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Available
October 2005
ISBN
1-55380-027-3
BISAC: BIO006000, HIS006000
6 x 9 238 pp trade paper, includes many b&w photos
$21.95 CDN $18.95
US
BIOGRAPHY, HISTORY, WEST COAST

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John Muir:
West Coast Pioneer
By Daryl Ashby
This
historical biography – based on the life of British Columbia pioneer
John Muir – tells the amazing story of a family from Scotland who
came out to Canada in the late 1840s to work as “consignee” labourers
for the Hudson’s Bay Company. Ashby recreates the story of the
Muirs’ struggle to develop a place for themselves in the hierarchic
colony ruled by James Douglas. With their vision of a country based
on democratic principles, the Muirs fought to bring a new way of
life to the West Coast. Drawing on the Muir family diaries, Ashby
recounts the family’s voyage from Scotland, their first years of
toil in the coal mines near Fort Rupert on northern Vancouver Island,
and their challenge to the Company when they initiated what may
have been the first strike in Canada. Muir went on to acquire property
and became an important figure in the economic development of the
province. He built the first successful steam-operated sawmill
in B.C. and developed the largest privately owned fleet of ships
in the Northwest. He became a magistrate with his own sense of
justice for the working man, and later a Member of the first Legislative
Assembly. So fascinating is Muir’s personality and so intriguing
is his struggle for a democratic way of life that his life’s story
reads at times like a novel. Ashby is to be commended for vividly
bringing back to life this historic figure, a man who deserves
to be better known in his own right and for his contribution to
the development of the West.
“An
early colonial history of British Columbia’s first settler, John
Muir, imagined as a prose ballad by Robbie Burns, this museum installation
as heritage re-creation, this wee dram after a big meal of footnoted
textbooks, is just the thing to dispel ghosts, or to bring them
back to life.” — Harold Rhenisch
Daryl
Ashby is an independent historian who has researched the lives
of the Muir family for over a decade. He has searched out their
original homesite at Fort Rupert and the site of their sawmill
and home in Sooke. He is presently at work on a second book about
early Canadian history. Ashby lives in Victoria with his wife and
family.
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