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2008.3.1.142 · File · 1995-1998
Part of Bridget Moran fonds

File consists of:

  • Name tag for Bridget Moran from Island Mountain Arts
  • Pamphlet from Island Mountain Arts where Bridget Moran taught writing (Summer School 1995)
  • Pamphlet from Island Mountain Arts where Bridget Moran taught writing (Wells, BC, 1997)
  • Pamphlet: "A Weekend Of Creative Writing with Bridget Moran" (Nov. 22, 23, 24, 1996)
  • Description of Bridget Moran's Creative Writing class from Island Mountain Arts (1995)
  • Newsletter from the College of New Caledonia's Counseling and Advising News re: College of New Caledonia's Writing and New Media Technologies (date unknown)
  • Newspaper clipping: "What A Mom!" by Bridget Moran (Prince George Citizen, May 7, 1997)
  • Newspaper clipping: Photograph of Bridget Moran "Helping Hands/Pass it on" (The Prince George Free Press, May 4, 1997)
  • Newspaper clipping: "Living History" (The Prince George Free Press, Oct. 9, 1997)
  • Newspaper clipping: "Women's History special celebration" (The Prince George Free Press, Oct. 23, 1997)
  • Newspaper clipping: Advertisement to meet Mary John and Bridget Moran (Oct. 4)
  • Photocopy of advertisement to meet Mary John and Bridget Moran at Mosquito Books
  • 2 Photographs of Stoney Creek Woman display in the front window of a book store featuring an article on Mary John's receipt of the Order of Canada
  • Newspaper clipping: "Group formed to fight recall" by Don Schaffer (Prince George Citizen, Nov. 4, 1997)
  • Newspaper clipping: "Book Fest is a first" (The Prince George Free Press, Oct. 30, 1997)
  • Pamphlet: "A Writing Weekend Retreat with Bridget Moran" (April 11, 12, 13, 1997)
  • A Note of Appreciation from the College of New Caledonia Social Services Foundations to Bridget Moran (Nov. 1997)
  • Thank you letter to Bridget Moran from Julia Whittaker, Director/Curator of the Prince George Art Gallery (Dec. 5, 1997)
  • Thank you card to Bridget Moran from Christine Jackman re" speaking to WRIT100 class (Nov. 1997)
  • Newspaper clipping: "City author Moran picture of ambition pursuing her dream" by Bernice Trick (Prince George Citizen, Dec. 8, 1997)
  • Pamphlet advertisement featuring Bridget Moran as a supporter of Paul Ramsey
  • Newspaper clipping: Advertisement featuring Bridget Moran as a supporter of Paul Ramsey (Dec. 12, 1997)
  • Christmas card thanking Bridget Moran (date unknown)
  • Christmas tag to Bridget Moran from Mary Ellen (date unknown)
  • Advertisement for Creative Writing taught by Bridget Moran for Island Mountain Arts
  • Letter advertising Stoney Creek Woman (date and company unknown)
  • Letter to Arsenal Pulp Press Book Publishers Ltd from Janice Henly re: making an audio tape of Stoney Creek Woman for disabled students at Kelly Road Secondary School (Jan 15, 1998)
  • Newspaper clipping: Top Ten Non-Fiction Bestsellers in British Columbia (Vancouver Sun, Jan. 17, 1998)
  • Newspaper clipping: "Bestsellers" (Jan. 21, 1998)
  • Newspaper clipping: "Here's the buzz: Mosquito Books is bigger, brighter and better" (The Prince George Citizen, Oct. 30, 1997)
  • Advertisement for Judgement at Stoney Creek from Arsenal Pulp Press
  • Fax from Legal Service Society re: Bridget Moran's resignation from the Media Committee to the Native Programs Committee (Sept. 21, 1995)
  • Newspaper clipping: Letters to the editor - "Native studies needed in our classrooms" by Bridget Moran (Oct. 27, 1998)
  • Newspaper clipping: "Mary John in hospital after suffering stroke" by Mark Nielsen (date unknown)
  • Newspaper clipping: "Board members and senior management visit communities" (June 1998)
  • Newspaper clipping: advertisement for KPMG, Aboriginal Services Group, Justa Monk a member (date unknown)
  • Newspaper clipping: "New judgement on old book" (The Prince George Free Press, Oct. 4, 1998).
2008.3.1.142.1 · Item · [after 1997]
Part of Bridget Moran fonds

Photograph depicts numerous copies of 'Stoney Creek Woman' (by Bridget Moran) in glass case. Display also features article on Mary John's receipt of the Order of Canada (see items 2008.3.1.22.61 and 2008.3.1.22.64 for photographs displayed in this image).

2008.3.1.142.2 · Item · [after 1997]
Part of Bridget Moran fonds

Photograph depicts numerous copies of 'Stoney Creek Woman' (by Bridget Moran) in glass case. Display also features article on Mary John's receipt of the Order of Canada (see items 2008.3.1.22.61 and 2008.3.1.22.64 for photographs displayed in this image).

2008.3.1.143 · File · 1968-1970
Part of Bridget Moran fonds

File consists of:

  • Newspaper clipping: "Horse radish in the corn flakes" by Bridget Moran (North Star, June 20, 1970)
  • Newspaper clipping: "The dignity of humanity?" by Bridget Moran (North Star, June 23, 1970)
  • Newspaper clipping: "frankly speaking" by Bridget Moran (North Star, July 15, 1970)
  • Newspaper clipping: "A basic difference in attitude" by Bridget Moran (North Star, June 27, 1970)
  • Newspaper clipping: "frankly speaking" by Bridget Moran (North Star, Sept. 9, 1970)
  • Newspaper clipping: "frankly speaking" by Bridget Moran (North Star)
  • Newspaper clipping: "frankly speaking" by Bridget Moran (North Star, Aug. 19, 1970)
  • Newspaper clipping: "frankly speaking" by Bridget Moran (North Star, Sept. 23, 1970)
  • Newspaper clipping: "frankly speaking" by Bridget Moran (North Star, Oct. 29, 1970)
  • Newspaper clipping: "frankly speaking" by Bridget Moran (North Star, Oct. 22, 1970)
  • Newspaper clipping: "Native History Neglected, Ridiculed" by Bridget Moran (New Leaf, June 1971)
  • Newspaper clipping: "All About Welfare Bums" by Bridget Moran (New Leaf, August 1971)
  • Newspaper clipping: "B.C. Has Its Own Style of a Disaster" by Bridget Moran (date unknown)
  • Newspaper clipping: "The Reserve: Cradle or Coffin?" by Bridget Moran (The Citizen, Jan. 15, 1969)
  • Newspaper clipping: "The Demise of The Geriatric Square" by Bridget Moran (The Citizen, Nov. 28, 1968)
  • Newspaper clipping: "What is Your Preference: No Prejudice or No Food?" by Bridget Moran (date unknown)
  • Newspaper clipping: "frankly speaking" by Bridget Moran (North Star, July 29, 1970)
  • Handwritten letter to Allan Fotheringham (?) from Bridget Moran re: free-lance writing for the Vancouver Sun (date unknown)
  • Handwritten notes by Bridget Moran re: Home Acquisition Grant and affordable housing (date unknown)
  • Newspaper clipping: "Allan Fortheringham" (Vancouver Sun)
  • Newspaper clipping: "frankly speaking" by Bridget Moran (North Star, Aug. 26, 1970)
  • Newspaper clipping: "My Backbone Is Great And My Soul Is Rested" by Bridget Moran (Vancouver Sun, Mar. 11, 1967)
  • Newspaper clipping: "Horse radish in the corn flakes" by Bridget Moran (North Star, June 20, 1970)
  • Newspaper clipping: "Horse radish in the corn flakes" by Bridget Moran (North Star, June 20, 1970).
2008.3.1.144 · File · 1975-1995
Part of Bridget Moran fonds

File consists of:

  • Everywomans Books 20th Birthday Party Celebration, 1975-1995 featuring an advertisement for a reading Bridget Moran
  • "Together again..." by Martha Perkins, 2 pages (Haliburton County Echo, June 13, 1995)
  • "History: Manslaughter, then Justa for All" (B.C. Bookworld, Spring 1995).
2008.3.1.146 · File · [before 1994]
Part of Bridget Moran fonds

File consists of the proof copy of Justa: A First Nations Leader. This Arsenal Pulp Press proof copy was transferred to the Archives from the Geoffrey R. Weller Library. Along with this spiral bound proof copy came a postcard from Wendy at Arsenal Pulp Press addressed to Bob Harkins; the postcard reads as follows: "Bob Harkens[sic], I know you're talking to Bridget about medic (?). Here is a gallery of her new book. Let me know if you have any questions. Wendy" This proof copy, along with this postcard were included in this fonds as the proof was created by Bridget Moran and it was felt to have more merit if included in the Moran fonds, even though it was a copy presumably received by Bob Harkins.

Interviews with Justa Monk
2008.3.1.147 · File · 1992-1995
Part of Bridget Moran fonds

File consists of interview audio recordings conducted by Bridget Moran with Justa Monk. Access copies have been made of each taped interview onto Maxell UR 90 min. audiocassettes.

Justa Monk audio recording
2008.3.1.147.01 · Item · 1 Sept. 1992
Part of Bridget Moran fonds

Item is a recorded audio interview with Justa Monk.

Audiocassette Summary
SIDE 1
00:04 Moran asks Justa when and where he was born. In Fort St. James, Nov. 20, 1942 in his father’s home. Moran asks about Justa’s mother’s family and her relationship to Eddie John. His mother had a big family, 2-3 sisters, and quite a few brothers. She was from Portage and his dad was from Babine Lake. Both ended up in Tachie after meeting in Fort St. James and marrying in 1924. Their marriage was arranged: a long time ago that is how marriages were made. His parents were born in 1900 and married in 1924. His mother was married before and had one child but this first husband died. The child’s last name was Maurice. After getting married, his parents moved to Portage to work on his father’s farm acreage outside the reserve. When Justa went to Lejac in ’54, he was accused of being non-status by Dept. of Indian Affairs and tried to kick him and his brother out of Lejac because this farm was off reserve. In 1954 the Monks moved back to Tachie after all his older brothers and sisters got married in Tachie.

4:35 His parents lived away from Tachie for about 30 years. They moved back to Tachie after working in Fort St. James, Douglas Lodge and Nakalak Lodge on Stewart Lake. Bridget wondered who owned the lodge back then? Justa says it was owned by Harry McConnachie. Justa’s father worked at this lodge as a guide.

5:03 Justa was the baby of a family of 11. Justa was born in 1942, when his mother was 42. His mother was born Feb. 18, 1900, his Dad May 15, 1900: so they were both about same age. They were married 67 years. His Mom died March 17, 1992. She was still sewing slippers at age 92. Bridget Moran talks about taping Granny Seymour as part of her social work when she was 111-112 years old, and how Granny had sewn Bridget a tablecloth.

6:30 Justa stayed at Lejac for 4 years. He couldn’t read, or write or speak English when he first started school. When he first arrived he had to surrender his home clothes and asked his brother, in his own language, why they were taking his clothes. A priest, Father Clanahan hit him on the ear and told him not to use that language here. He never forgot that day. He stayed from ’52 to ’57 and left in September 1957. They didn’t want to let him go because he was one of the best hockey players at Lejac. He took off into bush and went to his auntie’s place. They chased him for 2 weeks steady. He left because he was sick and tired of 2 things: working all the time on the farm and not learning anything in school; and second, praying 10-20 times a day. The schoolchildren changed clothes on Sundays, into Sunday clothes: a sweater and a pair of pants to go to church. He has nothing against religion, he is a practicing Catholic, but he was made to pray too often at Lejac. One thing he found with Lejac, was that they taught him what was right and wrong – they disciplined the children. Lejac did discipline people, but they didn’t totally punish them (with physical force). He worked at Lejac after he quit school with Adrian Johnnie. They would work there for 3 weeks then return home for 5 weeks. This job didn’t provide high wages but it was work and he had money.

10:18 When Justa left Lejac, he worked at a mill. He was 14 and underage, so his brothers signed for him so he could work. When he left Lejac in 1957, his father told him to go back but he didn’t want to. Justa had RCMP officers after him but with his brothers’ help he kept hiding. When his dad knew Justa wasn’t going to return to school he told him that if he was man enough to quit school, he was man enough to be on your own and start work. So his parents moved back up to North Arm to the lodge, and left Justa in the Fort. He was underage, and couldn’t get a job, until his brothers Teddy and John signed a consent form for him to work in a mill. He worked in the mill for 7 years from ’57 to ‘63. From ‘63 on, he worked with his dad at Nakalak Lodge for another 7 years. He worked a lot around white society and then into the Indian nations.

11:45 Justa talks about his trouble with the law. In 1967 his brother John came over and asked him to come and drink with him. His dad told him twice not to go but Justa didn’t listen. They were drinking rum together and the last thing he remembered was playing record player on the table. Later that night, the cops came and picked him up. He asked them why they were picking him up. The cops asked him if he knew what had happened. He said he didn’t know what they were talking about. They then told him he had stabbed his brother. He didn’t believe them. They had to get one of his sisters to come and explain it to him. That was in ’67, he was about 20 years old. He took it rough. He did time for 6 months or so in Prince George. He wanted to commit suicide but had a 24-hr guard placed on him. The prison also had his lawyer and priest to come and talk to him. When he was released, he went home and his family accepted him back but he still felt awkward and had every intention of killing himself.

