Interior of church in Lytton B.C.
- BC-1744/54
- Item
- After 1950.
Altar and stained glass window.
[Unknown] (Authorized heading)
Interior of church in Lytton B.C.
Altar and stained glass window.
[Unknown] (Authorized heading)
View of highway.
[Unknown] (Authorized heading)
Beach on possibly the Fraser River.
Some people standing among logs, others are wading in the water.
[Unknown] (Authorized heading)
Woman at campsite cooking with stove.
[Unknown] (Authorized heading)
Car parked on side of road with snow covered landscape in background. Probably B.C.
[Unknown] (Authorized heading)
Totem Poles at Kitwancool Indian Village, near Skeena River, British Columbia.
Detail of leaning totem pole.
Grant-Man Lithographers ltd.
Totem Poles at Kitwancool Indian Village, near Skeena River, British Columbia.
"People of the smoke hole" totem and "Skulls of people" totems.
Grant-Man Lithographers ltd.
Two women posing with bicycle. Third bicycle upside down.
[Unknown] (Authorized heading)
[Unknown] (Authorized heading)
Eagle Lake Saw Mills, power house fire, Giscome, B.C.
Aftermath of fire.
[Unknown] (Authorized heading)
Eagle Lake Saw Mills, power house fire, Giscome, B.C.
Aftermath of fire.
[Unknown] (Authorized heading)
Eagle Lake Saw Mills, power house fire, Giscome, B.C.
Aftermath of fire.
[Unknown] (Authorized heading)
[Unknown] (Authorized heading)
Sail in Provincial Museum, Victoria, B.C.
[Unknown] (Authorized heading)
Alexandra Bridge Over the Fraser River, British Columbia
Canadian Pacific Railway Company
[Unknown] (Authorized heading)
Copy of memorial of taking possession of Arctic Archipelago for Canada
Close-up of memorial tablet.
Hell's Gate on Fraser River, B.C.
Train going through tunnel.
Associated Screen News Limited
Shipping dogfish livers, Queen Charlotte City, Queen Charlotte Islands, B.C.
British Columbia Travel Bureau.
Photograph of two elderly men shaking hands, U.B.C. campus?
[Unknown] (Authorized heading)
Scene from the play, "Moscow character", by A. Safronov.
Two male actors.
Photograph taken in U.S.S.R.?
[Unknown] (Authorized heading)
Scene from the play, "Moscow character", by A. Safronov.
One male and one female actor.
Photograph taken in U.S.S.R.?
[Unknown] (Authorized heading)
Scenes from the play, "The Green street", by A. Suzgov.
Two male and one female actor, sitting and drinking.
Photograph taken in U.S.S.R.?
[Unknown] (Authorized heading)
Scenes from the play, "The Green street", by A. Suzgov.
One male and one female actor talking on patio.
Photograph taken in U.S.S.R.?
[Unknown] (Authorized heading)
Scenes from the play, "The Green street", by A. Suzgov.
One female and one male actor.
Photograph taken in U.S.S.R.?
[Unknown] (Authorized heading)
Scenes from the play, "The Green street", by A. Suzgov.
One female and three male actors.
Photograph taken in U.S.S.R.?
[Unknown] (Authorized heading)
Ghost of Walhachin roadside marker.
Message on marker: "Ghost of Walhachin : Here bloomed a "Garden of Eden"! The sagebrush desert changed to orchards through the imagination and industry of English settlers during 1907-14. Then the men left to fight- and die - for king and country. A storm ripped out the vital irrigation flume. Now only ghosts of flume, trees, and homes remain to mock this once thriving settlement. : Department of Recreation & Conservation."
[Unknown] (Authorized heading)
Probably view of Kamloops.
[Unknown] (Authorized heading)
View of river possibly near Kamloops.
View of river in Cariboo region of B.C.
[Unknown] (Authorized heading)
Lake of the Shuswap road sign with lake in background.
Text on sign reads: "Lake of the Shuswap. : This beautiful lake takes its name from the Shuswap Indians, northernmost of the great Salishan family and the larges tribe in Interior B.C.. Once numbering over 5,000 these people were fisherman and hunters. They roamed in bands through a vast land of lakes and forest stretching 150 miles to the west, north, and east. : Department of Recreation and Conservation."
[Unknown] (Authorized heading)
Car parked on roadside.
[Unknown] (Authorized heading)
Sign reads: "Frank Slide April 29 1903. Disaster struck the town of Frank at 4:10 A.M. April 29thth 1903 when a gigantic wedge of limestone 2.100 feet high 3.000 feet wide and 500 feet thick crashed down from Turtle Mountain. Ninety million tons of rock swept over a mile of valley, destroying part of the town, taking 70 lives, and burying an entire mine plant and railway in approximately 100 seconds. The old town was located at the western edge of the slide where many cellars still are visible.".
[Unknown] (Authorized heading)
Two figures walking on rocks above vegetation. Alberta, Canada.
[Unknown] (Authorized heading)
View of mountain sides, rocks and vegetation.
[Unknown] (Authorized heading)
View of mountainside with evidence of rockslide. Alberta, Canada.
[Unknown] (Authorized heading)
Thompson River below Spences Bridge.
Car parked at Spences Bridge, B.C. with campsite in background.
[Unknown] (Authorized heading)
Three figures standing in the water, possibly the Fraser River.
[Unknown] (Authorized heading)
Monument in commemoration of the work of Her Majesty's Royal Engineers.
Plaque reads: "1859-1927 in commemoration of the work of Her Majesty's Royal Engineers and in respectful admiration of the skill and energy displayed by them from 1859 to 1863 in the construction of the original Cariboo highway through the Fraser Canyon . This tablet is erected and dedicated by The Engineering Institute of Canada and The Association of Professional Engineers of British Columbia.".
[Unknown] (Authorized heading)
Fraser's River road sign with view of river.
Sign reads: " "...We could scarcely make our way even with our guns. We had to pass where no human being should venture ; yet in those places there is a regular... path ... indented upon the very rocks." So wrote Simon Fraser and fur-trader, in 1808, the first white man to descend the river which bears his name.".
[Unknown] (Authorized heading)
Historic Yale road sign with view of town.
Sign reads: "This was the head of navigation on the Fraser River. Founded in 1848 as a Hudson's Bay Company fur post, For Yale later became a roaring gold-rush town and for 20 years was the starting point of the famous Cariboo wagon Road. Yale faded with the gold-rush but boomed again in C.P.R construction days as a wide open western town. Department of Recreation & Conservation.".
[Unknown] (Authorized heading)
View from Hell's Gate, B.C.
[Unknown] (Authorized heading)
View of waves and people tanning on the beach.
[Unknown] (Authorized heading)
Open landcape with small farm.
Possibly interior B.C.
[Unknown] (Authorized heading)
Grant-Man Lithographers ltd.
Totem poles at Kispiox Indian village, Skeena River, British Columbia.
"Running Backwards" Totems.
Grant-Man Lithographers ltd.