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"Map of Prince Rupert"
2012.13.2.15.30.1 · Item · [before 1980]
Part of J. Kent Sedgwick fonds

The item is a map depicting the Prince Rupert townsite. Map is published by McRae Bros. Ltd. and Collart & Reynolds Real Estate.

2023.2.2.10 · Subseries · 1993-2001
Part of Dr. Paul Sanborn fonds

While at the Ministry of Forests, Dr. Paul Sanborn carried out two retrospective studies which examined soil chemical properties at long-term silvicultural research sites where different vegetation types had been created, either as planned or unplanned experiments. These studies were Experimental Project (EP) 660 and a research project at the Archie Creek site.

2012.13.4.09.5 · Item · 1992
Part of J. Kent Sedgwick fonds

The item is a map depicting the Salmon Portage area along the Salmon River. Various annotations are written in pen and sections of the map are coloured with pencil crayon. The Forest Cover Map identification number is 93J.026.

2012.13.4.09.1 · Item · 28 June 1999
Part of J. Kent Sedgwick fonds

The item is a map depicting the Salmon Portage area along the Salmon River. Various annotations are written in pen and sections of the map are coloured with pencil crayon. The Forest Cover Map identification number is 93J.026.

2012.13.4.09.2 · Item · 28 June 1999
Part of J. Kent Sedgwick fonds

The item is a map depicting the Salmon Portage area along the Salmon River. Various annotations are written in pen and sections of the map are coloured with pencil crayon. The Forest Cover Map identification number is 93J.027.

2012.13.4.09.3 · Item · 1991
Part of J. Kent Sedgwick fonds

The item is a map depicting the Salmon Portage area along the Salmon River. Various annotations are written in pen and sections of the map are coloured with pencil crayon. The Forest Cover Map identification number is 93J.027.

Archie Creek Site
2023.2.2.10.2 · Sub-subseries · 1993-2001
Part of Dr. Paul Sanborn fonds

The Archie Creek site is the informal name used for a research installation established in 1971 east of Prince George by the Canadian Forest Service, and subsequently abandoned by the end of that decade. Dr. Paul Sanborn revisited the site in 1995, and sampled forest floors and mineral soils across a range of conifer-broadleaf mixtures established by natural establishment of broadleaf trees among planted lodgepole pines.

Details of the site conditions, sampling methods, and results were published in:
Sanborn, P. 2001. Influence of broadleaf trees on soil chemical properties: A retrospective study in the Sub-Boreal Spruce Zone, British Columbia, Canada. Plant and Soil 236: 75–82. https://doi.org/10.1023/A:1011973402414

2023.2.2.10.1 · Sub-subseries · 1997-1998
Part of Dr. Paul Sanborn fonds

EP 660 was a conventional silvicultural trial established in 1967 which involved single species plantings of lodgepole pine (Pl), white spruce (Sw), and Douglas-fir (Fd) at different spacings. Three installations were established in the Prince George - Vanderhoof area: Buckhorn Ridge, Bobtail Road, and Chilco Creek.

General details on EP 660 are given by:
Coopersmith, D., M. McLellan, and J. Stork. 1997a. Experimental Project 660 overview of three experimental installations – a 30-year progress report. B.C. Min. For., Prince George For. Reg., Res. Note #PG-12.

Details on the Buckhorn installation are given by:
Coopersmith, D., M. McLellan, and J. Stork. 1997b. Experimental Project 660 30-year progress report: Buckhorn Installation. B.C. Min. For., Prince George For. Reg., Res. Note #PG-12-1.

