[BCMA] Friends of the BC Archives / in person event, November 17 @ 2pm ; "British Columbians’ Second World War: The Home Front Experience on Canada’s West Coast" by Dr. R Scott Sheffield
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Wed Nov 13 12:52:28 PST 2024
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Colleagues,
If you are in the Victoria area on Sunday, please join Friends of the BC Archives for for our first in-person speakers event of the fall!
FBCA 2024 Speaker Series Presents
"British Columbians’ Second World War: The Home Front Experience on Canada’s West Coast" by Dr. R Scott Sheffield
November 17th
2:00pm at Newcombe Hall, Royal BC Museum
675 Belleville St., Victoria, BC V8W 9W2
The Second World War looms large in the collective memory of Canadians as an important part of our history and identity. The same cannot be said for British Columbians, for whom the Second World War is largely a blank spot that has left little impression. The only exception is the appalling treatment of BC residents of Japanese descent, who were rounded up and interned for the remainder of the war. Even when I have searched through the academic literature of this province, the war appears as little more than a distant rumble of guns. Yet the evidence suggests that the war years were incredibly important for many British Columbians and their communities and accelerated the development of our modern province.
Dr. R Scott Sheffield is an Associate Professor of History at the University of the Fraser Valley. He grew up in the East Kootenay, went to school at UVic, and returned to BC to teach at UVic, Camosun College, Thompson Rivers University, and finally UFV. Most of his career has been spent researching the military service and experience of Indigenous peoples in the Second World War and he is the author of several books and articles on that subject. In the last five years Dr. Sheffield has focused on the experiences of British Columbians who remained at home through the Second World War and the role that community played in shaping those experiences.
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