Alan MacEachern is professor of history at the University of Western Ontario and has written widely on Canadian environmental history.
Alan MacEachern is professor of history at the University of Western Ontario and has written widely on Canadian environmental history.
BEN BRADLEY is a Grant Notley Postdoctoral Fellow in the Department of History and Classics at the University of Alberta. His research examines the linkages between mobility, landscape, and mass culture in twentieth-century Canada.
Bill Waiser is the author, co-author, or co-editor of eight books, including Park Prisoners: The Untold Story of Western CanadaÆs National Parks and (with Blair Stonechild) Loyal Till Death: Indians and the North-West Rebellion, which was a finalist for the Governor GeneralÆs literary award for non-fiction. His most recent book, All Hell Cant Stop Us: The On-to-Ottawa Trek and Regina Riot, won the 2003 Saskatchewan Book Award for non-fiction.
Bill Waiser is the author, co-author, or co-editor of eight books, including Park Prisoners: The Untold Story of Western CanadaÆs National Parks and (with Blair Stonechild) Loyal Till Death: Indians and the North-West Rebellion, which was a finalist for the Governor GeneralÆs literary award for non-fiction. His most recent book, All Hell Cant Stop Us: The On-to-Ottawa Trek and Regina Riot, won the 2003 Saskatchewan Book Award for non-fiction.
Bill Waiser is the author, co-author, or co-editor of eight books, including Park Prisoners: The Untold Story of Western CanadaÆs National Parks and (with Blair Stonechild) Loyal Till Death: Indians and the North-West Rebellion, which was a finalist for the Governor GeneralÆs literary award for non-fiction. His most recent book, All Hell Cant Stop Us: The On-to-Ottawa Trek and Regina Riot, won the 2003 Saskatchewan Book Award for non-fiction.
Bill Waiser is the author, co-author, or co-editor of eight books, including Park Prisoners: The Untold Story of Western CanadaÆs National Parks and (with Blair Stonechild) Loyal Till Death: Indians and the North-West Rebellion, which was a finalist for the Governor GeneralÆs literary award for non-fiction. His most recent book, All Hell Cant Stop Us: The On-to-Ottawa Trek and Regina Riot, won the 2003 Saskatchewan Book Award for non-fiction.
Bill Waiser is the author, co-author, or co-editor of eight books, including Park Prisoners: The Untold Story of Western CanadaÆs National Parks and (with Blair Stonechild) Loyal Till Death: Indians and the North-West Rebellion, which was a finalist for the Governor GeneralÆs literary award for non-fiction. His most recent book, All Hell Cant Stop Us: The On-to-Ottawa Trek and Regina Riot, won the 2003 Saskatchewan Book Award for non-fiction.
David Neufeld a Parks Canada historian, has worked on Chilkoot Trail National Historic Site for over ten years. Based in Whitehorse, he does research on the Kluane National Park Reserve, the Yukon River, Dawson City and the Klondike goldfields, and the Yukon north slope.
Brad Martin is the Dean of Faculty of Education, Health and Human Development at Capilano University.
Brad Martin is the Dean of Faculty of Education, Health and Human Development at Capilano University.
I.S. MacLaren is professor emeritus of history and English at the University of Alberta.
Lyle Dick is the West Coast Historian with Parks Canada in Vancouver, B.C. He has authored sixty-five publications in the fields of Arctic, Canadian, and American history and historiography. His Muskox Land: Ellesmere Island in the Age of Contact was awarded the Harold Adams Innis Prize by the Canadian Federation for the Humanities and Social Sciences in 2003 for the best English-language book in the social sciences.