2023.2.2.10.1.5 · File · 1997-1998
Part of Dr. Paul Sanborn fonds

File contains the following data sets:

  • S300FINL.XLS [Ministry of Forests lab data report: non-woody forest floor components]
  • S301FINL.XLS [Ministry of Forests lab data report: woody forest floor components]
  • 660FF97.xls [non-woody and woody forest floor components: mass / unit area (corrected to oven-dry basis)]
  • BUCKLIST.xls [table showing internal sample numbers corresponding to lab sample numbers used in MoF lab reports]
2023.2.2.10.1.6 · File · Aug. 1997
Part of Dr. Paul Sanborn fonds

File contains 8 slides from 2 rolls, taken August 1997:
Roll 1 - Buckhorn Ridge:

  • Slide 31 – Fd (2 x 2 m) – stand view
  • Slide 32 – Fd (2 x 2 m) – forest floor view
  • Slide 33 – Pl (2x 2 m) – stand view
  • Slide 34 – Pl (2 x 2 m) – forest floor view
    Roll 2 – Bobtail Road:
  • Slide 20 – Pl (2 x 2 m) – east plot, stand view
  • Slide 21 – Pl (2 x 2 m) – east plot, stand view
  • Slide 22 – Fd (2 x 2 m) – east plot, stand view
  • Slide 23 – Sw (2 x 2 m) – stand view
Archie Creek slides
2023.2.2.10.2.8 · File · Sept. 1995
Part of Dr. Paul Sanborn fonds

File contains 2 rolls (51 slides) taken September 25-26, 1995 that depict paired views of plot vegetation and forest floor surface. Handwritten number notations on slide frames indicate plot numbers from the original research installation.

Archie Creek site data
2023.2.2.10.2.7 · File · 1995-1996
Part of Dr. Paul Sanborn fonds

File contains the following data sets:

  • Archie Site Tree Data.xls [diameter (dbh) and basal area of trees within and overhanging plots]
  • Archie Site non-woody forest floor properties (1995).xls [non-woody forest floor chemical properties – individual sample results & plot means]
  • Archie Site woody forest floor component properties (1995).xls [total C, N & S concentrations, pool sizes for woody forest floor components]
  • Archie Site mineral soil properties (1995).xlsx [0-20 cm mineral soil chemical properties – individual sample results & plot means]
  • Archie Site forest floor mass (1995).xlsx [mass per unit area of non-woody & woody forest floor components, corrected to oven-dry basis]
  • S221FINL.xls [MoF lab data report: non-woody forest floor components]
  • S222FINL.xls [MoF lab data report: woody forest floor components]
  • S251FINL.xls [MoF lab data report: 0-20 cm mineral soil]
"Hixon"
2012.13.2.20.01.2 · Item · [ca. 1990]
Part of J. Kent Sedgwick fonds

The item is a map depicting the area surrounding the Hixon area in the Cariboo District. There are various annotations in pen and highlighted boundaries.

"Cottonwood River"
2012.13.2.20.01.1 · Item · 1980
Part of J. Kent Sedgwick fonds

The item is a map depicting the area surrounding the Cottonwood River in the Cariboo Land District. Various annotations are mad in pen on the map.

2012.13.2.19.22.1 · Item · 1981
Part of J. Kent Sedgwick fonds

The item is a map depicting the Queen Charlotte Islands, now Haida Gwaii. It includes a key with abandoned Indian villages and settlements. It also includes annotations in pen by Kent Sedgwick. The reverse side of the map has a recreational directory for the area.

"Bowron Lake Park"
2012.13.2.19.04.1 · Item · June 1968
Part of J. Kent Sedgwick fonds

The item is a map depicting Bowron Lake Park in British Columbia, the park boundary, the patrol cabin, roads, campsites, glaciers, and trails. Various handwritten annotations are written on the map and Public Shelters are circled in red pen.

2012.13.4.29.2 · Item · 2003
Part of J. Kent Sedgwick fonds

The item is a photograph depicting a woman standing in front of a display containing various items and photographs regarding the history of Prince George. Annotation on reverse side of photograph states, "Living Ls. 2003."

Urban PG
2012.13.5.09.1 · Item · 16 Aug. 2004
Part of J. Kent Sedgwick fonds

The item is a CD-R containing 3 Word documents of different editions of "Urban PG." The notes and information relates to the book chapter co-written by Greg Halseth and Kent Sedgwick.

