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FREDERICK W. DONAGHY

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Frederick W. Donaghy

July 9, 1925 – September 21, 2011

It is with great sadness we announce the

passing of Fred after a courageous year-long battle with cancer. He had lived most of his life on Salt Spring Island working at Saltspring Lands Real Estate and ending his working career with BC Ferries. He served as volunteer

Fire Chief from 1960 to 1969. He is survived by his loving wife Kay, devoted daughter

Louise, granddaughter Tamara (Paul)

Harrison, brother-in-law Wally Bradley (Jean), sister-in-law Helen Dickey and loving nieces and nephews. The family would like to thank their dear friends for their love and support throughout this difficult year. There will be no service by Fred’s request. Donations may be made to Lady Minto Hospital.

OLIVER R. STEWART

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OLIVER R. STEWART

September 16, 1924

to September 16, 2011

Of Salt Spring Island, Oliver (‘Stew’, ‘Ollie’) was born in Blenheim Ontario. He served in the RCAF during World War II, enjoyed a long successful management career in sales and marketing, was an avid golfer and very much enjoyed his motor scooter late in life. He was a vibrant man, enjoyed life and took on his challenges with great strength of character and dignity. He will be sadly missed by his recent partner and first wife Mildred Young, his children Brenda (Rod) Scotvold, Budd Stewart, Michael (Louise) Stewart, and Susan (Doug) Pugh, three grandchildren and one great-grandchild. Oliver is predeceased by his second wife Barbara.

There will be no service at Oliver’s request.

ELIZABETH MARY, NEE DOYLE CAMPBELL

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Elizabeth Mary Campbell, nee Doyle

January 23, 1932 – September 15, 2011

With great sadness, we announce the passing of Elizabeth after a 5½ year struggle with the complications of a series of strokes.

Elizabeth was born in Ballygillane, Kilrane, Co. Wexford, Ireland, emigrating to Canada in 1957.

Surviving her is her husband of 46 years, Dennis, sisters Celia Carmichael of Staffordshire, England, Bevina (Tom) McCarthy of Co. Waterford, Ireland and many nieces and nephews in Canada, Ireland and England. Predeceasing Elizabeth were two brothers and five sisters.

The family would like to thank the staff at Lady Minto Hospital Extended Care for their kindness and compassion for Elizabeth over the past three years. We would also like to thank Dr. David Woodley for his thoughtful care and assistance.

STEVEN LEIGH STEVENSON

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It breaks my heart to let you know of the passing of my husband.

Steven Leigh Stevenson

March 4, 1963 – September 13, 2011

Steve was born in Tillsonburg, Ontario. When Steve was young he loved his sports especially hockey and then baseball. Steve did a lot of farming and totally enjoyed it, especially looking after the pigs and chickens to running the farm equipment. Favourite pastime as a teen was gravel running with his brother and the boys. He then moved to Salt Spring Island with his mother Shirley LaFortune. Steve graduated from high school here, meeting many friends that he still has today. Steve was known for the biggest smile, sparkly blue eyes and crazy mustache then and now. Following high school, Steve went to trade school and became the best electrician, plus the man who a lot of people trusted and asked advise on how to solve a weird problem with electrical, plumbing, building to fishing and hunting. Steve, I believed was happiest out on his boat the “Money Sucker”, fishing and crabbing with Andrew, Ronnie and Rod. Steve loved his boy Daniel and Luke too! Steve was the kind of man who would do anything for anybody, just ‘cause, from changing a light bulb to putting the extra wire in for the future hot tub for free, to giving a complete stranger his last $40.00 and a ride to the ferry.

Steve will be greatly missed by his wife Deb and mom Shirley. Sons, Daniel and Luke. Parents Shirley and Steve LaFortune, Bill and Pam Stevenson. His brother Scott (Andrea, Mathew, Tyler and Spencer) Dean (Vanessa, Zach, Raquel, Luci), sisters Lissa (Jason, Shelbie and Sadie), Shannon (Ken, Tia, Cole, Jada, Kaden) and by his in-laws Dee Hellicar, Adam Hellicar and Katy Luedtke (Jerry, Jerimiah and Nikki).

Thanks to everyone who helped with finding Steve: Ian Marcotte, Andrew Holmes and the Search and Rescue, especially the helicopters. Thanks especially to everyone who helped make Steve’s “Celebration of Life” possible on such short notice: Dayva, Dan, Lisa, Hamish, Rod, Alana, Char, Donna, Katy, Lorraine and Salel. Thanks so much for the community support by lowering the flags at half mast at Mouat’s and the firehall and for the minute of silence at the Fall Fair. Steve would have never known how much he was loved.

