Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Times Colonist is an English-language daily newspaper in Victoria, British Columbia, Canada.. It was formed by the September 2, 1980 merger [2] of the Victoria Daily Times, established in 1884, and the British Colonist (later the Daily Colonist), established in 1858 by Amor De Cosmos who was later British Columbia's second Premier.
Hylands was born in 1943 in Lethbridge, Alberta. [3] His mother, Ruth (née White) Douglas (1913-2005), was a public health nurse, later a mathematics teacher, and his father, Walter Norman Douglas, was killed in action in 1945 during World War II.
The woman matched her general description and demeanor. The report resulted in the organization of a search of the View Royal area of Victoria in December 2018. [18] The search turned up no additional clues, but another search was planned for 2019. [19] Victoria media drew information from Kimberly Bordage's podcast, The Search for Emma Fillipoff.
Scott was married to his wife Olga for 60 years, until her death in February 1981. [19] Scott's oldest child, Sydney Scott, was born in Calgary on 10 July 1922. She died as Sydney Turner on 11 June 2011. [20] Scott's second child Sheila Marie Scott was born 15 April 1926. She served in the Canadian Women's Army Corps and the Women's Royal Naval ...
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Victoria_Times-Colonist&oldid=428491833"
Many Victoria residents recalled the day of Dunahee's disappearance as a "loss of innocence" for the city, [5] as the fact that a child had been abducted in their community came as a shock. Fears and concerns about child abduction quickly began to rise among parents, kids and schools in the months after the disappearance. [ 5 ]
In 2007, he received an honorary Doctoral degree in Science from the University of Victoria. Death. Parsons died on 11 April 2022 in Victoria, ...
Amor De Cosmos, September 1874. As the child of American refugees and having lived six years in the United States, De Cosmos developed a sharpened sense of nationalism.This was expressed in a growing protectionist economic sentiment, and the belief that the colonies of British North America needed to be self-supporting, develop a distinct identity, and form a political and economic union.