"Situating PG"
2012.13.5.07.1 · Item · 26 Mar. 2006
Part of J. Kent Sedgwick fonds

The item is a CD-R containing 36 jpg. photographs relating to Kent Sedgwick's guest lecture on Prince Gorge geography and development.

"GTP talk"
2012.13.2.15.16.1 · Item · 1 Oct. 2010
Part of J. Kent Sedgwick fonds

The item is a CD-R containing various jpg. photographs and a PowerPoint presentation about the Grand Trunk Pacific Railway done by Kent Sedgewick.

"Giscome cover"
2012.13.4.18.1 · Item · 8 Dec. 2008
Part of J. Kent Sedgwick fonds

The item is a CD-R containing a pdf. file depicting the cover of "Giscome Chronicle." Caption states, "The rise and fall of a sawmill community in central British Columbia 1912 - 1976."

2012.13.2.11.11.60 · Item · Dec. 1948
Part of J. Kent Sedgwick fonds

The item is a photograph depicting the river during the Nechako River flood on 20 December 1948. Annotation on reverse side of photograph states, "Nechako River Flood Dec. 20/48 Opposite the Cutbank."

2012.13.2.11.11.59 · Item · Dec. 1948
Part of J. Kent Sedgwick fonds

The item is a photograph depicting the river during the Nechako River flood on 20 December 1948. Annotation on reverse side of photograph states, "Nechako River Flood Dec. 20/48 At Caine Lbr Co Mill Site River Road."

2012.13.2.11.11.48 · Item · Dec. 1948
Part of J. Kent Sedgwick fonds

The item is a photograph depicting a small structure along the river during the Nechako River flood on 20 December 1948. Annotation on reverse side of photograph states, "Nechako River Flood. Dec. 20th, 1948."

2012.13.2.11.11.56 · Item · Dec. 1948
Part of J. Kent Sedgwick fonds

The item is a photograph depicting Riverside Avenue during the Nechako River flood on 20 December 1948. Annotation on the front of the photograph states, "River Avenue water level." Annotation on reverse side of photograph states, "Nechako River Ice Flood on Riverside Ave. Dec 20th, 1948 - Looking East from office of Caine Lbr Co Ltd."

2012.13.2.11.11.57 · Item · Dec. 1948
Part of J. Kent Sedgwick fonds

The item is a photograph depicting Caine Lumber Co. Ltd. during the Nechako River flood on 20 December 1948. Annotation on the front of the photograph states, "opposite C.L.C. Ltd Garage Riverside Ave.." Annotation on reverse side of photograph states, "Nechako Ice Flood. Dec. 20/48 from Garage Riverside Ave. Caine Lbr Co Ltd Looking East"

2023.2.2.8.06 · File · 2003-2014
Part of Dr. Paul Sanborn fonds

File consists of the following data sets:

  • Kluane crust Min N (2003) S671FINL.xls [mineralizable nitrogen for biological soil crusts & upper mineral soil, 2003 samples]
  • Kluane Crust samples (2004) moisture contents.xls [moisture content of air-dry 2004 crust samples from Peninsula & Silver City sites; sampling procedures & locations in Marsh et al. (20060]
  • Kluane Soil Crusts (2004) chemical analyses.xls [consolidated file of chemical data for 2004 crust samples from Peninsula & Silver City sites]
  • Kluane 2003 soil & crust 15N data.xls [15N natural abundance, total N, organic & inorganic C for 2003 crust & upper mineral soil samples]
  • Kluane 2003 soil data.xlsx [consolidated file of chemical data for 2003 crust and mineral horizon soil samples]
  • Kluane Crust 2004 total C & N data.xls
  • Kluane AMS dates (2003-2008 charcoal samples).xls [radiocarbon dates from the University of Arizona Accelerator Mass Spectrometry Lab]
  • Kluane soil transect - texture data.xls [2009 soil particle size analysis data, with potential lithological breaks highlighted]
  • Kluane surveys 2009.xls [topographic surveys for 3 soil transects cutting across eskers along Cultus Bay Rd., SE shore of Kluane L.]
  • S1061_1069_Final_Rev1.xls [lab data report from Ministry of Forests Analytical Chemistry Laboratory for 2009 transect samples: total C, inorganic C, & total N]
  • 100812003 (annotated) -corrected.xls [2009 transect samples: particle size analysis data report from CANTEST]
  • Kluane soil transect - master data file.xls
2023.2.2.8.02 · Item · July 2009
Part of Dr. Paul Sanborn fonds

This PDF contains 2009 Kluane site notes that include details of transect locations and sampling sites. Grassland pedons selected for Pautler et al. (2014) are indicated.