14:07 He went back to jail. He was told to stay away from the hotel. His friend went into this hotel, but Justa stayed outside about 50-60 feet away. A cop came by and told him he wasn’t supposed to be near that place. He asked him what was ‘near’ and the cop said about 50ft. Justa told the cop that he wasn’t going in, but the cop told him he was violating his parole anyway. He didn’t argue with the cop. He went back with his lawyer in front of the judge. Because he didn’t go into the hotel, he didn’t get charged with violating his parole, but was told he had to leave Fort St. James so he moved up to Dawson Creek and went back to school.

14:47 He stayed 1½ years in Dawson Creek to do his upgrading. He didn’t know anyone there. At that time he got $34/month for incidentals like cigarettes: room and board must have been paid for separately. Nowadays kids get something like $2,000 for going to school. It ($34) wasn’t much in ‘67-‘69. In ‘69 he got a letter from his brother Teddy saying their parents wanted him home. Justa had a common-law wife at that time. She had moved up to Dawson Creek with her kids. She had kids from another relationship. Life wasn’t easy then. He couldn’t get any part-time work. He had no choice but to move home after the letter from his brother. His parents were getting old. It wasn’t an easy life he lived.

16:10 From ‘67 on it was awkward. He didn’t know how he coped. Sometimes he just wanted to be alone. After he moved back home, he got a cabin on Stewart Lake - one his dad used to own. His dad transferred it over to him. He’d stay up there and just think about things. He had a lot of good jobs offered when he was young. When he was guiding, he had a guy from California offer him a guiding job in California. This guy said he would send Justa home twice a year to see his family. He was single then but he rejected this offer. In ‘70 when worked at BC Rail, they wanted him to move to Williams Lake and Kamloops to be a crane operator. He rejected them too because he wanted to be with his parents.

17:26 On Jan. 2, 1971 the band hired him as maintenance man. In ‘72 when the chief and staff there quit, they asked him to be band manager. He said he didn’t have the knowledge. They came back to his house twice, on the third time Justa agreed to give it a try but gave them no guarantees that he would stay. He said he didn’t know how he’d be an office boy when he was more an outdoors person, but he gave it a try and since then he has never looked back. From there Justa went from band manager for 14-15 years, to chief and band manager at times. When his brother (?) resigned as chief, he stepped in as chief and band manager. That was the toughest year he ever had. He was on nerve pills and sleeping pills. Dr. Mooney said if he didn’t slow down he was going to die. On June 14, 1986 when he broke out in rash again from bad nerves, he asked the council to let him off for 6 months or so for a rest - they wouldn’t let him, so he quit. He stayed home July and August and had no intention of working anywhere. He was going to go to his cabin and draw UIC. But on August 16, Eddie called him and told him he had to be in Prince George by August 18 as the Carrier Sekani Membership Assembly passed a motion and wanted to hire him as their General Manager. His wife said it was up to him, but she also suggested that he should take a year off. But he decided it was his own people picking him and he didn’t want to refuse them. So they moved down to P.G. and he was General Manager from August 1986 to July 1988 when the Tachie band wanted him back up there. When he moved back up to Tachie he was given the position of Coordinator for Teasely Forest Products, the sawmill they were building on the reserve. They also looked at him as Vice-chief, which he worked at part time on a volunteer basis from 1988-89. In 1989 he became Vice-chief and in July 1990 he was elected Tribal Chief which again meant he had to move down to P.G. for 2.5 to 3 years without his family. He was living out of motels for about a year.

21:44 He married his wife in 1972. She had 6 or 7 children from the previous marriage. She was a widow. They were going together before that. In ‘67 she had his child. Her name before marriage was Theresa Austin. They only had 1 child together but they adopted 1 girl and 1 boy. The girl was Theresa’s grandchild after Theresa’s daughter was killed. They legally adopted her when she was a few weeks old. Then Justa’s niece had a boy in Kamloops and wanted to give the boy away. He wanted a boy badly so he took the child.

23:12 Justa speaks of one of his daughters who was, at the time of the interview, being assessed for placement into College Heights Secondary in Prince George. She was supposed to go into grade 10 but as there was a lot of difference between reserve school in Tachie and public school in Prince George, she had to go for testing.

23:53 As Chief, Justa had a three part mandate: to educate the public about land claims, to work on land claims, and to stop Kemano II. Public education on land claims was a priority and he spoke to many organizations. However, his main focus at that time was Kemano II as it was going to destroy their way of life. The previous chief had done nothing about it for two years. Justa hired lawyers and started going to court. His lawyers lost the first round at court, won the second, and lost the third and that’s where it stood at the time of the interview. Other administrative priorities included: education, drop outs within the CSTC area, housing, social problems (drugs and alcohol). There was not just one issue, but many.

26:23 He never thought he would be in politics. He thought originally that he wanted to be either an RCMP officer, or to join the army. He never thought he’d be a chief. He went to a recruiting office, one of his friends was accepted. His knee was weak from previous sports injuries so he was rejected as was another one of his friends.

27:54 Justa has been working since he was 14. He was 49 at the time of the interview – that’s 35 years of his life spent steadily at work - except for 1 year when he went to school in Dawson Creek. Justa said the last 22 years were where the excitement was. From ‘71 to the present he’d seen lots of changes. In some cases better, in others worse. He gives for example the guidelines of the Department [of Indian Affairs?]. When reading the guidelines regarding housing and education the system has gotten worse – it has gotten stricter. Construction is also too costly now – you can’t build economical housing anymore. Communication with the department, however, has improved. Housing and social problems on reserve are now worse – more drugs, alcohol and free money. Justa stresses that social assistance is going to damage his people if they don’t do anything about it. His way of thinking proposes an alternative funding arrangement so the band can change the way social assistance is distributed so that his people can’t get money for free. The council would be able to make their people do something for the community in exchange for this money. Fort Nak'azdli band is doing that. The administrator there has brought welfare recipients down from 90% to 10%.

32:02 Bridget mentions it is her birthday today (69). She then tells Justa that they will have to talk about what he thinks (re: how to write the book). Justa says he wants to recollect everything. Bridget also mentions the wealth of information in the many journals he has kept over the years.

33:02 His time at Lejac was exciting for him. He was a favourite pupil at Lejac, because of his sports agility.

33:24 Bridget asked him if he had had trouble with alcohol. He says yes, that was the reason he got into trouble. He would work 5 days a week, but on weekends he would party with his brothers and a few friends. His parents worried he wouldn’t make it due to his partying. He started drinking at Lejac with stolen mass wine. Eventually he came to a point in his life when he was Band Manger where he wasn’t taking his leadership seriously. He would bring a thermos filled with beer and 3 packs of cigarettes to the office just to get through the day. After one of the elders talked to him about his self destructive ways, he began to think about his life. That was in 1984-85. So he started slowing down. As well, once his adopted little boy had grown up enough to see him drinking, he had told him to quit, so then he really started slowing down. And lastly, after he became Tribal Chief he knew he had to change his ways so he could be a positive role model for the young people. Quitting drinking was tough though as there were times he just wanted to drink, like when young people in his band died.

36:41 Bridget said she’ll write an outline of his life for her publishers to see what they think and then they can decide from that. She had his phone number and promised not to give it out to anyone else as it is unlisted. He mentioned he was going to go out hunting but his wife was always home. Bridget said she probably won’t tackle this project until the New Year as she had a new book coming out: A Little Rebellion. They could then work out an arrangement: 50% – 50% on royalties and he would have final say on what would go into the book. She told him he has to be prepared to really tell everything.

38:12 Tape ends mid sentence.

SIDE 2

45:50 Interview with Justa; Mary John and Theresa Monk are there too

46:11 Bridget asks about Joe Hansen, Justa Hansen’s brother. Joe was at Camp 24 – a mill camp where people from Ft. St. James would go to work in the summer and live in the shacks. Justa spent a weekend at this camp taking care of Joe Hansen when he was very old and dying of TB. His mouth used to dry out so badly, Justa would use bear grease on the outside and inside of his mouth, and that’s when Joe told him that in the future when he gets married he was going to have kids and be a leader. He told Justa he helps people; and never to laugh at the poor, or crippled or blind, and that if anyone else was laughing to just walk away and not to laugh with them because they will suffer later on. This is what the elders advised him. Many issues the elders talked to him about are now happening and are guiding him in his leadership. Jim (?) Joseph told him the same thing on his death bed. He told him in the future he was going to be a leader for a long time after he dies. Justa was named after Justa Hansen who was his godfather, and Justa Hansen used to tell Justa how to help people and what to do out in the bush. His elders spent a lot of time with him and shared their knowledge and wisdom with him. Some of the predictions – people dying out of alcohol is now what he’s seeing. Back in 1970, late 60’s, he was told in the future he would see young people from here to Ft. St. James dying out from alcohol. He is seeing this now. One of the biggest opportunities he had in life was to hang around with his elders: beginning in 1971 when he started working for the band.

51:00 His used to hang out with his elders (he lists many) and cut wood for them and give it to them free. The elders were just like parents to him and he was welcome everywhere with his elders.

52:13 Bridget asks if Justa will become chief here. Justa says he doesn’t know and that the young people around here have different ideas and don’t know what true leadership is. He presumes he will become chief but he can’t predict anything. Theresa: young people don’t look at what is good and what is bad. Bridget: do you think there is any real challenge to your leadership? Justa: there are some young people, but they don’t have leadership experience. He is positive he is going to get in. He’s received phone calls from chiefs asking him to be chief to his people part-time and then to also be tribal council chief part-time. He says staff is very important in any leadership, good staff listen to grassroots people. Same with leadership, they must listen to the grassroots people. With a good set of staff you don’t worry about anything.

54:48 He wants to complete the Kemano II deal. He made a commitment. On that basis he’s confused as to where he wants to be, he has a week to finalize his position. He knows if he runs as tribal chief he will get in. Archie Patrick supports his leadership and thinks he was the only one to keep people together. He also thought Justa really should have been given time off when he had asked for it. Justa talks about the deaths in his family that had caused him to quit the tribal council when he did in May (‘92?) Justa believes with the right set of staff he could do it.

56:37 Bridget: She has heard from so many native people and elders that until there is healing for the residential school experience, the other social problems won’t be solved. Justa doesn’t believe this to be true. The social problems exist regardless. As of 1992 the younger generation has no discipline, no clear direction, it is hard to talk to them without them swearing back at you. He cannot blame Lejac – there was some good and some bad. You look around today at the guys in leadership and they were all from Lejac. The social problems, you measure it from the time we left Lejac the social problems weren’t there. There was no real alcohol problems- just a few of us, no suicide, not as many deaths as today. People have put it in their minds that Lejac is where the social problems started from. He wouldn’t use Lejac as an excuse. It isn’t just Lejac though, some residential schools may have been worse. He was there for 4 years and only got punished once for something he didn’t do.

1:00:06 The beginnings of solutions for social problems: substance abuse, violence, suicide start with elders, the parents and the youth themselves. If he becomes chief, there is going to be an elders council and a youth council and they are going to work together with the chief and councillors. That is the start. Together they will search for solutions. Elders to share what they went through. He has many elders that can do this - if he can get them out of bingo! He has the 5-6 youths too. He would take 2 youths who are into substance abuse, 2 from the school and 1 from an urban area and tell them to make a 1 year commitment to talk about social problems and listen to the elders and bring them to meetings and make them sit there and listen. They would then go back and share what they learned with their friends and other students.

1:04:08 Bridget: Speaks to and about Mary John’s work with her people in Stoney Creek to deal with alcoholism in her community. Mary dealt with it from family to family but got burnt out. Justa: that’s why you have to work with the councillors, you can’t just depend on the elders as it will burn them out. Mary: you have to work with the councillors. Mary and Justa talk about trouble in Stoney Creek with the Council, and how you have to listen to your elders. Eddie has also never used the elders. Change must come from elders - sharing of the past and the intention of the future. Chief and councillors must be right there too as they are the chosen leaders. Eddie John is current chief. Mary: Eddie just has title of chief but is never here. (not heard: ? is acting as chief) Justa: he’s not feeling well he just had cancer and is very tired still from the treatment.

1:07:56 The local school on reserve teaches Carrier culture – they teach language and potlatch. Justa was not sure if they were still doing it. When he was band manager they started it and they would ask him to come watch the little kids hold a little potlatch. He really enjoyed that. They’ve done a lot in regards to whole culture. He used to get money for elders to teach children how to do skins.

1:08:57 Justa receives a phone call and speaks Carrier. Bridget speaks to Theresa and Mary in background.