The whole family wants to thank all their wonderful friends and this special community for their words of comfort, flowers, cards and support through this tough time.

You will be greatly missed Steve by those who knew you and especially by me your wife of 13 years.

– Deb, love ya truly xoxoxo

Why? That is what we ask. The truth is, we may never be able to know for sure why, but we do know that there is no single “should have done” or “could have done” or “did” or “didn’t do”. That we would have changed that why. All that love could do was done.

Steve Stevenson’s Ontario family and friends we would like to thank Salt Spring Island for the heart warming tribute to Steve. The flags flying at half-mast, the moment of silence at the fair, the inspiring messages shared at his celebration of life helps us cope with our loss. We knew the kind of person Steve was and knowing that everyone around him knew his kindness, his cheerful ways, his work ethic and generous spirit comforts us daily. The pain of his loss is felt across this country and we will always miss Steve but knowing because he was so special he will never be forgotten will carry us through.

ROBERT LESLIE SHIPLEY

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Shipley, Robert Leslie

June 20, 1933 – September 4, 2011

Our beloved Bob leaves to mourn his wife Lois and five step children and their families, twelve grandchildren and two great grandchildren, his sister Kathleen and nieces Lea Anne and Lori and their families. From his birthplace in Simcoe, Ontario, his engineering career took him throughout North America, from Yellowknife to Nashville to Los Angeles. He retired for the last 11 years on Salt Spring. Of the many aircraft Bob helped to produce, the B1B Bomber and the C17 Cargomaster stand out.

My dearest Bob –

One, or the other must leave

One, or the other must stay

One, or the other must grieve

That is forever the way.

That is the vow that was sworn

Faithful “till death do us part”

Braving what had to be borne

Hiding the ache in the heart.

One howsoever adored

First must be summoned away

That is the will of our Lord

One, or the other must stay.

Bob wished cremation, no service and his ashes scattered on his favourite trail and rock and in his family plot in Ontario. If you wish, donation can be made to the Bessy Dane Society, whom we thank for their compassion, or to B.C.S.P.C.A. Caregivers at Lady Minto, we can’t praise enough and Dr. David Woodlee, you are the most thoughtful and kind docter ever.

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JOAN EDNA MILTON

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Joan Edna Milton

June 30, 1923 –

September 4, 2011

Joan, born in London, was a wartime nurse who cared for her patients with compassion, sensitivity and humour. She enjoyed a brief career as a ball room dancer after the war, but was proud and happy to give up both careers to be a full time mum once her first son was born. In 1957, she immigrated to Ontario with her husband Ron and two sons, Michael and Derrick. Joan and her husband moved to Saltspring in 1991 to be closer to their youngest grand children, Margo and Shayla. Joan was disappointed that she had watched from a distance as her older grandchildren, Jennifer and Robert had grown up. Joan worked for a variety of charitable and community organizations both in England and Canada. Her greatest love was for children, but her love of animals, music, dance, theatre and travel was evident in her varied activities. She was very active in the Scout and Guide organization, setting up many packs and troops on 2 continents, as well as organizing at the provincial level. She was instrumental in creating live theatre in Aurora and was active in many organizations such as Royal Canadian Legion, the Humane Society, the SPCA, Seniors for Seniors, Central Hall, and more. Even at 88 she was still leading a sing-a-long regularly at Greenwoods. Joan?s strong will, never ending curiosity and sense of humour will be missed by all who knew her.

Memorial and Celebration of Joan?s Life

Sunday, September 18, 2:00 pm

at the Harbour House Green Room

(easy wheel chair and walker access via the rear door)

FU-SHIANG CHIA

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Fu-Shiang CHIA

1931 – 2011

Dr. Fu-Shiang Chia died Monday, August 22 at the Lady Minto Hospital on Salt Spring Island, B.C. after an extended illness. He is survived by Sharon, his wife of 48 years, their daughters Maria (Myron, Saint Albert, Alberta) and Alisa (Toronto), their four grandchildren Massey, Lara, Elise and Jeremiah, two sisters in Shandong, China and numerous nieces and nephews. Born in Shandong, he was pre-deceased by his parents and three older brothers. The only literate member of the family was his grandfather, an itinerant, countryside judge and fung shui master, who , when Fu-Shiang was seven years old, began to give the future scholar rigorous lessons in Chinese Classical Literature. Though illiterate, the boy’s mother was a natural, gifted story-teller who recognized in her fourth son an unusual intelligence and an extraordinarily curious nature. When he was fifteen she urged him to “go far away,” wanting him to procure an education somehow and to develop his mind to its full potential. For the next three years he wandered about eastern China amidst the dangers of the vestiges of the Japanese invasion and occupation and the armies of the advancing civil war, all who would have conscripted or killed him. As a vagrant vagabond, he was often reduced to begging or to petty commerce such as selling single cigarettes or pieces of candy scrounged from ubiquitous war dead in order to earn enough for a meal.