2008.3.1.210.1 · Item · [ca. 1960]
Part of Bridget Moran fonds

Audio recording is of an interview by Bridget Moran with both Mr. George Henry and Mr. Arnold Davis to discuss their memories of the early town site development of South Fort George and Central Fort George c.1910-c.1917. Mr. Henry was born in 1882 and his family arrived in Quesnel in 1909. Mr. Henry’s interview is primarily about his work as a captain on the BX Sternwheeler up until the time of the railroad arriving in Prince George in 1914. Mr. Davis, who was a Sherriff in Prince George, recalls his childhood memories of Fort George and Central Fort George c.1917. Mr. Davis also discusses his family roots from Ireland, the family’s arrival in Fort George from Ashcroft in 1917 and memories of his father who worked on the sternwheelers on the Fraser River.

Audiocassette Summary

Scope and Content:
Interview with Mr. George Henry

Mr. Henry was born in 1882 in Northern California and his family came to the Cariboo in 1909. He recalls riding his bicycle from Ashcroft to Quesnel in 3 days to find work with the BC Express Company.

Mr. Henry recalls working on the BX and describes the sternwheeler trip from Quesnel to South Fort George; it was a 3 hour trip from Quesnel and included two mail stops ;
Henry recalls an accident onboard the sternwheeler going through the Fraser Canyon (see p.p.11-12 of
Prince George Remembered)

Mr. Henry describes his homestead at South Fort George

Mr. Henry describes the BX sternwheeler being aground at South Fort George c.1920

Mr. Henry recalls spending winters in South Fort George in his log cabin; that work was “plentiful” in 1910 and the population at “about 700”
Mr. Henry notes that the “Indian reserve was at the Hudson’s Bay company” and that the native population was at “about 50”

Mr. Henry recalls the early commercial businesses in South Fort George c.1910 including the Northern Hotel; the candy store and ice cream store and theatre.

Mr. Henry describes the start of the town site of Central Fort George as a “viable little town” which started once the Grand Trunk Railway arrived and recalls the change in population between South Fort George & Central Fort George.

Henry recalls how all the workers came and lived in tents in Central Fort George.

Mr. Henry was not happy about the arrival of the railway as it meant he lost his job on the sternwheeler – he recalls that “us old river rats were just lost” (see p.p.34 of Prince George Remembered)

Bridget then asks Mr. Arnold Davis to recall his memories of early South Fort George
But first asks him to describe his family’s roots (See p.p. 1-2 of Prince George Remembered)

Scope and Content:
Interview with Mr. Arnold Davis

Davis notes he is 6th generation Canadian; family came from Ireland and his grandfather’s brother Jeff Davis became the President of the Confederate States of America.
Davis refers to his mother’s family being on the Prairies at time of the trial of Louis Riel

Davis explains that his grandfather first homesteaded at Banff; then Kamloops; then Ashcroft and on to South Fort George in 1917.

Davis’ father worked for the BC Express Company and he recalls being on the sternwheeler as a child during same time that George Henry worked the boats. Recalls workers on the boat; eating pie on the boat baked by the Chinese cook; (See p. 33 of Prince George Remembered)

Davis recalls the town site of South Fort George. He notes it had a population by 1917 of only “about 300” and that the “boom was over”

Davis describes location of various businesses in South Fort George including the Rex Theatre, George St. Poole Room, McKay Bros. Grocery store, Drugstore, Bairds, Peters Butcher Shop.

