CURRICULUM VITAE OF DANIEL P. MARSHALL

2 – 101 Menzies Street Victoria, , V8V 2G4 Email: [email protected] Cell: (250) 715-7896

 EDUCATION:

Doctor of Philosophy in History, 2000, University of British Columbia. Dissertation: “Claiming the Land: Indians, Goldseekers and the Rush to British Columbia,” (1st Class). Supervisor: Dr. Dianne Newell.

Master of Arts in History, 1991, University of Victoria. Thesis: “Mapping the Political World of British Columbia, 1871-1883,” (1st Class). Co-supervisors: Dr. Eric Sager and Dr. James Hendrickson.

Bachelor of Arts, 1989 (Honours, History & Political Science), University of Victoria.

 AWARDS AND HONOURS:

Canadian Historical Association’s 2019 CLIO PRIZE for best book on British Columbia. Daniel Marshall, Claiming the Land: British Columbia and the Making of a New El Dorado (Vancouver: Ronsdale, 2018).

Basil-Stuart-Stubbs Prize for outstanding scholarly book on British Columbia, administered by UBC Library, 2019. Daniel Marshall, Claiming the Land: British Columbia and the Making of a New El Dorado (Vancouver: Ronsdale, 2018).

New York-based Independent Publishers’ Book Award (Gold Medal for Western ), 2019. Daniel Marshall, Claiming the Land: British Columbia and the Making of a New El Dorado (Vancouver: Ronsdale, 2018).

Host, Canyon War: The Untold Story (2009), Cultural Documentary, Platinum Remi Award, Houston International Film Festival, Houston, Texas, 2010.

Nominee, John Bullen Prize, Canadian Historical Association, for best doctoral dissertation produced in year 2000. Nominated by the Department of History, University of British Columbia, December 2000.

British Columbia 2000 Book Award (BC Millennium Project) for Daniel P. Marshall, Those Who Fell from the Sky: A History of the Cowichan Peoples (Duncan: Cowichan Tribes, 1999). Reprint July 2007.

Canadian Historical Association’s Clio Award (Best book on British Columbia history) for Beyond the City Limits: Rural History in British Columbia, R. W. Sandwell, editor (Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press, 1999) that included Daniel P. Marshall, “‘An Early Rural Revolt:’ The Introduction of the Canadian System of Tariffs to British Columbia, 1871- 1874," pp. 47-61.

Native Daughters of British Columbia Scholarship, University of British Columbia, 1995-1996.

Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada, Doctoral Fellowship, 1991-1993, 1993-1995.

University of British Columbia Graduate Fellowship, 1991.

Executive Member, Margaret Ormsby Scholarship Committee, 1993-

Member, Conference Committee, New Directions in BC History, University of Northern British Columbia, Prince George, BC, May 1995.

Leon J. Ladner BC Historical Scholarship for best M.A. Thesis, University of Victoria, 1991.

Willard Ireland Graduate Fellowship, British Columbia Heritage Trust, 1991- 1992.

President, Graduate History Association, University of Victoria, 1990-1991.

Nominee, Governor-General’s Medal for best Master’s Thesis, Department of History, University of Victoria, 1991.

University of Victoria Graduate Fellowships, 1989-1990, 1990-1991.

Maureen Dobbin Award for Canadian History, University of Victoria, 1989.

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British Columbia Historical Federation Scholarship, 1989.

Member, University of Victoria Senate, Arts & Science Faculty, 1988-1989.

Imperial Order of the Daughters of the Empire, Canadian History Scholarship, Victoria Chapter, 1988.

British Columbia Historical Association Award, Victoria Branch, 1988.

Vice President, Alma Mater Society, University of Victoria, 1983-1984.

 PUBLICATIONS:

BOOKS

Claiming the Land: British Columbia and the Making of a New El Dorado (Vancouver: Ronsdale Press, 2018).

Those Who Fell From the Sky: A History of the Cowichan Peoples (Duncan, B.C.: Cowichan Tribes, 1999). Reprint July 2007.

