Revision as of 17:24, 9 March 2009 editMoonriddengirl (talk | contribs)Edit filter managers, Administrators135,072 edits →History: + history← Previous edit |
Revision as of 17:26, 9 March 2009 edit undoMoonriddengirl (talk | contribs)Edit filter managers, Administrators135,072 edits + detail, structureNext edit → |
Line 1: |
Line 1: |
|
{{mbox|type=content|text=This is a '''temporary''' page created because the article at ] is suspected to be a ]. Please work on a substitute article below.<br />Admins: Please don't delete this page unless you are sure it is no longer needed.<!-- Please don't remove this header, and create the new article below this line. -->}} |
|
{{mbox|type=content|text=This is a '''temporary''' page created because the article at ] is suspected to be a ]. Please work on a substitute article below.<br />Admins: Please don't delete this page unless you are sure it is no longer needed.<!-- Please don't remove this header, and create the new article below this line. -->}} |
|
|
|
|
|
'''Saltspring Island''' (also '''Salt Spring Island''') is one of the ] in the ] between mainland ], ] and ]. It is the most populated and most frequently visited of the Gulf Islands, with a population of about 10,500 as of 2008.<ref>{{cite book | last = Zimmerman | first = Karla | coauthors = James Bainbridge, Celeste Brash, Natalie Folster, Scott Kennedy, Graham Neale | edition = 10 | publisher = Lonely Planet | title = Canada | year = 2008 | isbn = 1741045711 | page = 731}}</ref> |
|
'''Saltspring Island''' (also '''Salt Spring Island''') is one of the ] in the ] between mainland ], ] and ]. It is the most populated and most frequently visited of the Gulf Islands, with a population of about 10,500 as of 2008.<ref>{{cite book | last = Zimmerman | first = Karla | coauthors = James Bainbridge, Celeste Brash, Natalie Folster, Scott Kennedy, Graham Neale | edition = 10 | publisher = Lonely Planet | title = Canada | year = 2008 | isbn = 1741045711 | page = 731}}</ref> The island is known for its artisans.<ref name=Hill>{{cite book | last = Hill | first =Kathleen Thompson | coauthors = Gerald N. Hill | title = Victoria and Vancouver Island: A Personal Tour of an Almost Perfect Eden | edition = 5 | publisher = Globe Pequot | year = 2005 | isbn = 0762738758 | page = 242}}</ref> |
|
|
|
|
|
==History== |
|
==History== |
|
The island, initially inhabited by ] ], became a refuge from ] for ] who had resided in the ].<ref>{{cite book | last = Schulte-Peevers | first = Andrea | title = Canada | edition = 9 | publisher = Lonely Planet | year = 2005 | isbn = 1740597737 | page = 729 | quote = Originally settled by the Salish First Nation over a thousand years ago, it became a place where African Americans fled to escape racial tensions in the USA}}</ref> Settled in 1858 by black Americans, the island was not only the first of the Gulf Islands to be settled, but also, according to 1988's ''A Victorian Missionary and Canadian Indian Policy'', the first agricultural settlement established anywhere in the ].<ref name=Hill>{{cite news | title = Hill | first =Kathleen Thompson | coauthors = Gerald N. Hill | title = Victoria and Vancouver Island: A Personal Tour of an Almost Perfect Eden | edition = 5 | publisher = Globe Pequot | year = 2005 | isbn = 0762738758 | page = 241}}</ref><ref>{{cite book | last = Nock | first = David A. | coauthors = Canadian Corporation for Studies in Religion | title = A Victorian Missionary and Canadian Indian Policy: Cultural Synthesis vs. Cultural Replacement | publisher = Wilfrid Laurier Univ. Press | year = 1988 | isbn = 0889201536 |page = 159-160}}</ref> The island, which had from 1859 been called "Admiral Island", was officially retitled by the Geographic Board of Canada in honor of the island's salt ] in 1905.<ref name=Hill/> 2005's ''Victoria and Vancouver Island'' indicates that in the 1960s, the island once again became a refuge for US citizens, this time for "]" during the ].<ref>Hill and Hill, 242</ref> |
|
The island, initially inhabited by ] ], became a refuge from ] for ] who had resided in the ].<ref>{{cite book | last = Schulte-Peevers | first = Andrea | title = Canada | edition = 9 | publisher = Lonely Planet | year = 2005 | isbn = 1740597737 | page = 729 | quote = Originally settled by the Salish First Nation over a thousand years ago, it became a place where African Americans fled to escape racial tensions in the USA}}</ref> Settled in 1858 by black Americans, the island was not only the first of the Gulf Islands to be settled, but also, according to 1988's ''A Victorian Missionary and Canadian Indian Policy'', the first agricultural settlement established anywhere in the ].<ref name=Hill241>Hill and Hill, 241.</ref><ref>{{cite book | last = Nock | first = David A. | coauthors = Canadian Corporation for Studies in Religion | title = A Victorian Missionary and Canadian Indian Policy: Cultural Synthesis vs. Cultural Replacement | publisher = Wilfrid Laurier Univ. Press | year = 1988 | isbn = 0889201536 |page = 159-160}}</ref> The island, which had from 1859 been called "Admiral Island", was officially retitled by the Geographic Board of Canada in honor of the island's salt ] in 1905.<ref name=Hill241/> 2005's ''Victoria and Vancouver Island'' indicates that in the 1960s, the island once again became a refuge for US citizens, this time for "]" during the ].<ref name=Hill/> |
|
|
|
|
|
==Notable residents== |
|
==Notable residents== |