1:09:54 From 1967-69 Justa went back to school in Dawson Creek to upgrade but hasn’t been back since. He is more a self taught politician. He has learnt from reading. That’s why there is so much difference in leadership nowadays. You take a young person coming out of school or college and they think they come home to be chief and change the world overnight. He worked at the grassroots level first, he was maintenance man first, then band manager, then chief and then tribal chief. He started at the grassroots level and that is why his intention is to improve grassroots support. He doesn’t impose on his people, they have to tell him what they want. He may only advise on how things might work better in the future.

1:11:40 Because of his broad experiences, he is going to hold a workshop for new councillors on leadership and responsibility, how to listen and respond to things. He’s going to do this when he is chief or tribal chief again.

1:012:21 There are 15,000 people in Carrier Sekani, 22 occupied communities, and 14 bands.

1:13:08 He likes to work, he’s used to it. Ever since he was 14. He remembers when he ran away from the bus in September that was to take him back to school from Fort St. James. His dad told him if he was man enough to quit school he was man enough to work. That’s when he made up his mind to work.

1:14:09 Before Lejac he lived in Portage. He really enjoyed this life. They didn’t have anything fancy, even sweets were rare. Since 5, he remembers hanging around his dad who had a farm and would help him from 4 o’clock in the morning. He loved driving the horses to plow the garden. His dad taught him a lot about surviving in the bush and what not to touch and what to touch. His dad told him not to chop trees, if you need it, if it’s dry use it. His elders told him don’t touch anything you don’t need.

1:15:47 He was the youngest in the family. The next sibling to him was his brother Teddy who was about 2 years older. He got shot. He went on an island from Tachie to pick up his cheque from a guy who had a guiding outfit. This was just after Justa returned home from Dawson Creek after receiving a letter from Teddy asking him to come home to be with his aging parents. Teddy went out and didn’t come back, he was in his 20s.

1:17:42 Justa didn’t get to Lejac until he was 10 years old as his Dad didn’t want to send him. There was a guy - Lee Cochran, DIA – he and an RCMP member talked to his dad and told him Justa had to go. Most of his siblings went to school at Lejac for 1-2 years. Jimmy the eldest didn’t go to school at all. Bridget: By 7 most children were sent to school or had the church and cops after them. Mary: Maybe because Justa was a bit more isolated in his community he was left alone awhile longer. Justa was up in Portage and you could only get up by boat and if the water was rough you couldn’t get up at all.

1:19:08 Justa had a very good childhood. His mom and dad were both very gentle people. He was never hungry. He didn’t have fancy clothes like he’s got nowadays but he never went naked. He also had very good experience at Lejac compared to other people. He was the leader of the boys. He would lead them to class, or to the dinning room. That’s when his leadership started. The school principal and priest chose him to do that job and he got paid $1/week. Mary: also had a good experience at Lejac, although she was homesick and hungry. Justa was homesick during the first year as he didn’t know the language. He had to depend on his brother Teddy and other friends. After that he was fine. It didn’t bother him to go back. But in his fifth year, when he was going into grade 7, he was 14 and his brothers convinced him he didn’t have to go back so he didn’t.

1:21:40 He wonders If he did complete his school if he’d be another Indian lawyer running around. Justa always wanted to be in RCMP or join the army. In 1962 he went to Vancouver to enlist but wasn’t accepted because of a bad knee.

1:22:09 When he was working in P.G. Justa missed Tachie very much. So he would often get up early and work late – because if he was busy he was occupied and not so homesick for his family. He never appreciated living in a city much. For last 5 years, there had been talk about moving the CSTC tribal office to Stoney Creek or Vanderhoof but every time this was brought up there were some reasons why couldn’t move office: airport in PG and resource people in PG. Justa doesn’t agree and believes Vanderhoof to be the centre point for their people. City life doesn’t suit him. Bridget comments on how the house he shares with Archie in PG is very different than his home in Tachie.

1:24:48 Bridget: They will have to keep in touch. She asks him if he still wants a book written about him? She tells him to talk to Mary as a book changes your life a bit.

1:25:05 Mary: She says it does, but she likes to have more people getting these stories.
[Break in conversation due to stopping of tape recorder? Conversation resumes mid-sentence. Perhaps they are speaking of the watchmen?]

1:25:16 Justa: His auntie’s husband would check every house once and awhile. Sylvester Basil was an orphan who used to stay with Justa’s parents, but he always wanted to be mischievous and make home brew. His sisters didn’t like home brew and he didn’t like it, and they didn’t want to see their parents drink either... So these guys would chop up their tents. They never did answer them but used to be really scared of them. The church chief used to work together. Mary: Lazare is a Church chief now. Church chief’s look after the spiritual part of the people. Theresa: like a church leader. Justa – they talk in church about what is wrong and right and how to trust in the Lord.

1:27:02 Justa doesn’t drink at all now. He had too much in younger days. He had a couple of beers on the Easter Monday after his mom died. Before that it was 3 years ago. Prior to that he had been slowing down 5-6 years earlier maybe more. When he was chief and band manager and used to drink in the early 80s it got to him so badly he would bring a thermos of beer to the office. That was the only way he could keep us his energy. He came to realize it was harming him.

1:28:50 He used to receive many complaints as band manager. He kept daily diaries, where he would write down these complaints but identify the complainant. Bridget wanted him to dig them out. By winter Justa should know if he’s chief, tribal chief or nothing. He wants to share his abilities with all his people, not just this community. If he gets back in, he’s going to start a youth conference using the elders. Bridget: In society’s that have recovered it was the use of the elders that had done it.
1:30:40 Wendy Grant (Musqueum Band – Vice chief of BC) told him sad story up at Nakalak Lodge last summer, when they were talking about the future of how they were going to take over the DIA and self government. The story was about how her band and her community totally lost their culture…

1:31:11 End of tape mid sentence.

Justa – Tape 2
2008.3.1.147.02 · Item · Jan. 1993
Part of Bridget Moran fonds

Item is a recorded audio interview with Justa Monk.

Audiocassette Summary

00’10” Bridget Moran interviews Justa Monk. They discuss the ancestry of his last name and its original spelling, Monck. Moran wants to know more about Monk’s genealogy. She tells Justa his family history will be a chapter in the book.

08’ 45” Justa discusses how his ancestors move around on the land for hunting purposes. Moran wants to know more about gardens.

10’ 19” The interview returns to Justa’s family history, particularly the arranged marriage between his mother and father.

12’ 33” Moran asks about Justa’s immediate family. Justa talks about his brothers and sisters.

16’ 54” Justa talks about alcoholism with his brothers and sisters, and with other families.

20’ 10” Moran returns to asking about Justa’s brothers and sisters. Justa talks about one of his brothers being shot and killed; mentions the name of the man who killed his brother. Justa talks about his nephew getting shot by the RCMP.

27’ 54” Moran asks Justa about the relationship between him and his siblings. He talks about being the one who is reliable; has strong leadership skills, even though he is the youngest child.

30’ 50” Moran asks about Justa’s mother. She loved going to potlatches, did a lot of sewing. She was a very quiet and religious person. Justa’s father was the same, very outspoken. Justa tells Moran he is close to all of his brothers and sisters after she asks which he is closest. When Justa was 5 years old, he spent a lot of time with his father, where he learned to hunt by the age of 7.

34’ 20” Moran asks about Justa’s housing when he was growing up. He tells her his family had a large house, but there were no bedrooms, so they had different corners where they would sleep. They had a large garden outside of their home.

39’ 20” Justa talks about how isolated Portage was, so they had to grow their own food.

40’ 41” Moran asks about churches. Justa tells her there was a church and a priest came into Portage once in a while.

41’ 10” Moran asks about what Justa remembers about Christmas. He remembers getting dressed up and going to church to sing hymns.

43’ 02” Moran asks Justa which of his brothers and sisters went to school. Justa says his sisters were not punished or abused. His brothers enjoyed school. His brothers and sisters were not allowed to speak their language, and this was their only disappointment. Justa talks about his experiences at school; he quit school and tried to get a job.

50’ 24” Moran asks about when Justa moved from Portage to Tachie.

52’ 34” Moran asks about Justa trying to get a job at such a young age. He got a job with his brothers at a sawmill in Fort St. James.

55’ 33” Justa says he was born in 1943. Moran asks about when he met Theresa, his wife. They began their common-law relationship in 1966.

57’ 13” Moran asks about how long Justa was in jail. He served 9 months and was released on parole.

1:02’ 53” Justa talks about being unemployed and broke. Theresa came to visit him at camp where she stayed for 6 or 7 months. He talks about getting married later on in their relationship. Moran asks about where Theresa is from. Theresa is from Tachie but he did not know her growing up. Moran asks about Theresa’s background.

1:08’27” Justa talks about his many girlfriends, partying, and being a womanizer. Theresa and him got ‘serious’ after she had their daughter.

1:11’ 24” Moran ends the interview. She tells Justa they will change the pace for the next interview by discussing land claims. Moran asks Justa about running for chief. He lost the first time he ran.

1:14’28” Moran asks Justa about Kemano. Back in 1948, Kemano I was created. The Indian Agent came to the reserves for signatures so the Kemano project could go ahead. Justa says the people did not have time to move their things when the flooding began. People were misled with regards to what the Kemano project was about. People on the reserves were moved to Grassy Plains – they were spread out, not the same community as they were. In 1982, First Nations people began to fight back against Kemano II. Justa was a district chief.

1:24’ 48” Justa discusses the need for an environmental assessment for the Kemano project. The case to the Supreme Court and are currently waiting for the decision. The provincial government claims there is no need for environmental assessment and are planning to go forward with the project. Justa discusses the commission and the Kemano case, in general.

1:30’ 07” End of tape.

Justa – Tape 3
2008.3.1.147.03 · Item · Jan. 1993
Part of Bridget Moran fonds

Item is a recorded audio interview with Justa Monk.

Audiocassette Summary

00’ 10” Continuation of Tape 2. Justa discusses the review of the Kemano project. He wants a public review where there is First Nations representation. He is frustrated by the lack of a working relationship and being recognized as a leader.

03’ 29” Their way of life is damaged from the flooding. Graveyards were flooded in the 1940s. Fishing grounds will never be the same. Kemano II will do the same damage to a narrower piece of land. Seven communities will be affected, particularly Stoney Creek, because there will be no more fishing grounds.

08’ 27” They are doing this for more electricity, not for the aluminum. BC Hydro made a deal with Alcan for a bigger reservoir. Moran asks Justa if BC Hydro is the ‘imp in the woodpile.’ Justa tells her there is a three-party agreement between Alcan, BC Hydro, and the provincial government. He tells her the project will not go ahead because he believes the Supreme Court will rule in their favour.

15’ 05” Moran mentions Mary John saying that everything the First Nations ‘ever got they had to fight for.’ They briefly discuss Oka. Justa returns to discussing the Kemano II project.

16’ 53” Moran asks Justa about the Aluminum Company of Canada.

17’ 49” They both talk about the Indian Agent that would not let First Nations people in his home. They both relay their disgust with a specific Indian Agent.

18’ 41” Moran asks Justa about the Carrier-Sekani land claims. He discusses having to revisit the boundary lines. Justa talks about an agreement he signed on September 21, 1992, where there would be proper representation for the First Nations people.

26’ 30” Justa discusses the ‘potlatch law’ which he describes as ‘love, share, and respect.’ He talks about how he often gets a good response from groups he teaches.

34’ 51” Moran tells Justa how she was contacted by the Stoney Creek Band regarding how they collected several stories that are unreadable. They have asked Moran to somehow transcribe them properly.

36’ 37” Moran asks Justa about the Kemano II decision from the Supreme Court. He talks about how he is disappointed in the decision, but said he expected it because the government has rarely ruled in favour of First Nations issues.

43’ 16” Justa tells Moran that he was written a letter to President Bill Clinton and Vice-President Al Gore extending an open invitation to see the damage the Kemano II project has done to the environment.

45’ 03” Moran asks Justa when he returned to Tachie to work. He discusses his work there. In 1969, he began work at BC Rail. He moved to Dawson Creek with Theresa and their family.

51’ 09” Moran asks Justa about returning to the village of Tachie, particularly with the trouble that had happened with his brother. He talks about how the elders believed that everything would work out and how many of his achievements relate to that philosophy.

54’ 37” Moran asks Justa about his maintenance work for BC Rail. He describes his position in detail.

59’ 44” Moran asks Justa about the great gardens his father had grown, but this has stopped because of the road. He talks about bringing in television to the community. He talks about when hydro came into the community in the early 1970s. He talks about the water and sewage system being implemented in the mid-1970s.

1:05’ 10” Justa talks about when he became band manager in 1973. He describes his position. Moran asks about the difference between band manager and chief. Justa describes the difference.

1:13’ 21” Moran asks about whether or not Justa had to deal with Indian Agents or the DIA during that time. He describes his band manager position further as being a marriage counsellor, policeman, secretary, a bouncer, and always trying to make peace within the community. He talks about the pressure of the position, and how it made his alcoholism worse, how he was on sleeping and nerve pills.

1:21’ 31” Moran asks about the population of Tachie. She asks about the location of Grand Rapids.

1:22’ 33” Justa talks about becoming chief in 1975, but also kept the band manager position. He discusses in detail about being both, particularly with social issues. He talks about how parties often ended up in some accident ie a little girl getting shot.

