place for subsequent generations who would know nothing of past struggles except through past recollections and story telling. Immigrants have made Canada what it is today. SOURCES Bone, Robert M. Regional Geography in Canada. Canada: Oxford University Press. 2000. Bouwmeester, Cory. Interview. 2000. Dijks, Ineke J., Jankunis, Frank, J. 1992. What Geography is There in Local History? Western Geography Vol. 2. Western Division, Canadian Association of Geographers. Ganzevoort, Herman. A Bittersweet Land. The Dutch Experience in Canada, 1890- 1980. McClelland and Stewart. 1988. Larosa, Mary. Interview. 1997. began. Once off the ship, people started going in all different directions, many depending on the location of their connections or sponsors. From the ports, people boarded trains to journey into the heart of Canada to meet church officials or familyor employer[s] who had sponsored them(Ganzevoort, 1988: 79). Settlement was in various locations and in varying numbers. Many people settled together in similar ethnic groups in order to maintain their culture and affiliation. Through this they could achieve a sense of place with little alienation in their new home. Some drew comfort from large numbers of similar people, however, my family did not settle amongst a Dutch colony. My grandfathers main goal was in establishing his own family where they were provided with the best opportunities and making their lives as prosperous as he knew how. He did this through hard work and determination. They traveled to Alberta where they met his brother who was already a resident. Here they settled on a farm. The Dutch were classified as preferred immigrants in contrast with non-preferred (Bone, 2000: Ch.4). Preferred immigrants may have experienced fewer barriers, but faced barriers nonetheless. Language, which is a key component of ethnicity, is one of those barriers. My grandmothers solution to this was to never allow her children to speak Dutch (Bouw...