Anna Pavlova
Anna Pavlova, the most famous woman dancer who ever lived, came to Vancouver November 17, 1910. She would visit us twice more, but that first visit made the greatest impression locally. The audience went gaga….
Read MoreAnna Pavlova, the most famous woman dancer who ever lived, came to Vancouver November 17, 1910. She would visit us twice more, but that first visit made the greatest impression locally. The audience went gaga….
Read MoreVancouver’s oldest company is older than the city itself. The story began in Germany in the last century when four young brothers, Godfrey, Charles, David and Isaac Oppenheimer left their native Frankfurt “to help in building a new continent.”
Read MoreThere weren’t many automobiles in Vancouver in 1907 (a five-minute film taken along several downtown streets this year shows precisely one), but there were enough for someone in the Vancouver office of the Imperial Oil Co. to decide that the usual method of fueling them at the time—carrying a sloshing bucket full of gasoline up to the vehicle and pouring it through a funnel into the tank—was somewhat dangerous.
Read MoreIt’s October 1, 1940 and Province photographer Claude Dettloff is standing on Columbia Street at 8th Street in New Westminster, his press camera up to his eye, preparing to take a shot. He’s focusing on a line of hundreds of men of the B.C. Regiment marching down 8th to a waiting train. Soldiers of the Duke of Connaught’s Own Rifles are marching past. Suddenly, in the view-finder, Dettloff sees a little white-haired boy…
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