1:28’ 34” Moran asks about the isolation of the community. Justa discusses calling for a boat or a plane to evacuate someone in case of an emergency.

1:30’ 10” End of tape.

Justa – Tape 4
2008.3.1.147.04 · Item · Mar. 1993
Part of Bridget Moran fonds

Item is a recorded audio interview with Justa Monk.

Audiocassette Summary

00’ 10” Justa talks about getting together a memorandum of understanding regarding boundaries for fishing grounds. Justa has also been discussing land claims with the provincial government. He talks about setting up the future for the younger generation. He says a fair land claim settlement would be the granting of traditional grounds.

5’ 27” Moran asks about the Save The River campaign.

6’ 14” Moran inquires about the diaries Justa is supposed to bring her. Justa wants to talk about his childhood. He feels his youth was better than the youth of today because they are given everything.

11’ 06” Moran asks about Justa’s life in Portage and to describe a day he remembers from his time there before going to residential school. He talks about not being allowed out after dark and being respectful of other people’s property. He discusses being disciplined by talking about what was right and wrong.

15’ 15” Justa talks about his time in residential school and how he was not allowed to speak his native language. He was shocked by the corporal punishment. Moran and Justa discuss about putting this in the book or not. He talks about not having any privacy in the residential school.

21’ 55” They return to discussing the personal details of Justa’s life in Portage, such as eating porridge for breakfast. Moran and Justa discuss fishing and hunting, and the times of the year he would be away from home.

27’ 55” Moran asks Justa about a day at the residential school. He talks about how he refused to buy a Bible. He participated in sports in his second year. He talks about the food and having to take cod liver oil. He talks about being a hockey player. He talks about the time he broke his leg at the residential school.

37’ 51” Moran asks Justa about which of his sisters would be willing to talk to her. They begin to talk about Justa’s philandering and how he had a lot of fun during that time. He talks about cheating on Theresa, but they stayed together. They continue to talk about his sex life. He talks about his relationship with Theresa. He talks about his daughter, Sharon.

47’ 00” Moran wants to talk about the trauma of John, his brother who was murdered. He tells Moran that was the time he started to turn his life around. They talk about his time in jail.

48’ 18” Moran starts the interview with Theresa, Justa’s wife. Moran asks Theresa about her personal details. She talks about her family past. She got married to get away from her parents, who were her adoptive parents.

52’ 40” Moran asks Theresa about going to residential school and how her parents would not allow it because they wanted to teach other responsibilities. Theresa talks about how some of her responsibilities were hunting beavers.

59’ 30” Theresa starts talking about how she found out she was adopted. She discusses her real brothers and sisters and how several of them passed away from tuberculosis. She talks about how she is close to her adoptive mother. Theresa does not know why she was adopted out.

1:05” 57” Moran asks Theresa about residential school. Theresa says she could not speak English, so was punished for speaking her native language. She says there was no corporal punishment against her. She talks about getting tuberculosis and getting transferred to a hospital where she stayed for eighteen months. She learned how to speak English while at the hospital.

1: 14’ 57” Theresa talks about getting married at the age of 18 in 1948. Theresa gets tuberculosis again in 1956, so was placed in a sanatorium. She returns to talking about her former husband and how he treated her poorly. He was sent to jail for about two years for assaulting Theresa.

1: 26’ 50” Theresa talks about how difficult it was to obtain money for her and the children.

1: 27’ 54” Moran asks about how she met Justa. She says she always liked him and thought he looked cute. She began to go out with Justa in the 1960s. She moved to Dawson Creek to be with Justa when he was released from jail.

1:33’ 35” End of tape.

2008.3.1.147.05 · Item · 17 Aug. 1993
Part of Bridget Moran fonds

Item is a audio interview recorded by Bridget Moran with Jimmy, Rosie, Nancy, and Madeline.

Audiocassette Summary

00’ 05” Continuation of interview with Jimmy. Jimmy says his grandfather is French, not German, like Justa thinks. Moran and Jimmy continue to talk about the history of his grandparents. Jimmy continues to talk about his family history. They talk about the history of their last name, Monk.

12’ 08” Interview changes to Rosie. Moran asks Rosie about her siblings and other family history. Moran asks about the history of their last name, Monk. She believes her descendants are French. They continue to talk about her family history.

19: 22” Moran asks Rosie about the time Justa murdered John. Rosie talks about the situation candidly. She talks about John’s family life.

26’ 30” Moran asks Rosie about attending residential school. Rosie says school was alright for her, that they looked after them. She came home after six years.

28’ 30” Rosie talks about traveling around with her father because he worked many different jobs.

29’ 55” Rosie talks about getting married, how she got to choose her own partner, instead of having it arranged. She discusses her children.

32’ 05” Moran asks if Rosie had a good childhood. Rosie says yes, but her parents were strict. She remembers her father having to pay a land tax because they did not live on reserve land. She continues to talk about her childhood.

37’ 16” Rosie talks about life in residential school. Nancy says the nuns were kind; that they had to punish them if they spoke their native language.

38’ 50” Interview changes to Nancy. Moran asks about the history of their last name, Monk. They talk about her family history.

45’ 43” Moran asks Nancy about the time Justa killed his brother, John. Nancy talks about what she can remember.

47’ 32” Moran asks Nancy about the death of her brother, Teddy. She tells Moran the story she was told by the police.

49’ 34” Moran asks Nancy when she went to residential school. Nancy talks about having convulsions, so only spent two years there, then came home. When she was feeling better, she went back for another two years. She said her time there was not that bad, but she was homesick and lonely.

53’ 16” Moran asks Nancy if she had a good childhood. Nancy tells her she did, that they did everything for their parents.

56’ 07” Interview changes to Madeline. Moran asks about the history of their last name, Monk. Madeline does not know much about it. They continue to talk about the history of the family.

1:02’ 45” Madeline tells Moran about how she knocked Justa out with a block of ice because he was teasing her when they were children. Justa was a big tease, she says. Madeline says that Justa collected a box full of ‘treasure.’

1:09’ 10” Moran asks Madeline about her mother and how much she sewed for other people.

1: 10’ 44” Moran asks about when Madeline went to residential school. She tells Moran that she liked it there. Those who went there have discipline, she says.

1: 12’ 55” Madeline tells Moran that her parents were strict. She talks about being punished when breaking the rules, much like being at the residential school. They return to discussing residential school.

1: 17’ 55” Moran asks Madeline about what she remembers about the trips between Portage and Fort St. James. She talks about traveling by canoe once with her grandfather.

1: 20’ 33” Moran tells Madeline what she plans to write about in the book, particularly the first chapter dealing with the family history and life before the road being built to Portage.

1: 23’ 25” They return to talking about the family history, including aunts. They talk about her siblings.

1:30’ 07” Moran asks about Justa Hanson, the man Justa was named after. He was living in Tachie at the time Justa was born.

1:32’ 40” End of tape.

Justa – Tape 5
2008.3.1.147.06 · Item · 18 Aug. 1993
Part of Bridget Moran fonds

Item is a audio interview recorded by Bridget Moran with Justa Monk.

Audiocassette Summary

00’ 10” Moran asks Justa about living ‘three lives.’ Justa discusses the three phases of his life – childhood, getting in trouble, and being in a leadership role.

03’ 10” Moran asks Justa to discuss his older brother John. Justa talks about John and his personality and his relationships.

07’ 35” Justa discusses the trouble he got into with John. Justa does not remember what started the fight, because no one wanted to tell him what had happened. Justa does not remember killing his brother, but discusses how he wanted to commit suicide after finding out the truth. Justa also talks about his jail time.

24’ 14” Justa talks about his move to Dawson Creek to do upgrading. He still had the intention of Justa talks about adopting his niece.

26’ 03” They return to discussing Justa’s committing suicide. He felt guilty about taking his brother’s life. They also discuss his alcoholism.

35’ 25” Moran asks Justa about how he felt about being Indian or being treated as a second-class citizen. Justa says he is proud to be Indian.

38’ 35” Justa talks about being slapped as punishment for using his native language at school. He talks about kissing a girl and getting caught. He talks about his other punishments at residential school, and how he got tired of a specific teacher. He continues to discuss the school and assimilation into the ‘white world.’

53’ 35” Moran asks about the name he was named after, Justa Hansen, who was from Tachie. Justa talks about how Hansen was an important leader of the community.

55’ 52” Moran asks about ‘Indian’ food, such as deer, bear meat and salmon. He loves this type of food dried.

58’ 49” Moran asks Justa when he became tribal chief. He talks about the history of the position and how he became the tribal chief.

1: 03’ 30” Moran asks about Justa’s father’s potlatch. He talks about his parents’ death.

1: 07’ 17” End of tape.

Justa – Tape 6
2008.3.1.147.07 · Item · 11 July 1993
Part of Bridget Moran fonds

Item is a audio interview recorded by Bridget Moran with Justa Monk.

Audiocassette Summary

00’ 10” Moran asks Justa to identify reserves on a map. Moran tells Justa she wants to start the book with the history of reserves Justa lived in or around. Justa was born in Fort St. James. Moran asks what he wants to name the book.

05’ 10” Justa talks about how long it took to get from place to place when he was a child. He talks about what types of transportation was used in the different seasons. He also discusses how the way of life changed when the road was built between Fort St. James and the other reserves. Moran suggests the road was bittersweet because of the loss of community.

25’ 30” Justa is concerned about the loss of Indian culture to younger generations, so speaks his language often. He also worries about the dependency First Nations have on modern conveniences, so have forgotten how to live off the land.

33’ 56” Moran asks how Justa feels about ‘culture camps.’

38’ 25” Moran asks Justa which clans are in Tachie, where he names several.

40’ 05” Moran tells Justa she has been reading his diaries and how she feels he is being killed by meetings once he became band manager. Justa says the meetings are beneficial to teaching himself what he needs to know.

42’ 35” Justa talks about his nervous breakdown because of the amount of meetings he had to attend, which he averages at about one thousand a year.

43’ 36” Moran asks Justa what the central concerns were for Tachie. Justa tells her hydro, sewage, telephone and cable services, and schools. Justa talks about the schools, in particular.

49’ 46” Justa talks about the new band manager of Tachie.
50’ 09” Moran asks about the Kemano Project. Justa tells her there are lot of uncertainties, but he is not sure what they are at the moment. Justa thinks the government will go ahead with Kemano II regardless of what the public think.

57’ 27” Justa talks to Moran about the qualities of being a leader. His father told him he was too radical to be leader and had to respect other people’s opinions and nationalities to be successful. People are more supportive of his ideas now.

1: 00’ 50” End of tape.

Theresa – Tape 7
2008.3.1.147.08 · Item · 12 July 1993
Part of Bridget Moran fonds

Item is a audio interview recorded by Bridget Moran with Justa Monk.

Audiocassette Summary

00’ 10” Moran asks Theresa about when she first started living with Justa. They discuss the beginning of their relationship. Theresa discusses her former husband, how she began drinking because of his abuse. She says Justa made her settle down.

11’ 22” Moran asks Theresa about the things her and Justa do together. She says they garden. She says he looks after her well, but in the past Justa ‘slapped her around’ when they were drinking. Theresa talks about her past with alcoholism and how it affected her relationship with Justa.

18’ 30” Moran asks about when Justa and Theresa got married. Theresa talks about the wedding. Theresa talks about how Justa’s parents initially did not accept her, but they eventually started to treat her well when they saw Justa and her were doing well.

21’ 35” Moran asks Theresa about her children. Theresa discusses them all individually. Two of her daughters were killed.

31’ 45” Moran asks Theresa about going to Tachie for salmon fishing. Theresa talks about the process of fishing from the shore. Theresa also talks about hunting and preparing for the winter.

37’ 45” Moran tells Theresa no names will be mentioned in the book, such as the last name of her first husband.

37’ 59” Moran asks Theresa why she thinks alcoholism is such a problem on the reserves nowadays.

42’ 59” End of tape.

Justa – Tape 7
2008.3.1.147.09 · Item · 30 July 1993
Part of Bridget Moran fonds

Item is a audio interview recorded by Bridget Moran with Justa Monk.

Audiocassette Summary

00’ 10” Moran asks about when the roads were built to Tachie. Justa talks about the length of time it took to get to work from Tachie to Portage before the roads were built. After some people drowned, the pressure was put on the Department of Indian Affairs to build a road. Justa talks about his trips before the road was built.

07’ 42” Moran asks about why Tachie was not built around Stuart Lake but at the mouth of the creek. Justa gives a brief history of Tachie.

09’ 20” Moran asks Justa about the history of his father, particularly what his jobs were.

11’ 01” Moran asks Justa what Camp 24 is, where his mother and father stayed at times. It was a camp owned by the Roman Catholic Church where people could stay while they worked in the bush. Justa says the camp was more of a settlement. Moran and Justa continue to talk about the living conditions of Camp 24.

16’ 47” Moran asks Justa about his father’s mother. Justa never met his grandmother, even though his father continued to visit her. They continue to talk about the history of Justa’s parents.

