appalled by the condition of the children, huddled together with inadequate bedding, surviving on a diet of thin soup and momos, steamed dumplings of mixed wheat and corn flour, they expressed their desire to help. "You must absolutely come and see uncle," said a young girl. This was Khando Yapshi, the Dalai Lama's niece.

    Publisher (Source)

    Vancouver

    Ronsdale Press

    Not specified
  • Vancouver Is Ashes The Great Fire of 1886

    Creator

    Smith, Lisa Anne Anne

    Abstract

    On the morning of June 13, 1886, a rogue wind fanned the flames of a small clearing fire—and within five hours, the newly incorporated city of Vancouver, British Columbia, had been reduced to smoldering ash. Vancouver is Ashes: The Great Fire of 1886 is the first detailed exploration of what happened on that pivotal, yet seldom revisited day in the history of Canada’s third-largest city. Lisa Anne Smith tells the story with numerous archival photographs.

    Publisher (Source)

    Vancouver

    Ronsdale Press

    Not specified
  • Uncharted Waters The Explorations of Jose Narvaez

    Creator

    McDowell, Jim

    Abstract

    Jim McDowell’s new biography of the little-known Spanish explorer José María Narváez, reveals his significant discoveries during the European exploration of what is now Canada’s Pacific Northwest Coast. Narváez was the first European to investigate a Russian fur-trading outpost in the Gulf of Alaska in 1788. The following year he became the first Spaniard to reconnoitre Juan de Fuca Strait.

    Publisher (Source)

    Vancouver

    Ronsdale Press

    Not specified
  • Bialystok to Birkenau The Holocaust Journey of Michel Mielnicki

    Creator

    Mielnicki, Michel

    Abstract

    This profoundly honest Holocaust memoir describes the transformation of everyday anti-Semitism into the Holocaust nightmare. Central to the story are the years Mielnicki spent in the camps of Auschwitz-Birkenau, Buna, Mittelbau-Dora and Belsen. Mielnicki's account is a harrowing yet powerfully redeeming human drama. Includes over 30 black and white photos and maps.

    Publisher (Source)

    Vancouver

    Ronsdale Press

    Not specified
  • Women on Ice

    Creator

    Norton, Wayne

    Abstract

    Women on Ice is the first book to focus upon the vibrant world of women's ice hockey in western Canada during the First World War and through the 1920s. The Vancouver Amazons were one of the most important teams during this perod. Their championship laurels and their association with hockey's famous Patrick brothers distinguish the Amazons from other women's hockey teams of the era.

    Publisher (Source)

    Vancouver

    Ronsdale Press

    Not specified
  • How I Won the War for the Allies One Sassy Canadian Soldier's Story

    Creator

    Gregory, Doris

    Abstract

    Still sassy, Doris Gregory takes the reader back over seventy years to the time when she broke with tradition, first by publicly challenging the University of British Columbia’s discrimination against women, and then by joining the Canadian Women’s Army Corps. Her memoir allows us to travel with her across the Atlantic at the height of the U-boat infestation and to take refuge in underground shelters while bombs fall on London.

    Publisher (Source)

    Vancouver

    Ronsdale Press

    Not specified
  • Long Labour, A A Dutch Mother's Holocaust Memoir

    Creator

    Shandler, Rhodea

    Abstract

    In this unusual Holocaust memoir, Rhodea Shandler gives a woman's view of life under the Nazis in Holland. She begins by describing her early life in a closely knit Jewish family in northern Holland. There was anti-Semitism, she explains, but it was of a low level, and the Jews with their strong ties to community managed to live relatively normal lives. Then everything began to change with Hitler's rise to power in 1933. Through it all, she tells of life ongoing and how she became a nursing student in Amsterdam.

    Publisher (Source)

    Vancouver

    Ronsdale Press

    Not specified
  • John Muir West Coast Pioneer

    Creator

    Ashby, Daryl

    Abstract

    This historical biography—based on the life of British Columbia pioneer John Muir—tells the amazing story of a family from Scotland who came out to Canada in the late 1840s to work as "consignee" labourers for the Hudson's Bay Company. Ashby recreates the story of the Muirs' struggle to develop a place for themselves in the hierarchic colony ruled by James Douglas. With their vision of a country based on democratic principles, the Muirs fought to bring a new way of life to the West Coast.

    Publisher (Source)

    Vancouver

    Ronsdale Press

    Not specified
  • Emily Patterson The Heroic Life of a Milltown Nurse

    Creator

    Smith, Lisa Anne

    Abstract

    When Emily Patterson arrives in the Pacific Northwest with her husband and children in 1862, she finds herself worlds away from Bath, Maine, the staunchly pious township of her birth. Up the remote reaches of Vancouver Island’s Alberni Canal, Emily learns much about self-reliance in a fledgling milltown where pioneer loggers and the native Tseshaht community share an often tempestuous co-existence. In search of their ideal homestead, the Pattersons next travel to Oregon’s fertile Willamette and Columbia River regions, confronting both joy and tragedy along the way.

    Publisher (Source)

    Vancouver

    Ronsdale Press

    Not specified
  • Women Overseas Memoirs of the Canadian Red Cross Corps

    Creator

    Day, Francis Martin

    Ladouceur, Barbara

    Abstract

    In these Red Cross memoirs, thirty women tell their stories of volunteer work with the Canadian Red Cross Corps in overseas postings during World War Two and the Korean War. These dramatic narratives take us across oceans infested with enemy submarines to witness Canadian women on duty in the U.K., in Europe and in Asia. Laced with humour and filled with grace, these stories are a testament to the vital yet often overlooked responsibilities that thousands of women gallantly accepted for the Allied war effort.

    Publisher (Source)

    Vancouver

    Ronsdale Press

    Not specified