Editor, (with Bruce Hodding). Cowichan Tribes Cultural Mapping Project: An Inventory of Marine-based Foods and Medicinal Plants (Duncan: Cowichan Tribes, 1997).

ARTICLES IN COLLECTED WORKS

“The British Columbia Commonwealth: Gold Seekers and the Rush for Freedom” in New Perspectives on the Gold Rush, Edited by Kathryn Bridge (Royal British Columbia Museum, 2015), 49-62.

“Conflict in the New El Dorado: The War” in New Perspectives on the Gold Rush, Edited by Kathryn Bridge (Royal British Columbia Museum, 2015), 125-140.

“Mapping the New El Dorado: The Fraser River Gold Rush and the Appropriation of Native Space” in Interpreting Canada’s Past: A Pre-

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Confederation Reader, edited by J. M. Bumstead, Len Kuffert, and Michel Ducharme, 4th Edition (Oxford University Press, 2011), 406-421. Reprint.

“Mapping the New El Dorado: The Fraser River Gold Rush and the Appropriation of Native Space” in New Histories for Old: Changing Perspectives on Canada’s Native Pasts, edited by Ted Binnema and Susan Neylan (Vancouver and Toronto: University of British Columbia Press, 2007), 119-144.

“No Parallel: American Settler-Soldiers at War with the Nlaka’pamux of the Canadian West” in Parallel Destinies: Canadian-American Relations West of the Rockies, edited by John Findlay and Ken Coates (Seattle: University of Press, 2002), 31-79.

“‘An Early Rural Revolt:’ The Introduction of the Canadian System of Tariffs to British Columbia, 1871-1874," in Beyond the City Limits: Rural History in British Columbia, R.W. Sandwell, editor (Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press, 1999), 47-61.

ARTICLES IN JOURNALS

Daniel P. Marshall and Dorothy Mindenhall, “Four Voices from British Columbia: A Review Essay,” BC Studies 134 (Summer 2002): 87-91.

“Mapping A New Socio-Political Landscape: British Columbia, 1871-1874," Histoire Sociale/Social History XXXI:61 (May 1998): 127-153.

"Rickard Revisited: Native 'Participation' in the Gold Discoveries of British Columbia," Native Studies Review 11:1 (1997): 91-108.

"The Fraser River War," Native Studies Review 11:1 (1997): 139-145.

"Carnarvon Terms or Separation: B.C. 1875-1878," British Columbia Historical News Quarterly (Summer 1993): 13-16.

"Arctic Sovereignty and Continentalism: Diverging Views of Defence," Ascendant Historian (Spring 1991): 33-44.

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OTHER PUBLICATIONS

History Columnist, The Orca, a new independent multimedia publication for B.C. politics, business, and history, 2018-20.

“Lock Down the Province?” The Orca (13 March 2020).

“British Columbia and the Pandemic of 1918,” The Orca (2 March 2020).

“The Battle of the Routes,” Part II, The Orca (14 February 2020).

“The Battle of the Routes,” Part I, The Orca (8 February 2020).

“Canada’s Westward Expansion to the Pacific Slope,” The Orca, Part III (25 January 2020).

“Canada’s Westward Expansion to the Pacific Slope,” The Orca, Part II (18 January 2020).

“Canada’s Westward Expansion to the Pacific Slope,” The Orca, Part I (11 January 2020).

“Lost in the Mountains on Christmas Day,” The Orca (21 December 2019).

“The Third Great ‘Devil Dance’,” The Orca (23 November 2019).

“The Mysterious Traveller,” The Orca (9 November 2019).

“War in the New El Dorado and the Birth of British Columbia,” Part II, The Orca (19 October 2019).

“War in the New El Dorado and the Birth of British Columbia,” Part I, The Orca (12 October 2019).

“Claiming the Land: The Need for a more Inclusive Story,” The Orca (5 October 2019).

