Updated
Wednesday, 9th June 2021, 12:38 pm
The property experts were seen showing a couple around several properties across the area for the popular television show which will be aired later this year.
Susie Jones from Jacobs Steel had the pleasure of taking Phil to view a top floor flat in West Avenue.
She said: “It was great to meet Phil and the crew from the TV show.
Susie Jones with Phil Spencer, of Location, Location, Location, in Worthing
“Phil was just as nice as he appears on the show – we had a really long chat about the property market.
“Phil said he’s never known it to be as busy in his 25 years of working in the industry.”
Updated
Wednesday, 9th June 2021, 12:38 pm
The property experts were seen showing a couple around several properties across Worthing for the popular television show which will be aired later this year.
Susie Jones from Jacobs Steel had the pleasure of taking Phil to view a top floor flat in West Avenue.
She said: “It was great to meet Phil and the crew from the TV show.
Susie Jones with Phil Spencer, of Location, Location, Location, in Worthing
“Phil was just as nice as he appears on the show – we had a really long chat about the property market.
“Phil said he’s never known it to be as busy in his 25 years of working in the industry.”
Article content
Survivors of Shingwauk Indian Residential School say there are unmarked graves of students at the site.
Former students who attended the school in the 1940s and 1950s have said there are additional graves besides Shingwauk Cemetery where 72 students are buried.
We apologize, but this video has failed to load.
Try refreshing your browser. More graves may be at Shingwauk site Back to video
Krista McCracken, interim director of Shingwauk Residential Schools Centre, told The Sault Star “some” survivors recall burials of students being done “outside the bounds of the cemetery.” They ‘didn’t really know” why there was another burial area, said McCracken.
A family member and researcher reflect on the impact Shingwauk Residential School in Sault Ste. Marie, Ont., had on its students, including the lack of nurturing, cultural impact and death of 72 students.