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Available March 2002

ISBN 0-921870-92-2
6 X 9 250 pp
$19.95 pb

Memoir, BC History

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     The Judge's Wife: Memoirs of a BC Pioneer
By Eunice M.L. Harrison
Introduction by Jean Barman
With notes by Louise Wilson

These memoirs offer a compelling account of life in early British Columbia from the 1860s to the first decade of the 20th century. The wife of Judge Eli Harrison, one of the province’s foremost lawyers and judges, Mrs. Harrison gives intimate glimpses into daily life in Victoria, Nanaimo and New Westminster, and her visits as a young woman to Granville (as Vancouver was then called) for dances and picnics. She describes the interests of a well-educated woman of her time who was fascinated by the growth of British Columbia. She knew many of the important people in the colony and province, including the Douglas family, and speaks freely about everyday events in British Columbia, such as famous murders, rides on "the unfinished transcontinental" and her meetings with First Nations people.  She also includes descriptions of her husband’s many hazardous trips over the Brigade Trail into the interior of the province to dispense frontier justice. In the final sections, she describes her visit to San Francisco where she was caught in the earthquake of 1906 and the subsequent fire that destroyed much of the city. With her daughter and son at her side, Harrison walked the length of the city to the dockyards – avoiding the burning buildings and the mobs of people taking advantage of the chaos – to board the ship that would take her out of the flames and back to Canada. The volume includes many original black & white photos from the Harrison personal files.


Eunice Harrison was born in 1860 and lived a long and eventful life in "the West," largely on Vancouver Island. Jean Barman, who wrote the introduction to The Judge’s Wife, is the author of several books including the much acclaimed The West Beyond the West (U of Toronto Press, 1991, 1996). She is a Professor at the University of BC, the former co-editor of the journal B.C. Studies and the recipient of many awards for her history writing. The extensive notes for the volume have been supplied by Mrs. Harrison’s granddaughter, Louise Wilson who, as a young girl, remembers sitting at her father’s knee as her grandmother dictated the memoir to her father, who typed it out.