Davis recalls that there were many “Yukoners” here at the time and recalls a tale about an old Yukoner

Mr. Davis recalls other people who worked on the BX with his father including Margaret “Granny” Seymour’s father;

Mr. Davis recalls riding up and down the river to Foley’s Cache on the sternwheeler as a child
Mr. Henry then speaks up and recalls trips on the sternwheeler with Arnold Davis on the boat as a child

Tape ends

2008.3.1.210.2 · Item · [May 1962?]
Part of Bridget Moran fonds

Audio recording is of an interview by Bridget Moran with Margaret [Granny] Seymour at the PG Hospital in 1962. Moran later noted in another recording that the interview with Margaret Seymour was part of her social work. At the time of the interview Granny Seymour states she is 109 years old and says she is to celebrate her 110th birthday in June.

Audiocassette Summary

Scope and Content:

  • Talks about a flood in Fort George
  • Went on a canoe from Fort St. James to Fort George
  • Clothing and food that Granny Seymour grew up with
  • Living at Fort St. James
  • Discusses the poverty of the First Nations after moving to Shelley
  • Discusses the priest who came to the reserve often
  • Would cook dinner for the priest as often as she could
  • Discusses memories of being a child and living in Fort St. James
  • Traveling to Vancouver
  • Police presence in Fort St. James – no police; She notes there was no police presence – the HBC boss provided policing. Recounts memories of one native at Ft St James who killed his boss
  • Traveling to Fort Fraser by dog team
  • Step dancing – remembers dances at Ft St James with the HBC crew
  • Cleaning houses - Remembers taking care of house at Hudson’s Bay fort in Ft St James
  • Health – talks about her health Visitors to Granny – Priest comes sometimes [to visit her now at the hospital]
  • Did not go to school
  • Discusses memories of her parents James Bouchey and her mother and her siblings
  • Seymour’s first husband worked for HBC Ft St James was a white man Edward Flameau- unhappy memories of her marriage
  • Seymour’s second husband was Billy Seymour – happier memories
  • Getting caught in a forest fire and a big storm coming from Ft St James
  • Talks about looking after Hudson’s Bay store and trading for sugar/tea

Tape ends

2008.3.1.210.3 · Item · [May 1962?]
Part of Bridget Moran fonds

Audio recording is of an interview by Bridget Moran with Margaret [Granny] Seymour at the PG Hospital in 1962. Moran later noted in another recording that the interview with Margaret Seymour was part of her social work. At the time of the interview Granny Seymour states she is 109 years old and says she is to celebrate her 110th birthday in June.

Audiocassette Summary

Scope and Content: Interview continues between Bridget Moran and Granny Seymour

  • She talks about hard work that she performed at the [HBC] store
  • Granny describes trapping at her own trap line
  • Sometimes had more on her trap line than her husband had on his
  • Talks about birth of her children at Hudson’s Bay in Ft St James and having to birth them on her own or with the help only of her sister [Nellie?] – as there was no doctor available
  • Very skilled in medicine
  • Everyone came to her for help
  • Lived at Hudson’s Bay Post in Fort St. James
  • Talks about employment
  • Describes early South Fort George – when there were no houses at all; early residents including Charlie Ogmann [sp?]
  • Granny notes her children never went to school but learnt quickly
  • She learned how to speak French as her father was French
  • Granny speaks about her mother – who is described as an “Indian Princess”
  • Talks about husband Billy Seymour’s work; Granny describes building her own house at Fort George cutting and hauling down trees by hand

Tape ends

History of Prince George
2008.3.1.210.4 · Item · [between 1958 and 1960]
Part of Bridget Moran fonds

Audio recording consists of individual taped interviews conducted by Bridget Moran with a number of early Fort George residents recalling the early years of white settlement in Prince George c.1910-c.1915. Interviews were conducted with the following individuals: Arnold Davis; J.A.F. Campbell; Alec Moffat; Claude Foot; George Henry; Nellie Law; John McInnis; Georgina [McInnis] Williams and Peter Wilson. These interviews were incorporated into the publication: Bridget Moran, Prince George Remembered…from Bridget Moran, Marsh Publishing, Prince George, 1996.