Fu-Shiang’s family, though very poor, actually owned the plot of land from which they drew subsistence, and therefore were under threat from the advancing communists in 1949. An uncle assisted him to gain safe passage to Taiwan (then Formosa), where he was immediately (and briefly) imprisoned as a suspected communist spy. Upon release, he was given the rank of Lieutenant in the KMT Nationalist army. After two years, he was decommissioned and began to study for his BSc in biology at the National Normal University of Taiwan. In 1961, his academic excellence gained him a scholarship to the University of Washington in Seattle, USA, where he earned MSc and PhD degrees which launched him on a career of research and teaching at six universities on three continents, including an early appointment in England and ending with an unusual position at one of Asia’s premier institutions. The bulk of his academic life was spent at the University of Alberta, in Edmonton, while he maintained an active research presence at the Friday Harbor Laboratories of the University of Washington and at the Bamfield Marine Station on Vancouver Island. Gradually he established a world-wide reputation for his academic work, publishing over 200 refereed scientific articles and four books on his specialization on intertidal invertebrate marine animals. He also mentored and supervised more than fifty post-doctoral fellows, MSc and PhD students. Not only was he a very popular instructor of undergraduate students, he also took a special interest in nurturing the aspirations of many younger people.

From 1978 to 1983, Fu-Shiang was Chairman of the Department of Biology at the University of Alberta, and from 1983 to 1993 he was the dynamic Dean of the University’s Faculty of Graduate Studies and Research, where he led by example to instil his own virtues of devotion to academic excellence, fairness, innovation and integrity. For several years he held the 9th highest amount of research grant dollars in Canada, all while distinguishing himself as an administrator.

From the University of Alberta, Professor Chia was recruited in the mid 1990’s by the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology as a professor to help that University in its ambitious program to become the MIT or Cal Tech of Asia. After four years there he enjoyed a brief stint as the Director of the Taiwan National Aquarium before returning to Edmonton. Soon after, he and Sharon took up residence on Salt Spring Island for his third, and final retirement. Until he was in his eightieth year, however, he continued to lecture to rapt audiences in Asia and North America.

This story of scientific and administrative achievements relates only half of Fu-Shiang’s professional life. During his mature years his mind returned to his tutelage by his grandfather in the 1930s. He quickly gained a vast readership in Taiwan, the People’s Republic of China and in the Chinese diaspora, prolifically publishing books of poetry, philosophical essays and popularly accessible, yet scholarly translations of Chinese classics. (He was also given as much space he wanted on whatever topic interested him in each year’s first issue of the Chinese edition of Scientific American, an honour and privilege he was only once able to fulfil.) Probably his greatest scholarly contribution to the world – and certainly his favourite work – was his 2008 publication of a tri-lingual translation of the Shi Jing, the oldest extant collection of lyric poetry in the patrimony of world literature, translating the Classical Chinese text into modern Chinese and on into contemporary English. In 2010 this magnum opus was republished by the prestigious University of Beijing’s Peking University Press, which further “translated” this work into the modern, simplified Chinese script put in place under Chairman Mao, virtually guaranteeingFu-Shiang’s work itself the status of a classic. Following this pinnacle of a more than forty year intellectual career, Fu-Shiang continued to the end of his life, writing and translating poetry and essays, planning his memoirs, and lecturing on ecology, philosophy and poetry, focussing his energies more and more on non-academic audiences and young people, fostering in them a love of science, fine arts and literature. To him no one who showed curiosity was ever too young or insignificant to be personally drawn into the orbit of his love of learning. His was truly a life well lived, and though he would blush and reject the notion, his was the life of a great soul, a very spiritual atheist.

Fu-Shiang’s family gratefully acknowledge the kindness and compassion of the nurses and doctors at the Lady Minto Hospital, especially Dr. White and Dr. MacPhail. They also extend a special, heartfelt “thank you” to the Salt Spring Hospice/Bessie Dan Foundation.