“Lost in Translation: How HBC Linguists brokered Early Relations with during the Fur Trade Era,” The Orca (28 September 2019).

“Margaret A. Ormsby: British Columbia Institution,” The Orca (14 September 2019).

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“Hiking the ‘Graveyard of the Pacific’,” The Orca (31 August 2019).

“The Forgotten Context of Canada’s Oldest China Town,” Part II, The Orca (10 August 2019).

“The Forgotten Context of Canada’s Oldest China Town,” Part I, The Orca (3 August 2019).

“An Anthropology of Belonging,” The Orca (20 July 2019).

“The Return of Chief Tsulpi’multw’s Ceremonial Blanket,” The Orca (6 July 2019).

“The Strange Case of the Anomalous Artifact that Fell from the Sky,” The Orca (15 June 2019).

“B.C.’s First Urban/Rural Split,” The Orca (25 May 2019).

“The Curious Story of Yale’s Garry Oak Grove,” The Orca (11 May 2019).

“The Peculiar Circumstances of British Columbia,” The Orca (27 April 2019).

“Unembarrassed by a Shilling of Debt,” The Orca (13 April 2019).

“Fort Rupert and the Mystery of the Fort Victoria Treaties, The Orca (20 March 2019).

“Fort Rupert and the Forgotten Coal Fields of Suquash,” The Orca (16 March 2019).

“B.C.’s Permeable Border,” The Orca (2 March 2019).

“British Columbia’s Forgotten Governor,” The Orca (16 February 2019).

“BC, Latin American, and the Munroe Doctrine,” The Orca (2 February 2019).

“Shut Down the Province,” The Orca (19 January 2019).

“An Independent British Columbia?” The Orca (5 January 2019).

“The Land as History Book,” The Orca (15 December 2018).

“The Colour Blind Commonwealth,” The Orca (1 December 2018).

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“The Forgotten Treaty-Making of Chief Maquinna,” The Orca (17 November 2018).

“British Columbia: Refuge for Political Exiles?” The Orca (3 November 2018).

“Tracking Down History,” The Orca (20 October 2018).

“British California,” The Orca (6 October 2018).

“Margaret Ormsby’s Milieu,” The Ormsby Review No. 296 (2 May 2018).

“Grim Legacy,” The Trail of 1858: British Columbia’s Gold Rush Past, edited by Mark Forsyth and Greg Dickson (Vancouver: Harbour Publishing and CBC Radio One, 2007), 31-33.

Daniel P. Marshall, editor, Bruce Hodding, Report on the Ethnohistory of the Hul’qumi’num Treaty Group. (Chemainus, B.C.: Hul’qumi’num Treaty Group, 1998), 126 pp.

“The Fraser River Fever,” BC Folklore: Journal of the British Columbia Folklore Society X (1997), 14.

"The Fraser River Gold Rush," The 1996 Canadian Encyclopedia plus (McLelland & Stewart, 1996).

"John Sebastian Helmcken" in Ramsay Cook and Jean Hamelin, eds., Dictionary of Canadian Biography, 14 (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1998), 472- 474.

BOOK REVIEWS

Wendy Wickwire, At the Bridge: James Teit and An Anthropology of Belonging by Wendy Wickwire (Vancouver: UBC Press, 2019). “An Anthropology of Belonging,” The Orca (20 July 2019).

Wendy Wickwire, At the Bridge: James Teit and An Anthropology of Belonging by Wendy Wickwire (Vancouver: UBC Press, 2019). The Ormsby Review No. 575 (9 July 2019).

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Douglas C. Harris, Landing Native Fisheries: Indian Reserves & Fishing Rights in British Columbia, 1849-1925 (Vancouver: UBC Press, 2008). In Canadian Historical Review 91:4 (December 2010), 773-775. Co-authored with Michael Blackwell.

Mark Forsyth and Greg Dickson, The Trail of 1858: British Columbia’s Gold Rush Past, (Vancouver: Harbour Publishing and CBC Radio One, 2007). In BC Studies 160 (Winter 2008/09), 123-125.