20’ 10” Moran tells Justa she has heard there are no more gardens in Tachie today. Justa tells Moran that people no longer live off the land and that is why the gardens no longer exist. Justa says he feels lucky that he was able to experience life by living off the land. Moran asks about how home brew is made. Justa gives a list of the ingredients and how it needed to sit for twenty-four hours before being able to drink it.

25’ 00” Moran asks Justa about what his first memories of Fort St. James were. He talks about his childhood memories and his first experience in driving in a vehicle.

29’ 58” Moran asks Justa about how many families are in Portage. Fifteen to twenty are there, which Justa says is bigger than when he was growing up. There is a problem of over-crowding with about 300 people living there.

31’ 14” Justa talks about going into the cellar to collect stuff for his mother, such as jams. He talks about how his parents never ate any canned food, and always continued to live off the land. Justa continues to talk about the relationship between his parents and how happy they were together, how they rarely argued. When his mother passed away, his father passed away shortly after because he stopped taking care of himself.

36’ 44” Moran asks Justa about fishing. Justa talks about fishing from a reef in the fall. Justa would smoke the fish in a tent that other people had set up. He talks about living off the land, where nothing was wasted. In the winter, he would ice-fish.

41’ 00” Justa talks about how he enjoys going back to the old way of life and is looking forward to finishing his leadership position, so he can return to the old ways. He talks about rehabilitating his mind and body because he is burning out from his busy schedule.

43’ 06” Moran asks if she can talk to Justa’s sisters and a friend of his family. Justa tells her that his sisters are looking forward to speaking to her. They talk about the benefits of aging.

47’ 08” End of tape.

Tachie – Tape 1
2008.3.1.147.10 · Item · 16 Aug. 1993
Part of Bridget Moran fonds

Item is a audio interview recorded by Bridget Moran with Justa Monk's family members.

Audiocassette Summary

00’ 05” Moran is talking to Justa’s sister, Adelle. She says the old way of life is better than life today. They talk about the lack of gardens in Tachie today.

02’ 45” Adelle talks about the family history, particularly her father. She talks about their way of life when they were children. Adelle continues to talk about her past.

08’ 40” Adelle talks about the residential school and how she was upset she was when she was sent there. She talks about being punished for speaking their native language. She was at the residential school until the age of sixteen.

12’ 13” Moran asks Adelle about what she remembers about fishing. She talks about the process of fishing.

13’ 22” Adelle talks about her individual history. She talks about not getting married at all because she could not marry the man she wanted. She talks about getting tuberculosis and being in the hospital for a year. When she was released from the hospital, she moved in with a man who was abusive towards her. She talks about leaving him and moving to Prince George, eventually.

18’ 56” Adelle talks about how it was beneficial that her parents were strict. She continues to talk about her childhood, particularly Christmas.

24’ 36” Moran and Adelle talk about when Justa killed his brother. Adelle tells Moran that Justa looked after his brother’s children after he was released from prison.

26’ 08” Moran asks Adelle about whether she drank or not. Adelle says when she moved to Prince George she began to drink heavily.

27’ 35” Moran asks Theresa about the time her and Justa got married. Adelle tells Moran that Justa was the baby of the family and how his siblings ‘babied’ him, hence why his mother was so upset when he married Theresa.

31’ 00” Interview changes to Theresa’s mother. Theresa’s mother speaks in her native language most of the time and Theresa translates. They talk about her past, particularly where and when she was born. They talk about how many families lived in Tachie.

40’ 13” Moran asks about whether Theresa’s mother went to Fort St. James often before the road was built. When they went to Fort St. James, by horse, they would buy some groceries.

43’ 04” They continue to talk about Theresa’s mother’s past.

47’ 33” Moran interviews Jimmy, Justa’s brother. She begins by asking him with the road being built. He tells her life was better in the old days because it was cheaper.

50’ 10” Moran asks about the family history. Jimmy lists the siblings from oldest to youngest.

52’ 05” Jimmy tells Moran that he did not go to the residential school because his grandfather would not let him. Jimmy needed to work for the family because he was the oldest. He talks about everything being done by hand.

58’ 00” Moran asks Jimmy about the type of house that his parents lived in when he was born. He talks about his childhood and his way of life. He talks about helping building a house with his father that had no rooms.

1: 02” 53” Moran asks Jimmy when he got married. Jimmy talks about his wife’s family, particularly his father-in-law, who Justa was named after.

1: 04’ 58” Moran asks Jimmy his memories about living in Portage. He tells her he was a bad kid. He also talks about the trips he took to the surrounding areas. He tells her it was a hard life, but there were good things.

1:10’ 35” Moran asks Jimmy about any memories he has of Justa as a kid. Jimmy tells her that even as a kid, Justa was pretty smart. Jimmy would take him to collect hay. Justa was called the baby and was spoiled too much.

1: 13’ 09” Moran asks Jimmy where he was when Justa got in trouble with his brother. Jimmy said he had a feeling something bad was going to happen, so decided to go home. He talks about when he was told about the murder. Moran continues to ask about the situation, but Jimmy tells her he is still not sure what happened between Justa and John.

1:25’ 03” Jimmy talks about making his store bigger at the pressure of Indian Affiars, but it was too much to keep operating, so now there is only a store that sells junk food.

1:28’ 47” Jimmy talks about the loss of two of his children. He continues to discuss his children.

1: 34’ 36” End of tape.

2008.3.1.147.11 · Item · 22 Nov. 1993
Part of Bridget Moran fonds

Item is a audio interview recorded by Bridget Moran with Justa Monk.

Audiocassette Summary

00’ 10” Moran is talking to Theresa, Justa’s wife. Moran asks her what Corpus Christi means. Theresa tells her it is a place where First Nations people from the area planted trees in a big circle. It was a prayer circle where the bishop would say mass.

05’ 10” Moran asks Theresa about Sports Day in Fort St. James, which was more like a rodeo.

06’ 17” Moran is now talking to Justa. Moran asks Justa about trips to Babine Lake that Jimmy previously mentioned. Justa does not remember the trips, but he imagines they were very cold.

09’ 17” Moran asks Justa about the store Jimmy used to run. Justa tells Moran the store was operating on the store credit, hence the downfall of the business. They continue to talk about opening a store in Tachie that is operated by someone with a strong business mind.

13’ 37” Moran asks Justa about a family member from Burns Lake that his sisters previously mentioned. Justa tells her that the family member is an aunt.

14’ 34” Moran asks Justa about the residential school. She enquires about his ability to play hockey. Justa never wore skates until he attended residential school.

16’ 03” Moran asks Justa about fishing with a safety pin. He tells her that one Indian can eat anything.

16’ 53” They return to talking about residential school and if Justa had ever returned. He went back when he was forty-five to visit the area.

18’ 34” Moran asks about the house his family used to live in. Justa is not sure about his brother’s story regarding the Hudson’s Bay Company. He is sure that the house they lived in was built byt heir family.

21’ 01” Moran asks about Justa’s brother who passed away when he was quite young. Justa says his mother told him his brother fell off the roof and broke his neck. They talk about Justa’s brother, Teddy, being killed.

24’ 04” Moran asks Justa about the community making their own snowshoes. Justa tells her what they made the snowshoes out of – deer hide, cow hide, moose hide. Justa talks about going out on the trap line with his father in his homemade snowshoes.

26’ 21” Moran asks Justa about his previous employment from 1957 on. He gives a chronological account of his employment history until 1967, when he went to jail. After 1969, he continued to work. He always worked. They continue to talk about his past employment.

39’ 32” Moran asks Justa about his social life between 1957 and 1967. He tells her that he had a good time. He started to drink at seventeen.

40’ 53” Moran asks about Justa’s brother Teddy and their relationship. Justa tells her they were close, like twin brothers.

41’ 52” They talk about his alcoholism and how it led to fighting. Justa continues to talk about his drinking days and how much trouble it caused him. He also talks about how his parents tried to discourage drinking between him and his brothers. His parents were not worried about his sisters because they settled down early.

48’ 52” Justa talks about how often he saw his family, particularly his parents, during that time period. He says he always felt close to his family, no matter what happened.

50’ 27” Moran asks Justa about how he earned a dollar a week leading children to the residential school. They talk about his arm being broken in the last year he attended residential school. He talks about playing hockey throughout his time at residential school.

54’ 11’ Moran asks Justa about how the Kemano II Project is going. Justa said in an interview the process should stop entirely because people are resigning on the government’s side. Justa tells her they are going to publicly protest the project.

59’ 16” End of tape.

Justa
2008.3.1.147.12 · Item · 1993, 1994
Part of Bridget Moran fonds

Item is a audio interview recorded by Bridget Moran with Justa Monk.

Audiocassette Summary

00’ 06” Justa is talking about the Kemano II Project and what he said in a meeting with the Ministers. He has asked them to stop the Project or they will face judicial review because they are basing the Project on a political basis, not a scientific basis. He says he feels he will win the case.

04’ 57” Moran tells Justa she is working on the chapter about when he kills his brother John. Moran asks Justa about what happened and he tells her all he remembers is when the cops arrested him. They continue to talk about what happened, though Justa’s memory is vague. Justa talks about his time in prison.

24’ 54” Moran asks Justa about when he moved to Fort St. James after he was released from prison. He moved to Dawson Creek after being picked arrested again.

27’ 58” Justa talks about moving back to Tachie, then going to work for BC Rail in 1970. At that time, he was hired as band manager.

28’ 50” They return to discussing the Kemano II Project.

32’ 20” Moran and Justa return to discussing the murder of his brother.

34’ 50” Moran and Justa talk about Brother Anderson, who worked at the residential school.

41’ 15” Moran talks to Justa about his brother Alec who passed away at a young age. The person who fell off a roof was a cousin.

42’ 30” Moran asks Justa about being left on Haldi Road when he was working at the rehabilitation camp. He talks about Haldi Camp and it was decent living conditions. There was no counselling offered.

47’ 57” Moran asks Justa if his troubles at that time were related to alcohol. He tells her that his fights were caused from drinking. He talks about his parents telling him they were worried about his drinking. He began to black out, but did not worry about it because he says he was young and did not pay attention.

49’ 55” After Justa left Dawson Creek, he returned to Tachie. Two weeks after he was home, Teddy was shot. They talk about the circumstances surrounding his death.

56’ 08” Moran asks Justa about his memories of Tachie when he started as a maintenance man in the 1970s. He says the roads were rough or hardly there. He talks about his job shovelling snow or pulling vehicles out of the mud. They talk about the Tachie community in the early 1970s. Justa talks about building the community up.

1: 08’00” Justa talks about his wedding to Theresa. Very few people attended the wedding. It took a long time for Justa’s family to recognize her as part of the family.

1: 12’ 54” Moran asks Justa about life in Tachie. Justa tells her things were done collectively, there was no division within in the community. He wishes the old way of life was still a part of the community. He talks about the love of ‘potlatch’ in the community. He talks about how the old way of life disappeared once the road was built.

1: 19’ 50” Moran asks Justa what he is working on. Justa says he is wrapping up the treaty process, budget proposals, and a couple other issues. He talks about Kemano II. He is serious about leaving his position because he has been neglecting his family. They continue to talk about the Kemano II Project.

1: 29’ 09” End of tape.

Justa
2008.3.1.147.13 · Item · 10 Feb. 1994
Part of Bridget Moran fonds

Item is a audio interview recorded by Bridget Moran with Justa Monk.

Audiocassette Summary

00’02” Justa is talking about the store in Tachie.

02’ 13” Moran asks Justa to clarify his different positions when working for the band, and when he served in those positions. He talks about the years he was band manager and tribal chief, and talks about these positions. He discusses the stress of the positions because of lack of funding.

16’ 29” Moran asks Justa about the different programs, such as water systems and education. Justa discusses getting the water system into Tachie. He discusses the details of trying to get the water system, particularly trying to get funding and getting the proper contractors. He talks about the stress of the position and how it affected his mind.

39’ 04” Justa talks about the differences between being a band manager and a tribal chief. He tells her there were no politics involved in being a band manager.

41’ 30” Moran asks Justa to draw her a map of Tachie and Sunnyside for the book, so she knows where everything can be found. Justa draws her a detailed map that includes the lake and the river.

52’ 34” Moran asks Justa about his week as a band manager and tribal chief, starting from Monday to Friday. He talks about his meetings involving contracts, social assistance, education, and other funding concerns. He reads from his diary to Moran.

1:02’ 55” Moran asks Justa about when Tachie received a telephone system. Justa talks about how he actually regrets getting a telephone and television system because of the loss of community.

1:08’ 55” Justa returns to talking about Kemano II.

1:14’ 59” Moran’s voice is muffled and incomprehensible.

1:16’ 35” Moran asks Justa for photographs for the book. Moran wants a subtitle for the book, so asks Justa for something in Carrier. Moran tells Justa that the CBC has asked why she is writing a book about him. They discuss the general details of the book.

1:26’ 17” End of tape.

Justa
2008.3.1.147.14 · Item · 1994
Part of Bridget Moran fonds

Item is a audio interview recorded by Bridget Moran with Justa Monk.

