B.C. among the stops planned for immersive digital display of the Egyptian boy king
Town considered to be one of Canada’s first multicultural communities
Hand-in-Hand Intergenerational Storytelling matches volunteer writers with seniors
International team of researchers, divers confirm discovery of crashed Second World War bomber
Remembering the legend 19 years after his death
Story of relatively unknown female hockey team glides onto Chemainus Theatre stage
Monarch visited the area in 1951 and 1987
Listening, seeing and touching Elvis when the King played Spokane’s Memorial Stadium in August 1957
The Category 4 hurricane became the worst natural disaster in U.S. history.…
The month celebrates Black freedom fighters, revolutionaries, radicals and political prisoners
B.C. residents lead the country in saying they lived on unceded Indigenous territory
Antoinette Hérivel’s ‘The Green Front Door’ showing until Aug. 31
Open house draws a crowd with aircraft, games and more
One-woman show ‘Cougar Annie’ coming to Bowser Aug. 7
5 Greater Victoria barbers share their unique approach to cutting hair
First signs of people around Fort McMurray appear to be 11,000 to 13,000 years ago
Nun cho ga being preserved in freezer storage while next steps are determined
In 1974 Mavis partnered with Roland Shanks to buy the Gazette from Shanks’ parents
Jerry Fevens can often be seen documenting construction projects around the city
Trʼondëk Hwëchʼin elders named the mummified mammoth Nun cho ga meaning “big baby animal.”