Matthew D. Evenden, Fish Versus Power: An Environmental History of the Fraser River (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2004). In Scientia Canadensis (Strasbourg, France) 31:1-2 (2009): 193-196.

Grant Keddie, Songhees Pictorial: A History of the Songhees People as seen by Outsiders, 1790-1912 (Victoria: Royal British Columbia Museum, 2003). In Canadian Historical Review 86:4 (2005): 724-25.

Robert E. Ficken, Unsettled Boundaries: Fraser Gold and the British-American Northwest (Pullman, Washington: Washington State University Press, 2003). In Canadian Historical Review. (2005) Forthcoming.

Donald J. Haulka, McGowan’s War: The Birth of Modern British Columbia on the Fraser River Gold Fields (Vancouver: New Star Books, 2003). In BC Studies. No. 144 (Winter 2004/05): 144-45.

Douglas C. Harris, Fish, Law, and Colonialism: The Legal Capture of Salmon in British Columbia (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2001). In Pacific Northwest Quarterly. 96:1 (Winter 2004/2005): 48-49. Co-authored with Adrian Clark.

Alan L. Hoover, Editor, Nuu-chah-Nulth Voices, Histories, Objects & Journeys (Victoria: Royal British Columbia Museum, 2000). In BC Studies. No. 141 (2004): 123-24.

John Phillip Reid, Patterns of Vengeance: Crosscultural Homicide in the North American Fur Trade (Ninth Judicial Circuit Historical Society, 1999). In Oregon Historical Quarterly. Vol. 103:2. (Summer 2002): 272-74.

Netta Sterne, Fraser Gold 1858! The Founding of British Columbia (Washington State University Press, 1998). In BC Studies No. 123 (Fall 1999): 95-97.

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Jean Barman, The West Beyond the West: A History of British Columbia (University of Toronto Press, 1991). In Histoire Sociale/Social History XXV:50 (November 1992): 393-396.

Robin Fisher, Duff Pattullo of British Columbia (University of Toronto Press, 1991). In Histoire Sociale/Social History XXV:50 (November 1992): 393-396.

 PRESENTATIONS:

Claiming the Land: The Need for a more Inclusive Story, Oddfellows Hall, Victoria, BC, 2019.

Claiming the Land: The Need for a more Inclusive Story, Sooke Historical Society, Sooke, BC, 2019.

Claiming the Land: The Need for a more Inclusive Story, Princeton Historical Society, Princeton, BC, 2019.

Presentation to Word Vancouver Festival with regard to Claiming the Land: British Columbia and the Making of a New El Dorado, 2019.

Gold Rush: El Dorado in British Columbia Exhibit Presentation and consultation on behalf of Royal BC Museum to the Jewish Federation of Greater Vancouver, Vancouver, B.C., August 2014.

Gold Rush: El Dorado in British Columbia Exhibit Presentation and consultation on behalf of Royal BC Museum to the BC Black History Awareness Society, Victoria, B.C., May 2014.

Gold Rush: El Dorado in British Columbia Exhibit Presentation and consultation on behalf of Royal BC Museum to the Chinese Canadian Cultural Association, Victoria, B.C., April 2014.

Moderator, Post Screening Presentation and Discussion, Canyon War: the Untold Story, 20th National Claims Research Workshop, 25 September 2012, Quw’utsun’ Cultural & Conference Centre, Cowichan Tribes, Duncan, B.C.

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“British Columbia: The Need for a More Inclusive Story,” presentation to the 2012 Hope History Conference, sponsored by the Hope Museum and Christ Church National Historic Site, Hope, BC, 3 March 2012.

“Forgotten First Nations History & The Need for a More Inclusive Story in British Columbia,” Keynote address given to the Cariboo Teachers’ Symposium, sponsored by the New Pathways to Gold Society, Barkerville, BC, September 2009.