Audiocassette Summary
Scope and Content:Recording consists of individual taped interviews conducted by Bridget Moran in a number of locations with Arnold Davis; J.A.F. Campbell; Alec Moffat; Claude Foot; George Henry; Nellie Law; John McInnis; Georgina [McInnis] Williams; Peter Wilson

Subjects include:

  • Arnold Davis – former Sherriff in Prince George (born in 1882) arrived in Quesnel in 1909 and worked on the BX sternwheeler. Davis discusses his family roots from Ireland as a 6th generation Canadian. Recalls how his family arrived in South Fort George in 1917 and how his father worked on boats that went up and down Fraser River
  • Claude Foot recalls coming from New Zealand to Fort George [Prince George] in 1906 and how there were ‘very few white men’; his father was Irish, mother was English
  • Alex Moffat – describes how his parents provided a ‘stopping place’ for stage coaches in the Cariboo region
  • George Henry recalls working on the boats that plied the Fraser River between Prince George and Soda Creek, near Quesnel
  • Nellie Law – describes arriving from England in 1917 to Ashcroft and then Quesnel in 1917
  • Peter Wilson – Barrister and Solicitor; the prosecutor for Prince George since 1916 describes arriving by train from Edmonton and arriving on a scow in South Fort George
  • Mr. John McInnis – from Prince Edward Island, who sat twice in provincial legislature – in constituency of Grand Forks as socialist and later for constituency of Fort George recalls arriving in 1910 by rail to Kamloops and then by sleigh to South Fort George; describes the Indian Reserve at Fort George “[…don’t think there were a dozen white people…when I arrived […]”
  • J.A. ‘Doc’ Campbell recalls being part of a survey crew in Fort George in 1908
  • George Henry – also recalls cruising down the [Fraser] river by way of sternwheeler and losing men overboard
  • Peter Wilson recalls experiences as practicing lawyer; there was no assize court in the region until 1919; recalls some of his early cases [murder case]
  • Nellie Law describes working as a desk clerk at first The Alexandra Hotel and later The Prince George Hotel from 1918 to 1952
    Law describes the hotel patrons and how she met the Duke and Duchess of Devonshire in 1922. Recalls stoking furnace with logs in the hotel to keep it warm and working as a bouncer
  • Alex Moffat – recalls workers and hauling freight via the old Cariboo Road; existence of one policeman only (BC Provincial Police); and describes in detail a stopping place for horses / crew on the Cariboo Road and the pack trains.
  • Mr. Moffat – Describes the luxury experienced on the sternwheeler, The BX that “could carry seventy saloon passengers” and “staterooms were all equipped with push buttons, electric lights, hot and cold water, steam heat, and everything modern”
  • Claude Foot – Recounts a dance in Quesnel at the hotel barroom and describes ordering drinks at the Al Johnson Hotel that had a bar which boasted to be “ the biggest bar in Canada, if not the world” 100 ft + bar with “six or seven bartenders behind this long bar, and the customers would be lined up two or three deep […]”
  • J.A. [F.] [Campbell] – post-1910 changes with the use of scows on the Fraser River; describes the BC Provincial Police “in those days [they] just wore ordinary civilian clothes, but they were a tough bunch….[…]” and rowdiness in the bars in South Fort George
  • Campbell describes the first bank in Fort George was the Bank of British North America that was housed in a tent and he recalls needing money while playing poker - ‘about eleven o’clock that night, the vault was open, and the till was open, and if you wanted money you’d walk up to the bank till and put an IOU in and take money out and go on playing [poker]
  • Peter Wilson – comments about how lax the enforcement of law and order was in the early years including among the police themselves: “that the “Old Blind Nick [who] ran a bootlegging joint, went broke because he said he couldn’t afford to supply the police with any more liquor.”
  • Claude Foot – recalls a fire in Quesnel in 1916 that burned a large part of the business section and the firemen were as Nellie Law notes “ a bucket brigade of Chinamen, filling buckets from a water hole in the Fraser River that the horses drank in…”
  • John McInnis recalls political meetings and the election in 1916 when he was a candidate for the Fort George riding and being defeated by 7 votes; that the investigation of the election “was a whitewash”
  • Georgina McInnis, who was the first White Child born in the community – she tells of the meeting that decided her name – as Fort Georgina McInnis
  • Arnold Davis recalls his father working on boats that went up and down Fraser River and being on the boat with him and “watching the connecting rods go in and out and concentrate on pie…[served by the Chinese cook]” Davis also recalls The Yukoners who emigrated to PG after the Gold Rush
  • George Henry recalls with lament the coming of the railway as he lost his job plying the River - preferred voyages on the Fraser River – and refers to those who worked the River and himself as “river rats”
2008.3.1.210.6 · Item · [1982?]
Part of Bridget Moran fonds

