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BC History Diary

  • Man on wagon full of hay being pulled by two horses

    Observation Cars, Mining Camps, and Settler Life in 1897

    February 19, 2026April 20, 2026 Agassiz-Harrison Museum & Archives (Source), The Hazeley Letters

    Mining camps become a part of the everyday sights for the Wright family as they experience the excitement of the gold rush and travel on Harrison Lake in British Columbia, Canada. This post is all about May and Harold Wright’s letters home about domestic labour, time on Harrison…

  • Metal watering can used to water garden outside

    Family Tension & Chinatown in Agassiz, B.C. 1897

    February 10, 2026April 20, 2026 Agassiz-Harrison Museum & Archives (Source), The Hazeley Letters

    Family tension was high as not everyone was pulling their own weight to make their farm run smoothly. The Wright letters from Agassiz April 1897 show us what life was like for those settling in the Fraser Valley. This post examines a series of letters written in April…

  • Picture of gold with a black background and writing

    Gold Mining in British Columbia 1897: Peril in the Mountains and Trains Through Agassiz

    January 30, 2026April 20, 2026 Agassiz-Harrison Museum & Archives (Source), The Hazeley Letters

    Gold mining was in full swing in Agassiz and Harrison Lake in British Columbia in the 1890s. Thousands of prospectors arrived hoping to strike it rich, while local residents continued on their daily lives and adapted to changes. This post explores the dangers and changes experience by gold…

  • View of Harrison Lake, small island and beach

    Harrison Lake: New Visitors and Mining Excitement in 1897

    January 20, 2026April 20, 2026 Agassiz-Harrison Museum & Archives (Source), The Hazeley Letters

    In the spring of 1897, Harrison Lake was alive with speculation, surveying crews, and renewed hopes of gold. Eager prospectors travelled up the lake, new mining claims were discussed daily in Agassiz, and mechanical inventions promised to transform mineral extraction in the Fraser Valley. Harrison Lake and Harrison…

  • Winter Life in Agassiz, British Columbia

    Winter Life in Agassiz, British Columbia

    January 3, 2026April 20, 2026 Agassiz-Harrison Museum & Archives (Source), The Hazeley Letters

    It is winter after the New Year for the Wright family in Agassiz, British Columbia. Continuing their story from New Year in Canada, 1897, these letters show how daily routines, winter labour, and community life resumed as January turned into February. This post explores This post explores how…

  • Two people in victorian clothing and one drinking from a champagne glass

    New Year’s in Canada in 1897

    December 28, 2025April 20, 2026 Agassiz-Harrison Museum & Archives (Source), The Hazeley Letters

    For the Wright siblings, New Year’s in Canada in 1897 meant new beginnings with the neighbours and friends, farming adjustment to make it through the winter, and hopes for their future in Canada This post explores how the Wright family experienced their first New Year’s season in Canada…

  • Victorian Christmas in Canada vintage christmas tree in victorian living room

    A Victorian Christmas in Canada 1896

    December 23, 2025April 20, 2026 Agassiz-Harrison Museum & Archives (Source), The Hazeley Letters

    This post is all about the Wright siblings first Christmas in Canada in 1896 and how they brought their English traditions to their small community. The Wright’s First Christmas in Canada Christmas in Canada in 1896 looked very different for the Wright siblings than what they had known…

  • A man and woman dancing in victorian clothing

    The Odd Fellows Ball: Dancing Until Dawn in Agassiz, British Columbia (1896)

    December 16, 2025April 20, 2026 Agassiz-Harrison Museum & Archives (Source), The Hazeley Letters

    In May’s letters from December 1896, she shares how settlers in Agassiz, British Columbia gathered for the Odd Fellows Ball: an all-night social event that offered warmth, music, and connection during a long Fraser Valley winter. In two letters home, May Wright describes dancing until dawn, winter travel…

  • horses on farm during winter at sunset

    ‘Frozen Solid’: The Wright Siblings’ First Winter in Canada, 1896

    December 8, 2025April 20, 2026 Agassiz-Harrison Museum & Archives (Source), The Hazeley Letters

    In the winter of 1896, the Wright siblings, new settlers living at Hazeley Ranch in Agassiz, British Columbia, experienced their first true Canadian winter, and it was far colder than anything they had known in England. Their letters home vividly describe frozen rivers, dangerous travel conditions, and record-low…

  • Ocean waves with stairs going in.

    When the SS Tynemouth Arrived in Victoria: The Story of B.C.’s Most Famous Bride Ship

    December 1, 2025April 20, 2026 Agassiz-Harrison Museum & Archives (Source), British Columbia History

    Follow along the journey of the famous Bride Ship – the SS Tynemouth – as it sailed from England to Victoria, British Columbia, Canada. This post is all about the journey of the men and women of the SS Tynemouth in 1862. Among them a man who would…

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Hi, I’m Jodie! Historian, Archives Assistant, and researcher in British Columbia's Fraser Valley. I bring forgotten Canadian stories to life through archival letters and local history. Learn more here.

Latest Posts

  • 153 Mile House: Letters Sent to the Historic Crosina Store
  • 153 Mile House: The Historic Cariboo Roadhouse and Store
  • William Gordon McRae (1897-1917): The Final Letters
  • Missing in Action: A Family’s Search For Answers (1917)
  • Reported Missing: The Letters of William McRae (1917)

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  • Home
  • 153 Mile House History
  • William McRae WWI Letters
  • The Hazeley Letters (1896 – 1897)
    • Those Named in the Hazeley Letters
  • British Columbia History
    • Mount Cheam Hike: A Historic Climb from Agassiz, B.C. (1914)
    • When the SS Tynemouth Arrived in Victoria: The Story of B.C.’s Most Famous Bride Ship
    • The Early History of Harrison Hot Springs (Part 1)
    • The Early History of Harrison Hot Springs (Part 2): Pioneer Life, Port Douglas, and Harrison Lake Adventures
    • What It Was Like Picking Hops in Agassiz, BC in the 1930s
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