Chair, “Negotiating Space and Place in Colonial British Columbia,” Space and Place in British Columbia, BC Studies Conference Session, 1 May 2009, University of Victoria, Victoria, BC.

“British Columbia’s Sesquicentennial, 1858 to 2008: Changing Perspectives on First Nations Reconciliation, Multiculturalism, and the Need for a New Provincial Identity.” Presentation to Deputy Ministers, Government of British Columbia, 6 November 2007. Sponsored by the Premier’s Office, BC Legislature, Victoria, BC.

Organizer of Fraser River War Symposium, 21-23 September 2007, Co-sponsored by the and the New Pathways to Gold Society, Lytton, BC.

“The Fraser River War and the Appropriation of Native Space.” Presentation to the Fraser River War Symposium, 21-23 September 2007, Co-sponsored by the Lytton First Nation and the New Pathways to Gold Society, Lytton, BC.

Presenter and Director of Ceremonies for the Honourable Iona Campagnola, Lieutenant Governor of British Columbia and Vice-Regal party re. The 1858 Fraser River gold rush and First Nations Reconciliation, Canada Day Celebrations, 1 July 2007, Yale, BC.

Understanding the Nations: Cowichan Tribes Reconciliation Symposiums, Cowichan and Chemainus Valleys, February 2007 – 2009.

“The Traditional World of the Hul’qumi’num-Speaking Peoples.” Presentation to Syuhe’mun (Walker Hook): Past, Present and Future. Symposium organized by Woodward & Company, Ganges, Saltspring Island, B.C., 26 September 2003.

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“Claiming the Land: Natives, Gold Seekers, and the Rush to Eastern Washington & British Columbia in 1858.” Paper presented to Strange Intruders: furmen, miners, and big-eared bats on the slope of the Cascades. Symposium sponsored by the United States Forest Service, Twisp, Washington, 13-14 August 1999.

“Yale and the Fraser River Gold Rush.” Keynote address to the Annual General Meeting of the Yale Historical Society, October 1998, Yale, B.C.

“A Cultural Crossroads: The Collision of Euro-American Miners & Okanagan Peoples during the Fort Colvile Gold Rush of 1855.” Paper presented to the Journeys Past Symposium sponsored by the United States Forest Service, , Washington, August 1997.

"No Parallel: American Settler-Soldiers at War with the Nlaka'pamux of the Canadian West." Paper presented to the symposium sponsored by the Center for Pacific Northwest Studies, "'On Brotherly Terms': Canadian- American Relations West of the Rockies," University of Washington (Seattle), September 1996.

"Native Participation in the Gold Discoveries of British Columbia." Paper presented to American Mining History Association Conference, Rossland, British Columbia, June 1996.

"Claiming the Land: The Fraser River Gold Rush and the 'Conquest' of Native Lands." Paper presented to the Annual Meeting of the Canadian Historical Association Conference, Montreal, Quebec, August 1995.

"The Fraser River Gold Rush and Gold Rush Place Names." Paper presented to The Fraser River History Conference, Yale, British Columbia, BC Heritage Properties Branch, Ministry of Tourism, Small Business & Culture, 14-15 October 1995.

"Mapping the Political Landscape of British Columbia, 1871-1874." Paper presented to BC Studies Conference, Victoria, B.C., 1992.

"British Columbia Legislative Alignments in the 19th Century." Paper presented to the annual Qualicum Conference, Qualicum Beach, B.C., 1989.

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 TEACHING:

Adjunct Assistant Professor, Department of History, University of Victoria, January 2008 --.

Sessional Lecturer, History 358F, Natives and Newcomers: Historical Encounters in Canada from 1867, Department of History, University of Victoria. Spring 2012.

Sessional Lecturer, History 358F, Natives and Newcomers: Historical Encounters in Canada from 1867, Department of History, University of Victoria. Spring 2011.

Sessional Lecturer, History 354A, Northwest America to 1849, Department of History, University of Victoria. Fall 2010.

