The Prince George Citizen

History awards handed out

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The 36th annual Jeanne Clarke Local History Awards were announced during a virtual ceremony Sunday evening.

The Prince George Native Friendship Centre was honoured with the Jeanne Clarke Local History Award for Service for their Skeh Baiyoh Childcare Centre. The Skeh Baiyoh Childcare Centre incorporat­es Indigenous teaching practices into early childhood education, blending together Aboriginal Head Start philosophy and early childhood education best practices with critical aspects of Carrier culture. Children learn about the Lheidli T’enneh by gaining exposure to language, social gatherings, traditions, and the wisdom of elders. Skeh Baiyoh also partners with outside organizati­ons to expand awareness of Lheidli T’enneh history and culture, which continues to thrive after centuries of colonizati­on.

The Prince George Public Library Board also awarded two regional awards for publicatio­ns this year.

Geoff Mynett accepted a Publicatio­n Award for Service on the Skeena: Horace Wrinch, Frontier Physician. Service on the Skeena is the previously untold biography of medical doctor, administra­tor, missionary, farmer and progressiv­e politician Horace Wrinch. Wrinch, who departed England alone at age 14, arrived in Hazelton 20 years later, where he built the first hospital in the northern interior. Having drawn extensivel­y on research from archives, newspapers, family documents and photograph­s, Mynett’s work captures the reader’s admiration and interest from cover to cover.

Briony Penn accepted a Publicatio­n Award for Stories from the Magic Canoe of Wa’xaid by Cecil Paul as told to Briony Penn. Stories from the Magic Canoe reflects on the restoratio­n of land and culture. Told in Wa’xaid’s (also known as Cecil Paul) singular, vernacular voice, the book spans a lifetime of experience, suffering and survival. A Xenaksiala elder, Wa’xaid passed away in December, shortly after his 90th birthday. The prominent Indigenous leader was known for his tireless work to protect the Kitlope, described as the largest intact temperate rainforest watershed in the world.

The Jeanne Clarke Local History Award was establishe­d by the library board in 1985, in memory of former library board chair Jeanne Clarke, a founding member of the Prince George Public Library’s Local History Committee whgo played a key role in establishi­ng the library’s local history collection.

 ?? CITIZEN PHOTO BY JAMES DOYLE/LOCAL JOURNALISM INITIATIVE ?? The Prince George Native Friendship Centre was the recipient of the Jeanne Clarke Local History Award for Service at the 36th annual Jeanne Clarke Local History Awards. PGNFC Executive Director Barb Ward-Burkitt, right, and Kim Rud, Director of Early Childhood Services pose for a photo with the award in front of the centre on Monday morning.
CITIZEN PHOTO BY JAMES DOYLE/LOCAL JOURNALISM INITIATIVE The Prince George Native Friendship Centre was the recipient of the Jeanne Clarke Local History Award for Service at the 36th annual Jeanne Clarke Local History Awards. PGNFC Executive Director Barb Ward-Burkitt, right, and Kim Rud, Director of Early Childhood Services pose for a photo with the award in front of the centre on Monday morning.

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