Audiocassette Summary

00’ 05” Justa is talking about cutting wood for heat at home. He talks about wrecking his father’s axe. He continues to tell amusing stories about his childhood, which include his siblings and his father.

04’ 45” Moran asks Justa about how many employees he had when he was band manager. Justa talks about his work as band manager. They continue to talk about sawmills in the area. Justa discusses land rights as a result of the sawmills in their territory. Justa talks about tree farm licenses and the disputes between the band and the government. He talks about agreements the band has with Northwood Pulp and Timber Ltd.

16’ 35” Moran asks Justa about the note Theresa left him about being either a father or a band manager. They talk about this briefly.

18’ 23” Moran asks Justa about stories in his diary, such as trying to quit smoking. They talk about Justa becoming band leader. They continue to talk about Justa’s duties as general manager for the band and the politics surrounding the position.

25’ 14” Moran asks Justa about developing a school board for Tachie that is run by First Nations people. He wants to develop a proper curriculum that embraces the old way of life to maintain their culture.

30’ 40” Moran asks Justa why he stepped down as general manager for the band. Justa talks about someone else wanting the position. He also talks about the restraints on him. He talks about becoming tribal chief. He was given the mandate to deal with Kemano II, land claims, and developing forms of self-government.

41’ 15” Moran asks about the spread of AIDS in Tachie. Justa says, like cancer, it has spread because of stupidity. His people were healthy until the modernization of their society.

42’ 22” They return to discussing the opening of sawmills in the Tachie area, as well as tree licenses.

49’ 00” Moran asks Justa how many bands have dropped out of land claims issues. Ten remain, he tells her. They continue to discuss the issue of land claims.

50’ 47” Moran asks about when the tribal chiefs came together to have a common goal with regard to land claims. They continue to discuss land base, the progress of land claims, and the amount of people in each area. Justa talks about private companies entering their land and building private roads to log the area. They continue to talk about the politics of the position.

1:00’ 13” Moran asks Justa about his tribal chief position. He tells her it is a ‘twenty-four hour machine’ and to develop working relationships between the bands and the government, particularly with land claims and poverty issues. Justa continues to talk about his position.

1:09’ 11” Moran asks Justa which position he feels has helped his people the most. He tells her being band manager and tribal chief because he feels he has the right vision for his people that he can implement through clear direction and demanding certainty from the government, particularly with land claims. He talks about wanting to save the future of the nations and saving the river from the Kemano II Project. They continue to discuss the history of the Kemano II Project.

1:17’ 38” End of tape.

Justa
2008.3.1.147.15 · Item · 1994
Part of Bridget Moran fonds

Item is a audio interview recorded by Bridget Moran with Justa Monk.

Audiocassette Summary

00’ 01” Justa is talking about the Kemano II Project, which he states is a political issue, not an environmental one. He says the Project is a public issue now, not just a First Nations issue.

06’ 52” Moran asks Justa about when he was elected to tribal chief. He talks about the nominations process.

09’ 52” End of tape.

Justa
2008.3.1.147.16 · Item · 1994
Part of Bridget Moran fonds

Item is a audio interview recorded by Bridget Moran with Justa Monk.

Audiocassette Summary

00’03” Moran asks Justa how the Department of Indian Affairs party went at Other Art Cafe.

01’20” Moran tells Justa she has a number of questions regarding his political career. They talk about the number of bands in the area.

05’ 11” Justa talks about the nomination process for becoming tribal chief at the annual Assembly. He talks about when he was nominated and how he believed that he was nominated based on his character. Moran asks about the culture surrounding the Assembly, including entertainment. Justa tells her he did not participate in any of the activities.

12’ 41” Justa talks about his mother loving potlatch.

14’ 35” Moran asks Justa about the personal qualities it takes to be tribal chief. He tells her he was nominated because the people knew and trusted him.

16’ 03” Moran asks Justa about the role he played in getting the Department of Indian Affairs shut down. He tells her about leading a mandate to close the Prince George office through lawyers and the support of his people.

25’ 18” Moran asks Justa about the development of a school board for the reservations. He wants the school curriculum to teach the language and the culture. He has negotiated with the federal and provincial governments to implement these plans.

29’ 13” Moran asks Justa about his role in land claims. Justa talks about negotiating with the government to get some of the land back to his people. He has played a big role, he says, because he knows the area, the language, and the people. He talks about the long, drawn out process of planning the land claims concerns. Justa has a mandate as tribal chief to address land claims. He says the important part of the process is educating the people, white and non-white.

45’ 49” Moran is talking about Alcan locating grave markers to compensate for the damage done from the original Kemano project.

47’ 47” Moran asks Justa the role he has played in the Kemano II Project. He tells her that he took a big role because he saw the way of life being destroyed, never mind the environmental damage. He says he hates the concept of the project. Justa talks at length about the politics surrounding the Kemano II Project.

1:07’ 55” Moran asks Justa about which politicians he has met in his time as tribal chief. She encourages him to drop names. He lists a number of provincial and federal politicians.

1:10’ 45” Moran asks Justa about the Oka situation and any role he played in helping to negotiate the situation. He talks about an emergency Assembly. He discusses supporting the situation and telling his own people that they should not protest with the people from Oka to maintain peaceful land claims negotiations. He says he had to keep things calm in his own territory while offering support.

1:13’ 30” Moran asks Justa about the referendum regarding self-government. They talk about which way they voted.

1:16’ 20” Moran asks Justa about the consecration of the graveyards that were flooded by Kemano. He talks about how emotional the ceremony was and how much it hurt to be treated like second-class citizens. One woman described it as being chased out like a pack of coyotes.

1:19’ 50” Moran asks Justa about running for tribal chief again because he has unfinished business with the Kemano II Project.

1:20’50” Moran talks about the chapters of the book with Justa. They discuss some of the stories Moran is writing within the book.

1:28’ 42” End of tape.

Justa
2008.3.1.147.17 · Item · 1994
Part of Bridget Moran fonds

Item is a audio interview recorded by Bridget Moran with Justa Monk.

Audiocassette Summary

00’ 04” Moran is talking about book signings for Justa’s book.

00’ 27” Justa and Moran talk about board members for the Kemano II Project. They continue to talk about the Kemano II Project. Justa says the amount of pressure he is putting on the government, combined with public support, hopefully means Kemano II will be stopped. They continue to discuss the details and the politics surrounding the Project.

10’ 26” Moran asks Justa whether he was surprised or not when he lost the position of tribal chief at the last Assembly. He tells her he was not surprised. He talks about the first time he resigned from the position due to stress. He says the band knew he was tired, so did not want the position any longer. In a letter he wrote, he stated it was time for some new blood.

21’ 11” Moran asks Justa about his new position. He talks about being a contractor to Northwood Pulp and Timber where he liaisons between First Nations people and the company on employment concerns and tree sales. He talks about his position in more detail.

28’ 46” Moran asks Justa about how he feels about his life now. He tells her he feels good about what he has accomplished, but he needs a rest. He talks about his accomplishments throughout his career. He tells Moran he has no regrets about anything.

37’ 55” Moran asks Justa about his health issues and how he is feeling now.

38’ 57” End of tape.

Justa
2008.3.1.147.18 · Item · 11 Sept. 1995
Part of Bridget Moran fonds

Item is a audio interview recorded by Bridget Moran with Justa Monk.

Audiocassette Summary

00’ 10” Moran is asking Justa about how he is feeling because he had a major heart attack. He talks about recovering from his attack in a week.

02’ 15” Moran asks Justa about what he thinks about the Gustafson Lake situation. He says he predicted it because the government has not been serious enough in negotiations for land claims. He does not believe in militant reactions and wants peaceful negotiations.

04’ 54” Moran asks Justa about what helped him get out of the ‘trench’ he was in after murdering his brother. He was able to carry on partly because he was forgiven by his family and the elders. He says the elders were the people who convinced him to plan for his future. He took their advice seriously, hence why he took on leadership roles.

07’ 15” Justa talks about taking a group of students to meet Gino (?), a hockey player. He says he wants to make things better for the young people because of alcohol and drugs, so believed the trip helped the students he took on the trip.

13’ 34” End of tape.

2008.3.1.148 · File · [between 1980 and 1999]
Part of Bridget Moran fonds

File consists of one 5.25" floppy disk, containing the following files:

  • “Alcohol” -Transcript of Mary John discussing her history with alcoholism; how it is the biggest problem facing First Nations people
  • “Changes”- Transcript of Mary John discussing the changes on the reserve, including TV, hot water, and electricity. John talks about how she earns her money through leatherwork
  • “Depression”- Transcript of Mary John discussing how hard the Depression was on First Nations people. They would trade fish for clothing during that time
  • “Indian Agent and Department of Indian Affairs”- Transcript of Mary John discusses the corruption of the Department of Indian Affairs and how many of the Indian agents were indifferent to First Nations people
  • “Hides”- Transcript of Mary John discussing how to make proper moose hides
  • “Lejac”- Short paragraph on the residential school of Lejac
  • “Marriage”- Transcript of Mary John discussing how finances were poor because of the Depression. She discusses how her husband made railway ties to earn money
  • “Mike”- A birthday letter to Mike, Bridget Moran’s son, expressing her joy of having a computer
  • “Net Fishing”- Transcript of how to set fishing nets in the water
  • “Potlatch”- Transcript of what a potlatch is, how many clans there are and what they mean
  • “Siblings”- Transcript of Mary John discussing her stepbrothers and sisters. She talks of Mark, her oldest brother, who died of tuberculosis in 1940
  • “Social Life”- Transcript of Mary John discussing how they would have dances in people’s homes. She also talks about baseball games in Prince George, BC
  • “Survival”- Transcript of Mary John discussing a survival camp at Wedgewood where children learned to tan hides and live off the land
  • “Whites”- Transcript of Mary John discussing how she was treated poorly in a hospital. She discusses her relationships with white people, and how racist Vanderhoof was compared to Prince George
  • “Work”- Transcipt of Mary John discussing the trials of getting to work in the winter, but how she managed to save some money to purchase a vehicle
2008.3.1.149 · File · [between 1980 and 1999]
Part of Bridget Moran fonds

File consists of one 5.25" floppy disk, containing the following files:

  • “Coreen” – Chapter Seventeen Draft “Coreen” re: the death of Coreen Thomas
  • “Elders” – Chapter Nineteen Draft “Elders” re: the creation of the Elders Society to help preserve First Nations culture and customs
  • “Eleven” – Chapter Eleven Draft re: the births and deaths of Mary John’s children
  • “Fifteen” – Chapter Fifteen Draft re: building a school on the reserve; Mary John teaches Carrier to the attending children
  • “Fourteen” – Chapter Fourteen Draft re: tuberculosis takes Mary John's children and other family members
  • “Eighteen” – Chapter Eighteen Draft re: inquest into Coreen Thomas’ death and the impact it had on the community
  • “Memorandum of Agreement”- Publishing agreement between Bridget Moran and Mary John regarding Stoney Creek Woman
  • “Sixteen” – Chapter Sixteen Draft re: the effects of alcohol on Mary John and her family; how she vowed to never drink again after the death of her nephew- in-law
  • “The Last” – Chapter Twenty-One Draft re: sickness affects Mary John’s life
  • “Thirteen” – Chapter Thirteen Draft re: Mary John’s parents and their deaths
  • “Title”- Title page for Stoney Creek Woman
  • “Twelve” – Chapter Twelve Draft re: the Depression years
  • “Twenty” – Chapter Twenty Draft re: Mary John wins Citizen of the Year; celebrates her fiftieth wedding anniversary
  • “Epilogue”- Epilogue Draft for Stoney Creek Woman
2008.3.1.150 · File · [between 1980 and 1999]
Part of Bridget Moran fonds

File consists of one 5.25" floppy disk, containing the following files:

  • “Brian”- Letter to Brian and Linda (last names not written) regarding the publication of Stoney Creek Woman
  • “Chapter One” -Draft re: Mary John’s family tree and her first memories of childhood
  • “Chapter Two”- Draft re: Mary John’s childhood memories; description of Stoney Creek village
  • “Chapter Eight”- Draft re: Mary John’s first potlatch; her first experience with racism
  • “Expense”- Letter from Bridget Moran concerning the amount of her rent
  • “Chapter Five”- Draft re: Mary John’s time at Lejac
  • “Chapter Four”- Draft re: first memories of going to residential school
  • “Introduction”- Introduction to Stoney Creek Woman
  • “Memorandum of Agreement”- Agreement of publishing and monetary rights between Mary John and Bridget Moran
  • “Chapter Nine”- Draft re: Mary John’s arranged marriage to Lazare John
  • “Pictures”- A list labeling the photographs found in Stoney Creek Woman
  • “Prologue”- A quote from Adnas Alexis describing how Carrier language and customs has passed from generation to generation
  • “Quotes”- A list of the quotes used in Stoney Creek Woman
  • “Resume”- Resume for Bridget Moran
  • “Chapter Seven”- Draft re: the terror of having to return to Lejac
  • “Chapter Six”- Draft re: more on Lejac; how a day school was requested year after year
  • “Synopsis”- A list of the contents and chapters of Stoney Creek Woman
  • “Chapter Ten”- Draft re: Mary John in the early days of her marriage to Lazare John; the relationship with her mother-in-law
  • “Chapter Three”- re: Mary John’s childhood memories, particularly Christmas and hunting with her stepfather
  • “Dedication”- Dedication to Helen Jones, Mary John’s daughter
  • “A Step or Two in her Moccasins”- Why Bridget Moran wrote Stoney Creek Woman
2008.3.1.151 · File · [between 1980 and 1999]
Part of Bridget Moran fonds