Sessional Lecturer, History 358F, Natives and Newcomers: Historical Encounters in Canada from 1867, Department of History, University of Victoria. Spring 2010.

Sessional Lecturer, History 358C, Natives and Newcomers: Historical Encounters in Canada to 1867, Department of History, University of Victoria. Fall 2009.

Sessional Lecturer, History 358F, Natives and Newcomers: Historical Encounters in Canada from 1867, Department of History, University of Victoria. Spring 2009.

Sessional Lecturer, History 358C, Natives and Newcomers: Historical Encounters in Canada to 1867, Department of History, University of Victoria. Fall 2008.

Sessional Lecturer, History 358F, Natives and Newcomers: Historical Encounters in Canada from 1867, Department of History, University of Victoria. Spring 2008.

Sessional Lecturer, History 358C, Natives and Newcomers: Historical Encounters in Canada to 1867, Department of History, University of Victoria. Fall 2007.

Sessional Lecturer, History 358F, Natives and Newcomers: Historical Encounters in Canada from 1867, Department of History, University of Victoria. Spring 2007.

Sessional Lecturer, History 358C, Natives and Newcomers: Historical Encounters in Canada to 1867, Department of History, University of Victoria. Fall 2006.

Sessional Lecturer, History 358F, Natives and Newcomers: Historical Encounters in Canada from 1867, Department of History, University of Victoria. Spring 2006.

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Sessional Lecturer, History 358C, Natives and Newcomers: Historical Encounters in Canada to 1867, Department of History, University of Victoria. Fall 2005.

Sessional Lecturer, History 354A, Northwest America to 1849, Department of History, University of Victoria. Fall 2005.

Sessional Lecturer, History 354B, History of British Columbia, 1849-1903, Department of History, University of Victoria. Spring 1997.

 DOCUMENTARY FILM CONSULTANCIES:

Screen Siren Pictures four-hour historical documentary series about the people, forces and events that shaped the province of British Columbia. The series, “1871” (working title), is scheduled for broadcast and streaming in 2021, on the occasion of the 150th anniversary of the province's entry into Confederation. Forthcoming.

Secret Victoria: Rush for Freedom, a Telus/Storyhive Production, 3 September 2019.

Claiming the Land: The Need for a more Inclusive Story, hour-long made for TV, Shaw Cable Production, aired throughout 2019.

The War, Episode 2, Nations at War Television Series, APTN (2017). Historical Consultant and documentary interview.

Canyon War: The Untold Story (2009), documentary film production. Host and Historical Consultant to Wunderman Film Inc. for research & production of documentary film. Broadcasted on Knowledge Network (January 2010), APTN (2011), and currently PBS (Seattle & Yakima) in 2013. Winner Best International Director, New York International & Independent Film and Video Festival, Los Angeles, California, 2010. Winner, Platinum Remi Award, Houston International Film Festival, Houston, Texas, 2010. Nominated for Golden Sheaf Award (Best Historical Documentary), Yorkton Film Festival, 2011.

“Wisdom of the River: Salmon Culture of the Cowichan,” (2001). Film documentary funded by Cowichan Fish and Habitat Renewal (Fisheries Renewal BC) and narration based on Daniel P. Marshall, Those Who Fell from the Sky: A History of the Cowichan People (Victoria, B.C.: Cowichan Tribes, 1999).

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“The Last Stand,” Ribbons of Steel Documentary Series No. 13. Historical Consultant to Great Northern Releasing Inc., Edmonton Alberta, in association with the Life Network for half hour film-television appearance on the history of the Esquimalt & Nanaimo Railway (1996).

 PROFESSIONAL EXPERIENCE: (Highlights)

Founder and Principal of Pacific Reach Consulting Ltd., specialising in historical and legal research, report preparation, and expert advisement and opinions for First Nations, and provincial and federal governments with respect to land and resource issues. October 2000 – .

Chair, Cowichan Tribes Elders Translation Working Group, for translation of Elders Interviews from Hulqui’minum language to English, July 2017 – .

