BC's Black Pioneers: Their Industry and Character Influenced the Vision of Canada British Columbia’s Black Pioneers BC Black History Awareness Society
Emma’s great-grandniece Naidine Sims with her daughter and granddaughter view the plaque at Emma’s former address in Nanaimo, B.C. The plaque reads: In memory of Emily Arabella (Emma) […]
The photo is believed to have been taken at a portrait studio in Nanaimo on Vancouver Island, B.C. Emma was teaching in the nearby community of Cedar.
A formal portrait of Emily Arabella Stark, hand tinted, possibly taken while she was a schoolteacher.
Marie’s story about the Stark Family was published in The Gulf Islands Driftwood newspaper as an 11-part series in 1979-1980.
Marie Albertina (Wallace) Stark (about 23) and her sister Louise Edna (Wylie) Stark (about 11), circa 1890. Marie Albertina and Louise Edna were the two youngest children. Marie […]
Sylvia Stark moved to Cedar on Vancouver Island in the early 1870’s. She returned to Salt Spring Island in the early 1880s. She missed her neighbours and life […]
As the population of Salt Spring Island grew, the story of Sylvia Stark became legendary. She was visited by numerous historians and photographers. “Although she is 96 years […]
Nancy Lester moved with her husband Peter and children to San Francisco from Philadelphia in 1850. Then in 1858, their 15-year-old daughter Sarah became part of a local […]
While in Victoria, Maria experienced first-hand the discrimination that prevailed here by some. On Wednesday evening, September 25, 1861, heavily pregnant, Maria attended the theatre with her husband […]
The Richard family was part of a nucleus of families who moved to California from Florida and then later to Vancouver Island. Born in Jacksonville, Florida, Victoria married […]
Mary Louise Barnswell “She was widely known and respected for her common sense and integrity. Businessmen and politicians, who valued her intelligence, sought her opinion” Crawford Kilian, Author
Lucretia is the 3rd daugher and 5th child of Charles and Nancy. Lucretia married William E. Mortimer on September 14, 1887. They had 8 children.