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The Prince George Coldsnap Festival (formerly known as the Prince George Folk Festival) is a national folk music festival held annually in the winter at various venues throughout Prince George. Past artists have included John Denver , Bruce Cockburn , Sarah Harmer , Janis Ian , Alpha Yaya Diallo . 2006 saw Matthew Good , Fred Eaglesmith , The ...
Sportspeople from Prince George, British Columbia (45 P) Pages in category "People from Prince George, British Columbia" The following 43 pages are in this category, out of 43 total.
Prince George-North Cariboo is a provincial electoral district for the Legislative Assembly of British Columbia, Canada. Created under the 2021 British Columbia electoral redistribution , the riding will first be contested in the 2024 British Columbia general election . [ 1 ]
This is a list of the 93 provincial electoral districts (also informally known as ridings in Canadian English) of British Columbia, Canada, as defined by the 2021 electoral redistribution.
Edward Arden of Park Hall, Castle Bromwich, was Sheriff of Warwickshire in 1575 and was the son of William Arden (d. 1545). He was the second cousin of Mary Arden , mother of William Shakespeare . In 1583, he came under suspicion for being head of a family that had remained loyal to the Catholic Church , and was sentenced for allegedly plotting ...
Mr. PG is a mascot for and monument in Prince George, British Columbia, Canada. [1] He was first constructed in 1960 as a symbol of the importance of the forestry industry to the city. [2] He currently stands at the junction of Highway 97 and Highway 16. He is 8.138 m (26.70 ft) tall and his head is 1.5 m (4 ft 11 in) in diameter.
BX at South Fort George (1910) South Fort George is a suburb of Prince George, British Columbia, Canada. Before the arrival of the Grand Trunk Pacific Railway in 1914, the Prince George area was known as Fort George and was a Lheidli T'enneh village and Hudson's Bay Company store. In 1909, two rival townsites were built and promoted.
Land developers organized and sponsored the first schools within Prince George. [1] By 1914, one high and three elementary schools existed. [2] Within the area of what would become SD 57, the establishment of separate school districts (usually comprising a single school), totalled 9 in 1911–1920, 17 in 1921–1930, and 11 in 1931–1940. [3]