Historical Consultant, with regard to publication of Thinking It Through: A Social Studies Source Book, Ed. Glen Thielmann, Cariboo School District (Toronto: Pearson, 2018).

Historical Consultant, reorganization of Cowichan Tribes Treaty Department Archives and creation of End Note Archival digital database, May 2016 – .

Expert Report writer, Cowichan Tribes, Duncan, B.C., July 2015 – October 2017.

Special Advisor on Gold Rushes to the Royal BC Museum, November 2014 – May 2015.

Chief Curator, Royal BC Museum Exhibit, Gold Rush: El Dorado in British Columbia, (Travelling Exhibit: BC, Ottawa and China), 2015-2017), November 2013 – May 2015.

Historical Consultant to Stk’emlupsemc Division (Skeetchestn and Tk’emlups First Nations), Kamloops, B.C., Re. Ajax Mine Cultural and Historical Heritage Study, February 2013 -- .

Expert Advisor and report preparation for Morahan & Company on behalf of the Songhees First Nation in the matter of Sam and others v. HMQBC and others, July 2012 -- .

Historical Consultant to Cowichan Tribes for cataloguing British archival materials collected from Public Record Office, Kew Gardens, UK and Rhodes House Library, Oxford, UK, August 2012- November 2012, Cowichan Tribes, Duncan,

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B.C.

Historical Consultant to New Pathways to Gold Society, for management of research teams in Victoria, Vancouver and Barkerville with respect to historic trails in the Hope-to-Barkerville corridor, in preparation for analysis and eventual re- construction of historic trails for public use, and their reinterpretation with respect to First Nations as part of a more inclusive provincial story. September 2009 –.

Historical Consultant (with Professors Hamar Foster and John Burrows, UVic) to the First Nations Leadership Council, for preparation of a new Proclamation and historical backgrounder to accompany the Province’s Recognition and Reconciliation Legislation (overturning the province’s historic 150 years of the denial of Aboriginal rights & title), Spring 2009.

Historical Consultant to New Pathways to Gold Society for organisation and guiding of BC Premier’s Tour of the Fraser Canyon with respect to First Nations reconciliation and culminating in bridge rededication at Lytton, BC, in honour of the 1858 Nlaka’pamux War Chief, David Spintlum. Yale, BC to Lytton, BC, September 2009.

Coordinator, BC150 Storycatching Program in association with the Spirit Pole Tour, Collection of stories from Elders and preparation of video clip interviews. BC150 Secretariat, Ministry of Tourism, Sport and the Arts, May-July 2008.

Interim Coordinator for the creation of a Department of Natural Resources, Capacity Building Program, Penelakut Tribe, Kuper Island, B.C., July 2007 – June 2011.

Historical Consultant to Penelakut Tribe, Kuper Island, B.C., for specific claims research and report preparation, July 2007 – 2011.

Chair, Universities Caucus, BC2008 Historical events and First Nations reconciliation, New Pathways to Gold Society, April 2007 – .

Historical Consultant to Boston Bar Band for creation of Interpretive Signage for Tuckkwiowhum Traditional Village Site (Anderson Creek), June 2007 – 2008.

Expert Advisor and report preparation re. Snuneymuwx-Chemainus-Lyackson First Nations Territorial Boundaries. March 2003 – October 2003. Hul’qumi’num Treaty Group, Ladysmith, B.C.

Historical Consultant to Chemainus First Nation, Ladysmith, B.C., for specific claims research and report preparation, January 2002 – 2010.

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Historical Consultant to Cowichan Tribes, Duncan, B.C., for specific claims research and report preparation, January 2002 – .

Interim Coordinator of the Department of Natural Resources, Chemainus First Nation, Ladysmith, B.C., January 2001 -- September 2001.

Historical Consultant to Chemainus First Nation for reorganization of the Administration’s Archives, August 2000, Ladysmith, B.C.

September 2020

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