File consists of one 5.25" floppy disk, containing the following files:

  • “Chapter Seventeen – Coreen” - Draft re: the death of Coreen Thomas and the demand for an inquest
  • “Chapter Nineteen – Elders” - Draft re: the creation of the Elders Society to help teach Carrier language and culture
  • “Chapter Fifteen”- Draft re: the demand for a day school on the reserve; Mary John gains employment in a hospital because her family was financially struggling; she is asked to teach Carrier language and traditions at the new day school
  • “Chapter Fourteen”- Draft re: tuberculosis takes a number of Mary John’s family members
  • “Chapter Eighteen – Inquest”- Draft re: the inquest into Coreen Thomas’ death and the effect on the community
  • “Chapter Sixteen”- Draft re: the removal of the drinking ban on reserves and the effect it had on the community; how Mary John vowed to never drink again after losing a family member in a train accident
  • “Chapter Thirteen”- Draft re: the loss of Mary John’s stepfather and mother
  • “Chapter Twenty”- Draft re: being Citizen of the Year; building a new home; falling ill, but still keeping busy in her senior years, particularly with the Potlatch House
  • “Chapter Twenty-One”- Draft re: conclusion
Disk0005 – ANCESTOR
2008.3.1.153 · File · [between 1980 and 1999]
Part of Bridget Moran fonds

File consists of one 5.25" floppy disk, containing the following files:

  • “Introduction” -Intro to a transcript re: pioneer days in Prince George
  • “Colleges”- Form letter providing information on A Little Rebellion from Aresenal Pulp Press
  • “Cross Culture Education”- Speech given to unknown audience re: aboriginal education
  • “Eileen”- Song/poem dedicated to Eileen Temperley
  • “Five”- Transcription re: changes in Prince George after 1910
  • “Four”- Transcription re: BC Express
  • “Kamloops”- Letter to Terry Grieve re: talking to students about Stoney Creek Woman
  • “The Nechako and Me”- Describing traveling on the Nechako River
  • “Northern Lights”- Letter to Northern Lights College Networks Conference re: cross cultural education
  • “PG History”- Transcription re: stories of coming to Cariboo country
  • “Prince George Remembered”- Publishing information for Prince George Remembered
  • “About the Author”- Biography of Bridget Moran
  • “Prince George Remembered 2”- Title page for Prince George Remembered
  • “Prince George Remembered 3”- Dedication page
  • “Reunion”- Letter to Verna and Gloria (last names unknown)
  • “Six”- Transcription re: life in the Cariboo
  • “Income Tax Statement 1991”- Tax statement
  • “Income Tax Statement 1992”- Tax statement
  • “Income Tax Statement 1993”- Tax Statement
  • “Income Tax Statement 1994”- Tax Statement
  • “Income Tax Statement 1995”- Tax Statement
  • “Income Tax Statement 1996”- Tax Statement
  • “Income Tax Statement 1997”- Tax Statement
  • “Three”- Transcription re: life and work in the Cariboo
  • “Two”- Transcription re: life and work in Prince George
2008.3.1.154 · File · [between 1980 and 1999]
Part of Bridget Moran fonds

File consists of one 5.25" floppy disk, containing the following files:

  • “Ann”- One sentence about the reserve
  • “Stoney Creek Woman”- Why Stoney Creek Woman was written
  • “Assault”- Letter to J. Pattison from Patrick Moran re: assault on Patrick Moran
  • “BC Historical Federation”- Letter to Naomi Miller re: Stoney Creek Woman
  • “Birds”- Letter to Patrick (last name unknown) re: submission of The Plot Thickens
  • “Grant”- Letter to Dr. Richard re: Canada Council grant reward
  • “Cakes”- Recipe for white cake
  • “Canplus”- Letter to Canadian Plus re: reward points for a flight
  • “Carl”- Letter to Carl (last name unknown) re: safety training for school social workers
  • “Progress Report”- Progress report on Stoney Creek Woman to the Canada Council
  • “Grant 3”- Letter to Dr. Richard re: progress report to the Canada Council
  • “Grant 4”- Letter to Dr. Richard re: distribution of grant funds
  • “Grant 5”- Letter to Dr. Richard re: application form
  • “Grant 6”- Letter to Canada Council re: application form for Arts Grant
  • “Grant 7”- Letter to Dr. Richard re: grant expenses
  • “Grant 8”- Grant application letter for A Little Rebellion
  • “Grant 9”- Letter to Dr. Richard re: final report for grant
  • “Grant A”- Reference file number for the Canada Council
  • “Grant B”- Final report for Judgement at Stoney Creek for the Canada Council
  • “Grant C”- Letter to Dr. Richard re: future grant applications
  • “Grant D”- Letter to Ms. Hogue re: grant
  • “Grant E”- Letter to Dr. Richard re: grant application
  • “Petition”- Petition: Connaught Hill Park
  • “Contents”- Projected Contents of A Little Rebellion
  • “Costs”- Project Costs for A Little Rebellion
  • “Dare To Ask”- Letter to Al and Mike at CBC
  • “Davies”- Letter to Dr. Ashley Davies from Patrick Moran re: assault injuries
  • “Deadlock”- Unholy Deadlock – Bridget Moran writes about marrying Pat
  • “Event”- Letter submitting Unholy Deadlock in a creative fiction contest
  • “Flame”- “My Old Flame” – Bridget writes about quitting smoking
  • “Garth”- Reference letter for Garth Walmsley
  • “Introduction”- Bridget Moran writes about the importance of writing Mary John’s story
  • “Letter”- Letter to Brian and Linda (last names unknown) re: introduction
  • “Madonna”- Personal letter to Madonna (last name unknown)
  • “Matches”- The Case of the Box of Matches – beginning of a short story
  • “Milltown”- Personal letter to Mike (last name unknown)
  • “Mistakes”- Corrections for Judgment at Stoney Creek
  • “Passport”- Letter to Hon. Joe Clark re: passport for Mary John
  • “Petition”- Petition to Prince George City Council re: partying on Connaught Hill Park
  • “Pious”- Letter to Linda (last name unknown) re: quitting smoking
  • “Program of Work”- Grant application for A Little Rebellion
  • “Project”- Projected contents of Judgement at Stoney Creek
  • “Published”- Resume for published and unpublished works
  • “Review”- Letter to editor at the Vancouver Sun re: Condom Capers
  • “Safety”- Questionnaire for social workers re: safety training
  • “A Child’s Christmas In Saskatchewan”- Beginning of a short story
  • “Letter”- Letter to Pauline Stroud re: passport for Mary John
  • “Superannuation”- Letter to Superannuation Commissioner re: amount of superannuation
  • “Margaret”- Letter to Margaret (last name unknown) re: taxes
  • “Tommy”- The Case of the Penny Matches – beginning of a short story
  • “Unholy”- The end of Unholy Deadlock
  • “Committee”- District Screening Committee meeting
2008.3.1.155 · File · [between 1980 and 1999]
Part of Bridget Moran fonds

File consists of one 5.25" floppy disk, containing the following files:

  • “Letter”- Letter to Gloria, Verna, and Lille (last names unknown)
  • “Letter 1”- Personal letter to 5TOers
  • “Frieda”- Personal letter to Frieda (last name unknown)
  • “Geisela”- Letter to David Pihl re: character reference for Geisela Vogler
  • “Pauline”- Written by Betty Keller for Pauline Johnson re: character of Pauline’s people
  • “Refund”- Letter to ICBC re: Senior Discount Refund
  • “Teresa”- Autobiography of Teresa, an abused woman who left her husband
  • “Teresa 2”- Autobiography of Teresa, an abused woman who left her husband
  • “Teresa 3”- Autobiography of Teresa, an abused woman who left her husband
  • “Teresa 2 (a)”- Autobiography of Teresa, an abused woman who left her husband
  • “Teresa 3(a)”- Autobiography of Teresa, an abused woman who left her husband
  • “Teresa 4”- Autobiography of Teresa, an abused woman who left her husband
  • “Title”- Title page for Teresa
  • “Tony”- Word processor instructions
2008.3.1.156 · File · [between 1980 and 1999]
Part of Bridget Moran fonds

File consists of one 5.25" floppy disk, containing the following files:

  • “Eight”- Draft of Chapter Eight for Mary and Me
  • “Five”- Draft of Chapter Five for Mary and Me
  • “Four”- Draft of Chapter Eight for Mary and Me
  • “Introduction”- Draft of the introduction for Mary and Me
  • “Nine”- Draft of Chapter Nine for Mary and Me
  • “One”- Draft of Chapter One for Mary and Me
  • “Seven”- Draft of Chapter Seven for Mary and Me
  • “Six”- Draft of Chapter Six for Mary and Me
  • “Ten”- Draft of Chapter Ten for Mary and Me
  • “Three”- Draft of Chapter Three for Mary and Me
  • “Two”- Draft of Chapter Two for Mary and Me
Disk0009 – Mary and Me
2008.3.1.157 · File · [between 1980 and 1999]
Part of Bridget Moran fonds

File consists of one 5.25" floppy disk, containing the following files:

  • “Eighteen”- Draft of Chapter Eighteen for Mary and Me
  • “Eleven”- Draft of Chapter Eleven for Mary and Me
  • “Fifteen”- Draft of Chapter Fifteen for Mary and Me
  • “Fourteen”- Draft of Chapter Fourteen for Mary and Me
  • “Nineteen”- Draft of Chapter Nineteen for Mary and Me
  • “One”- One two three
  • “Seventeen”- Draft of Chapter Seventeen for Mary and Me
  • “Sixteen”- Draft of Chapter Sixteen for Mary and Me
  • “Thirteen”- Draft of Chapter Thirteen for Mary and Me
  • “Twelve”- Draft of Chapter Twelve for Mary and Me
Disk0010 – Family
2008.3.1.158 · File · [between 1980 and 1999]
Part of Bridget Moran fonds

File consists of one 5.25" floppy disk, containing the following files:

  • “Twenty”- Planning a family reunion (a couple sentences long)
Disk0011 - Lady Law
2008.3.1.159 · File · [between 1980 and 1999]
Part of Bridget Moran fonds

File consists of one 5.25" floppy disk, containing the following files:

  • “Brian O’Lynn”- Poem
  • “Letter”- Letter to Duncan Macrae re: writing diploma program at the College of New Caledonia
  • “Convocation UNBC”- Guest list for Mary John
  • “Letter 1”- Letter from Mayo Moran to a treeplanting company re: cook position
  • “Bill”- Expenses for research on Hale V Her Majesty the Queen
  • “John”- Personal letter to John and Kate (last names unknown)
  • “Lady Law”- Personal Statement for Mayo Moran re: attending law school
  • “Letter 2”- Letter to Cecilia Freeman-ward re: honorary degree from University of Victoria
  • “Patriot”- Poem
  • “Premier”- Letter to Premier Glen re: election
  • “Women and Poverty”- Speech (?) on women and poverty
  • “Sophie”- Letter to UNBC re: nomination of Sophie Thomas for honorary degree
  • “Varley”- Letter to David (last name unknown) re: Courtworkers situation
2008.3.1.160 · File · [between 1980 and 1999]
Part of Bridget Moran fonds

File consists of one 5.25" floppy disk, containing the following files:

  • “BC Writers”- Questionnaire
  • “Dease Lake”- Letter to Programme Director re: Reading Centre
  • “Dease Lake 1”- Letter to Kris McLeod re: conference
  • “Donna”- Letter to Minister of Health from Eileen Drugan re: sister’s discharge from hospital
  • “Eight”- Letter to Eloquent Eight
  • “Eight 2”- Letter to Eloquent Eight
  • “Eight 3”- Letter to Eloquent Eight
  • “Letter”- Letter to the Canada Council re: Vancouver Public Library reading
  • “Expenses”- Letter to the Canada Council re: expenses
  • “Germany”- Letter to Daniel (last name unknown) re: Justa
  • “Grierson”- Short paragraph (beginning of story?)
  • “Guests”- Invitations for suggested guests for Spring Convocation
  • “Invoice”- Invoice for O Ye Dry Bones
  • “Jade Book”- Letter to Bill Elliott re: Justa
  • “Joan”- Reference letter for Joan Sutherland
  • “Legal Services Society”- Letter to David (last name unknown) re: expenses
  • “Legal Services Society 1”- Letter to Lucette Kirbach re: expenses
  • “Legal Services Society 2”- Letter to Lucette re: expenses
  • “MacPhail”- Letter to Joy MacPhail re: welfare changes
  • “Mary Hogan”- Letter to The Citizen re: Mother of the Year (Mary Hogan)
  • “Mary John”- Letter to UNBC Senate re: honorary degree to Mary John
  • “Biography”- Biography of Mary John
  • “Mary John 1”- Letter to Svend Robinson re: meeting Mary John
  • “Mary John 2”- Letter to Honours Directorate for the Order of Canada re: Mary John’s nomination for the Order of Canada
  • “O Ye Dry Bones”- Opinion editorial on healthcare
  • “The More Things Change”- Opinion editorial on promoting the building of a new jail in Prince George
  • “Now Nine”- Chapter Twenty Draft for Horizontal Land
  • “Pulp”- Letter to Arsenal Pulp Press re: expenses
  • “Red”- Letter to Marins Castonguay re: store
  • “Speech”- Convocation Speech, May 26, 1995
  • “Squamish”- Letter to Mostly Books re: Justa
  • “The Hill”- Letter to Leisure Services re: Connaught Hill Park reduced hours
  • “Tour”- Letter to Gold Pioneer Memorial Library re: postponement of presentation with Justa Monk
Disk0013 - Poetry Oct/97
2008.3.1.161 · File · [between 1980 and 1999]
Part of Bridget Moran fonds

