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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.
A time capsule was ceremoniously buried. It included not only the congregation's constitution, a list of donors to the building fund, some coins, and a copy of the local newspaper, the British Colonist , still publishing today as the Victoria Times Colonist , but the full membership lists of the Germania Sing Verein and French Benevolent ...
T. F. Chuck's historical photographic montage entitled The Explorers and Early Colonists of Victoria made in 1872. It contains 713 photos. The Explorers and Early Colonists of Victoria is a historical photographic montage of 1872 by Thomas Foster Chuck (1826–1898). It consists of a framed collection of 713 photographs of the early settlers of ...
The hotel was to serve business people and visitors to Victoria, but later as Canadian Pacific ceased its passenger services to the city, the hotel was successfully remarketed as a resort to tourists. Victoria emerged as a tourist destination beginning in the mid-to-late 1920s. The Empress in August 1930, years after the hotel's expansion in 1928
Godfrey Rupert Cripps Stephens (born 28 October 1939) is a Canadian artist, best known for his protest sculpture Weeping Cedar Woman and large abstract wooden columns. His painting and sculpting style combines West Coast iconography from First Nations references to classical Greek and nautical elements. [1]
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Victoria_Times-Colonist&oldid=428491833"
The Victoria Open is a golf tournament on the PGA Tour Americas. ... Bayview Place DCBank Open presented by Times Colonist. 2019 Paul Barjon; 2018 Sam Fidone;
British Colonist newspaper in Victoria, complete text Dec. 1858 to June 1910, searchable; British Columbia History Internet/Web Site, 1995–2004, compiled by historian and archivist David Mattison, was succeeded by the British Columbia History Portal, 2003–present.