Sunday, June 28, 2020

Sunday 28 th June 2020..Day 131!!!

Woke up to very windy and cool conditions and I won’t tell you what I did this morning...⚽️⚽️⚽️⚽️⚽️⚽️⚽️⚽️⚽️

By noon the wind had died down and the sun came out and it was lovely and I took Boomer down town and we did the 8 km Sea wall walk....

Enjoy the photos.....




Love this one





The Croatia flag on the left...good memories..


The mountains on the main land..

A working harbour..





















He was on leash but still enjoyed himself.....

This was going to be a funny comment saying this is just a bridge...





And I was going to say no not any bridge but the Pearson bridge....

Then I Googled  the Pearson it is named after and read this...


George Sharratt Pearson

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George Sharratt Pearson (April 27, 1880 – August 24, 1966) was an English-born wholesale grocer and political figure in British Columbia. He represented Nanaimo from 1928 to 1933, Alberni-Nanaimo from 1933 to 1941 and Nanaimo and the Islands from 1941 to 1952 in the Legislative Assembly of British Columbia as a Liberal.

He was born in BromleyStaffordshire in 1880,[1] the son of Joseph Dudley Pearson and Emma Sharratt. Pearson came to Canada in 1889; he was educated in Nanaimo, British Columbia. In 1904, Pearson married Emmeline Pearce. He served in the provincial cabinet as Minister of Labour and Commissioner of Fisheries. Pearson was president of the Nanaimo General Hospital.[1] From 1941 to 1952, he was a member of a Liberal-Conservative coalition in the provincial assembly.[2] Pearson died in Nanaimo at the age of 86 in 1966.[3]

In 1942 Pearson was a powerful political leader who adamantly advocated for the entire Japanese population to be driven out of British Columbia, in spite of military, navy and RCMP assertion, that they posed no threat. “B.C.politicians took the floor. They were led by George Pearson, B.C.’s minister of labour. He was half mad with rage. His position was that the entire Japanese population could not be trusted and he sought a final solution for his province: drive them all out.”[4]

The George Pearson Centre of the Vancouver Hospital, originally known as the Pearson Tuberculosis Hospital, was named in his honour.[5] The Pearson Bridge and Pearson Park in Nanaimo[6] and the retired BC ferry MV George S. Pearson were also named after Pearson.[7]



After I read it I was enraged and will never think the same when I cross over that bridge!!!!!


Stay safe and healthy!!


Yashi Kochi!!

2 comments:

Peter Kouwenhoven said...

Oh those Pearsons...

mexicokid said...

Yes bad boys indeed.....

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