In lieu of flowers, the family suggests donations in Dr. Fu-Shiang Chia’s memory to either the Land Conservancy of British Columbia [301-1195 Esquimault Road, Victoria, B.C. V9A 3N6] or to the University of Washington for the Fernald Fellowship Fund at the Friday Harbor Laboratories, Friday Harbor, Washington, USA 98250.

A Memorial Celebration of Fu-Shiang Chia’s life will be held on September 2nd, from 2:30 to 4:30 at the Harbour House Hotel on Salt Spring Island.

LAUREL BAUCHMAN

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Laurel Bauchman

 

Born Halifax, Nova Scotia, March 22, 1959. Died Saltspring Island, BC, August 20, 2011, surrounded by her family.

Beloved wife of 19 years to Paul Ceyssens, mother to Kiera and Callum, sister to Bronwyn, Paul (predeceased) (Mary Anne), and Roy, and aunt to Megan. Laurel was predeceased by her parents Perry and Rosemary Bauchman.

Laurel grew up in Halifax, Montreal and St. John’s, and received her arts, education and law degrees from Dalhousie University. She began her legal career with the Nova Scotia Legal Aid Commission, appearing regularly in the courts of Cape Breton representing clients in family law and criminal matters. Most recently, she practiced for 12 years in the areas of employment law and professional regulation with her husband, in the Saltspring Island firm of Ceyssens & Bauchman.  Laurel was involved in providing pro bono legal services and other charitable endeavours, most prominently as a long-serving member of the board of directors of the Gulf Islands Early Learning Society (formerly Salt Spring Island Daycare Society).  She was heavily involved in the Society’s plans for a new early learning centre in the community.

Laurel was proud of her professional accomplishments, but always said what she wanted more than anything was a family. She derived enormous personal satisfaction from her family and was a committed and intuitive parent. To her family and many friends she exhibited in abundance the qualities of inspiration and compassion and mischievous fun.

Laurel’s family wishes to express sincere gratitude to the nursing staff at Lady Minto Hospital and Dr. Ian Gummeson.

A memorial service will take place at St. Luke’s Anglican Church, 3821 Cedar Hill Cross Road, Victoria, Friday, September 2, at 2 p.m.  In lieu of flowers, donations can be made to the Gulf Islands Early Learning Society, 381 Lower Ganges Road, Saltspring Island, V8K 2V4, Queen Margaret’s School, 660 Brownsey Avenue, Duncan, BC, V9L 1C2, or the Colorectal Cancer Association of Canada, www.colorectal-cancer.ca. Condolences to

pc@saltspring.com.

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PIETER H. DE VINK

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De Vink, Pieter H.

It is with profound sadness that we announce the passing of our beloved Pieter on August 17, 2011.

Born in Rotterdam in the Nether-lands on February 17, 1936, Pieter emigrated to Canada in 1959, eventually settling in Vancouver. After graduating from university, for many years he worked for Correctional Services Canada, eventually retiring from the position of Deputy Commissioner, Pacific Region. In retirement, he spent many memorable years on Salt Spring Island, where he was able to indulge his passion for travel, sailing and building all manner of sheds. He also became a valuable member of the Coast Guard Auxiliary – Gulf Islands Unit 25 – where he imparted his knowledge and enthusiasm to many young sailors.

Beloved husband of Pauline Guénette, caring father to John (Kim) and Allison (Bill), and devoted Opa to Nicholas, Keagan, Jordan, Elizabeth and William. He is survived by his brother Bert (Judy) of Quesnel, B.C., and his sisters Riet and Joke in the Netherlands, along with several nieces and nephews in both the Netherlands and Canada. Pieter will be fondly remembered by his extended family, many friends and colleagues for his warmth, generosity and sense of humour.

Many thanks to the doctors and staff at both the Lady Minto Hospital on Salt Spring and the Royal Jubilee Hospital in Victoria, and especially to Doctors Leon and McGhie, for their compassion and caring.

A celebration of Pieter’s life will be held on Saturday, August 27, 2011, at Meaden Hall, Royal Canadian Legion, 120 Blain Road, Ganges, Salt Spring Island, from 1:30 to 4:00 p.m. If so desired, donations may be made to the Salt Spring Branch of the SPCA (www.spca.bc.ca) or to the Lady Minto Hospital (www.ladymintofoundation.com).

Donald Samuel McCardia

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DONALD SAMUEL McCardia passed away on August 11, 2011 at the age of 94. As per his wishes he will be cremated and there will be no funeral or memorial service. Previously deceased by his wife Lillian McCardia. Left to mourn is his only son Richard McCardia and his longtime friend and companion Wynn Edwards.