Audio recording is of an CKPG-CBC affiliate recording at the Supreme Court in Prince George regarding the 60th anniversary of Judge J.O. Wilson being called to bar.

Audiocassette Summary
Scope and Content:

  • CKPG-CBC affiliate recording at the Supreme Court in Prince George
  • Justice Harold McInnis talks about Judge Wilson’s achievements and his career On the 60th Anniversary of his being called to the bar
  • Other members of the Supreme Court congratulate him on his anniversary including Judge McInnis & Judge Stewart
  • Judge Wilson recalls his early years practicing law
Paul Ramsey Interview
2008.3.1.210.9 · Item · Dec. 1995
Part of Bridget Moran fonds

Audio recording is an interview by Bridget Moran with Paul Ramsey. At the time of this interview (December 1995) Paul Ramsey was serving in the BC provincial government (NDP) as the Minister of Health and Minister Responsible for Seniors, a post he held from September 1993 to February 1996. Bridget Moran interviews Paul Ramsey on the state of health care in Prince George. Moran notes in the interview that this material is for an article that she is writing on the crisis in health care in Canada.

Audiocassette Summary

  • Paul Ramsey discusses why doctors have left Northern BC; specifically the case of orthopedic surgeons leaving Prince George
  • Ramsey discusses burnout by physicians, more money in private sector
  • Ramsey discusses the impact of a two tier health care system in Canada; the treatment of health care as a ‘consumer good’
  • Ramsey compares the Canadian health care system with the U.S. health system
  • Discusses specific case of doctors in Prince George – re. the direct billings crisis in 1993
  • Ramsey describes changes in medical training; specialists versus general practitioners
  • Budget – cost of health care $6.6 billion – 1/3 of provincial expenditures; expecting cuts in health care by spring 1996
  • Expands on what he sees as the federal government’s view of universal health care in Canada; including views of individual politicians, both federally and provincially.
  • Bridget provides her views on the pitfalls of a two-tier health care system based on personal experiences and family members’ health care history
  • Ramsey provides his views on the British Columbia Medical Association
  • Ramsey discusses cases of Prince George doctors who started direct billings to patients and settlement of cases
Ken Rutherford (Tape 2)
2008.3.1.210.8 · Item · 1 Apr. 1993
Part of Bridget Moran fonds

Audio recording is the continuation of an interview by Bridget Moran with Ken Rutherford, educator and former municipal politician of Swift Current, Saskatchewan and later ran for the NDP in Fort George, BC. Rutherford discusses his involvement in politics in Saskatchewan, and subsequent move to Prince George, BC and interest in politics in BC.

Audiocassette Summary

  • Recalls the 1953 federal election when he ran unsuccessfully as CCF member for Swift Current, Saskatchewan
  • After election decided to move to Vancouver; started looking for jobs and took teaching job in Prince George, BC
  • Describes living conditions; living in cabin in Fort George and their early neighbors (Milners (sp?) in Prince George c.1950s
  • Recalls running in BC elections 3 times unsuccessful
  • Discusses MLA Ray Williston and the Wenner-Gren election issue
  • Discusses his thoughts on the current NDP; regarding the issue of Senate abolishment and what he sees as ‘undemocratic policies’