East Kootenay Chronicle
- Publisher
- Sunfire Publications Limited
- Initial publish date
- May 1974
- Category
- General
-
Paperback / softback
- ISBN
- 9780889830288
- Publish Date
- May 1974
- List Price
- $3.95
Classroom Resources
Where to buy it
Out of print
This edition is not currently available in bookstores. Check your local library or search for used copies at Abebooks.
Description
In tapping the rugged historical spirit of the East Kootenays, the authors have crafted an intriguing book which breathes of violence, strength and discovery.
Two years of extensive research have gone into the writing of this book. It is the story of the pioneers of the East Kootenay district, and their struggle to survive through incredible hardships and setbacks. East Kootenay Chronicle relates the lives and times of such men as David Thompson, Colonel Baker, Father de Smet, Chief Isadore, William Baillie-Grohman, Edgar Dewdney, Colonel Steele, Father Coccola and others. It is a story of the Kootenay Indians; the first explorers and missionaries; the gold rush at Wild Horse Creek; the construction of the Dewdney Trail; and the beginnings of settlements like Fisherville, Fort Steele, Fernie and more.
East Kootenay Chronicle covers a wide canvas, stretching across southern British Columbia from the Alberta border to Creston on Kootenay Lake. This is one of the most rugged regions of Canada. Big, swift rivers, steep valleys dark with heavy forest, gold-bearing streams, fabulous outcropping of valuable ores, dangerous coal mines-it is a region that tends to generate more tall tales and exciting stories than fact. Fortunately, history is not overshadowed by myth.
About the author
David E. Scott was educated in Quebec, New Brunswick, and Ontario. He worked for newspapers in the US and Canada as a reporter-photographer-editor, bureau chief for Canadian Press and was owner-publisher of two Ontario newspapers. Assignments took him to more than one hundred countries. He owned a bar-restaurant-disco in the co-principality of Andorra, subject of the first of his forty-odd books of humour, history, and travel. He lives in Allanburg, Ontario.