File consists of one 5.25" floppy disk, containing the following files:

  • “Agreement”- Memorandum of Agreement between Mary John and Bridget Moran re: Mary and Me
  • “Adair”- Letter to Lois and Paul (last name unknown) re: Brent Adair
  • “BC Federation”- Letter to Corey (last name unknown) re: ThreadBare Like Lace
  • “Cynthia”- Letter supporting Cynthia Wilson’s nomination for Woman of Distinction
  • “Eleanor”- Letter to Eleanor (last name unknown) re: Eleanor’s writing
  • “Gould”- Letter of support for Bernie and Jack Gould for Citizen of the Year
  • “Grad”- Speech for College of New Caledonia graduation
  • “Grain”- The Relief Cheque poem
  • “Grain 2”- Covering page for The Relief Cheque
  • “Grain 3”- Letter to Jill Robinson re: The Relief Cheque
  • “Grain 4”- Short Grain Writing Contest winners
  • “Hale”- Edits concerning Richard K. Butler
  • “Hale 2”- Statement of Evidence of Bridget Moran re: Hale v. Her Majesty the Queen
  • “Jacqui”- Reference letter for Jacqueline Baldwin’s application for BC Arts Council grant
  • “Kromar”- Publishing expense for Justa from Kromar Printing
  • “Muffins”- Recipe for muffins
  • “NCLO”- Thank you letter to Doug Donaldson
  • “Nisga’a”- Letter to the Vancouver Sun re: Nisga’a Treaty
  • “Old Mike”- I Remember, I Remember…
  • “Letter”- Letter to Robert McDonald re: Stoney Creek Woman
  • “Sandy”- Westward Ho!
  • “Sandy 2”- Notes on visiting Social Work offices
  • “Child’s Christmas in Saskatchewan”- Draft
  • “Thresher”- The Threshers Are Coming
  • “Writers”- Letter to Clelie (last name unknown) re: resignation as representative to the Federation of BC Writers
2008.3.1.163 · File · [between 1980 and 1999]
Part of Bridget Moran fonds

File consists of one 5.25" floppy disk, containing the following files:

  • “Chapter 1” - Draft of Stoney Creek Woman
  • “Chapter 2”- Draft of Stoney Creek Woman
  • “Chapter Three”- Draft of Stoney Creek Woman
  • “Chapter 4”- Draft of Stoney Creek Woman
  • “Chapter 5”- Draft of Stoney Creek Woman
  • “Chapter 6”- Draft of Stoney Creek Woman
  • “Chapter 7”- Draft of Stoney Creek Woman
  • “Chapter 8”- Draft of Stoney Creek Woman
  • “Chapter Potlatch”- Potlatch Draft of Stoney Creek Woman
2008.3.1.164 · File · July 1995
Part of Bridget Moran fonds

File consists of one 5.25" floppy disk, containing the following files:

  • “AM 1”- On Writing Well by William Zinsser
  • “AM 2”- Steps on rewriting
  • “AM 3”- Articles and Columns
  • “AM 4”- Getting Published
  • “Blocks”- Anybody Can Write – writer’s block
  • “Plot”- Writing examples
  • “PM 1”- Ten Commandments for a Writer
  • “PM 2”- The Short Story
  • “PM 3”- Discussion
  • “PM 4”- Reading
  • “Workshop”- Schedule for Workshop
2008.3.1.165 · File · 6 Jan. 1997
Part of Bridget Moran fonds

File consists of one 5.25" floppy disk, containing the following files:

  • “Intro”- Intro to workshop
  • “One”- Choosing a writers workshop
  • “Two”- Other writers
2008.3.1.166 · File · [199-?]
Part of Bridget Moran fonds

File consists of one 5.25" floppy disk, containing the following files:

  • “Mackan”- Transcript of CBC interview with Pal Mackan
  • “Medal”- Letter to Brian Gardiner re: nomination letter for Mary John
  • “Multicultural”- Letter to Multiculturalism and Citizenship Canada re: The Imaginary Indian
  • “Promote 1”- Letter to Curriculum Department re: Teacher’s Guide for Stoney Creek Woman
  • “Promote 2”- School Districts
  • “Promote 3”- Letter to Curriculum Department re: Stoney Creek Woman
  • “Promote 4”- Letter to Dr. Rose re: Teacher’s Guide for Stoney Creek Woman
  • “Promote 5”- Letter to Curriculum Department re: Justa
  • “Trip”- Letter to Brian (last name unknown) re: promotional trip and expenses
2008.3.1.167 · File · [199-?]
Part of Bridget Moran fonds

File consists of one 5.25" floppy disk, containing the following files:

  • “General”- General Topics for Stoney Creek Woman
  • “Guide”- Chapter Guide to Stoney Creek Woman
  • “Guide 2”- Chapter Guide to Stoney Creek Woman
  • “McCallum”- Biography of Allan McCallum
  • “Thomson”- A Conversation Between Mrs. James Thomson and Bridget Moran
  • “Thomson 2”- A Conversation Between Mrs. James Thomson and Bridget Moran
  • “Thomson 3”- A Conversation Between Mrs. James Thomson and Bridget Moran
  • “Thomson 4”- A Conversation Between Mrs. James Thomson and Bridget Moran
  • “Thomson 5”- A Conversation Between Mrs. James Thomson and Bridget Moran
  • “Title”- Title for Teacher’s Guide to Stoney Creek Woman
  • “Videos”- List of videos
  • “Yukon”- Letter to Linda and Brian re: promoting Stoney Creek Woman
2008.3.1.168 · File · [199-?]
Part of Bridget Moran fonds

File consists of one 5.25" floppy disk, containing the following files:

  • “Granny 1”- Transcript of conversation with Granny Seymour
  • “Granny 2”- Transcript of conversation with Granny Seymour
  • “Sick ‘99”- Letter to Sylvia (last name unknown) re: being sick
2008.3.1.169 · File · [199-?]
Part of Bridget Moran fonds

File consists of one 5.25" floppy disk, containing the following files:

  • “A Twigg”- Letter to Alan Twigg re: life after publication
  • “Bam Bio”- Biography of Bridget Moran
  • “BC Arts”- Letter to Richard Brownsey re: appointments to BC Arts Council
  • “BC Arts 2”- Letter to Richard Brownsey re: BC Arts Council appointment
  • “BC Books”- Letter to Association of Book Publishers re: First Nations Books for B.C. Schools
  • “Background”- Background to Justa Monk
  • “Bibliography”- Bibliography of Bridget Moran’s published works
  • “BioJusta”- Biography of Justa Monk
  • “BlurbCNC”- Bridget on Bridget for CNC
  • “Broadcast”- Permission for broadcast of Life at Lejac
  • “Can Publ”- Letter to Canadian Book Information Centre re: books about First Nations and Aboriginal Peoples – Special First Edition
  • “CC Grant 4”- Letter to Canada Council re: grant application
  • “CC Grant 5”- Summary of Justa
  • “CC Grant 6”- Reference letter for Bridget Moran
  • “CC Grant 7”- Projected expenses for Justa
  • “CC Grant 8”- Grant application
  • “CC Read 5”- Letter to Canada Council re: Public Readings by Canadian Writers
  • “Condoms”- Letter to Jackie Larkin re: Condom machines in high schools
  • “Culture”- Biography of Justa Monk
  • “Culture 2”- Biography of Justa Monk
  • “Culture 3”- Grant application letter for Mary and Me
  • “Culture 4”- Summary of Mary and Me
  • “Culture 5”- Letter to BC Arts Council re: grant application
  • “Culture 6”- Letter to BC Arts Council re: bibliography
  • “Dease Lk”- Letter to Carolyn (last name unknown) re: travel itinerary
  • “Extracur”- List of Bridget Moran's schedule throughout 1993-94
  • “Foreword”- Backstairs at the Palace
  • “G Thomas”- Reference letter for Geraldine Thomas
  • “Granola”- Recipe for granola
  • “Hiiye’yu”- Letter to a number of women
  • “I Spy”- Mr. PG is made of metal!
  • “I Spy 2”- Title page
  • “J Summary”- A summary of chapters for Justa
  • “Kellsie”- Personal letter to Kellsie (last name unknown)
  • “Life After Publication”- A short paragraph on life after publication
  • “Landmark”- Letter to Sheraton Landmark Hotel
  • “London”- Letter to Mr. Morton re: accommodations
  • “London 1”- Letter to Aston’s Budget Studios re: accommodations
  • “London 2”- Letter to Mrs. M.C. Harler re: accommodations
  • “London 3”- Letter to C. Crossley Cooke re: accommodations
  • “London 4”- Letter to Jeff Turner re: accommodations
  • “London 5”- Letter to Ashburn Garden Apartments re: accommodations
  • “London 6”- Letter to Mr. Vlotides re: accommodations
  • “London 7”- Letter to Crawford Holiday Flats re: accommodations
  • “Naomi”- Personal letter to Naomi, Janet, David, Bev (last names unknown)
  • “NBennett”- Letter to Nancy (last name unknown) re: using last name Redekop in Stoney Creek Woman
  • “News”- Summary of Justa
  • “Oct”- Letter to Barb (last name unknown) re: Teacher-Librarian’s Conference
  • “Phoenix”- Letter to Helen (last name unknown) re: speaking at Phoenix Transition House
  • “Pincombe”- Personal letter to Chic and Tommy
  • “Pro”- Changing name of book to Justa instead the Man from Tachie
  • “Pro 2”- Summary of Justa
  • “Quon”- Letter to Walter Quon re: application for Culture Services grant
  • “Reading 1”- Letter to Everywoman’s Bookstore re: reading
  • “Resume 2”- Resume for Bridget Moran
  • “Stgrant”- Summary of Justa
  • “Stgrant 2”- Letter to Arts Award Services re: application for short-term grant
  • “Stgrant 3”- Letter to Dr. Richard re: report for Canada Council grant
  • “Twigg”- Letter to Alan Twigg re: Norris cartoon
  • “Type”- Project Assistance for Creative Writers application
  • “Union”- Letter to Penny Dickens re: fiscal dues to Writers’ Union of Canada
  • “We Three”- Poem
  • “Weller”- Letter to Dr. Geoffrey Weller re: UNBC Bookstore
  • “Wells”- Writing Workshop requests
  • “Wong 1”- Letter to Donna Wong-Juliani re: Joan Carson in Los Angeles
  • “Zuker”- Letter to Bernard Zukerman, CBC re: declining an offer to develop
    Judgement at Stoney Creek
  • “Zukerman”- Letter to Bernard Zukerman, CBC re: Judgement at Stoney Creek
2008.3.1.170 · File · [199-?]
Part of Bridget Moran fonds

File consists of one 5.25" floppy disk, containing the following files:

  • “Annie”- Draft
  • “Aunt”- Draft
  • “CBC”- Letter to CBC re: manuscript for The Horizontal Land
  • “Face”- Joy to the World (Bridget Moran’s address)
  • “J and K”- Personal letter to Mike
  • “Joy”- Chapter Fifteen Draft for Joy to the World
  • “TwoOne”- Chapter Twenty-One Draft (Now We Are Nine)
  • “TwoTwo”- Chapter Twenty-Two Draft (Aunt Annie Cometh)
  • “We Nine”- Draft
  • “Xmas”- Draft
Disk0023 - Horizontal Land
2008.3.1.171 · File · [199-?]
Part of Bridget Moran fonds

File consists of one 5.25" floppy disk, containing the following files:

  • “Chapter One”- The Letter
  • “Chapter Two”- Till Death Do Us Part
  • “Chapter Three”- Westward Ho!
  • “Chapter Four”- We’re Here Because We’re Here
  • “Chapter Five”- Saskatchewan, Saskatchewan, There’s No Place Like Saskatchewan!
  • “Chapter Six”- This Land is Your Land, This Land Is My Land
  • “End 6”- Draft
  • “Finis”- Draft
  • “Gunthers”- Draft
  • “Two Three”- The Gunthers Are Back!