Line of cars waiting due to road grading
- CA SQPL 11-023
Fait partie de Squamish Valley Museum (Brightbill House) Photograph Collection
Highway 99 (?)
146 résultats directement liés Exclure les termes spécifiques
Line of cars waiting due to road grading
Fait partie de Squamish Valley Museum (Brightbill House) Photograph Collection
Highway 99 (?)
Fait partie de Squamish Valley Museum (Brightbill House) Photograph Collection
Location unknown.
Woodfibre Plant construction, 1960
Fait partie de A.J. Sinclair Photograph Collection
Woodfibre Plant construction, 1961
Fait partie de A.J. Sinclair Photograph Collection
Fait partie de A.J. Sinclair Photograph Collection
Work at little Stawamus bridge
Fait partie de Squamish Times Photograph Collection
The actual Indian spelling of Stawamus is STA-a-mus and is a variant of Squamish and means "birthplace of the winds". Pioneers often used "Stamish" instead of "Stawamus". The name refers to the Indian reserve at the mouth of the Squamish River (Reserve #24), the Stawamus River, the area drained by it and the "Chief".
Squamish Public Library, Squamish Files: Place Names.
Grading the road from Squamish to Cheekye
Fait partie de Squamish Valley Museum (Brightbill House) Photograph Collection
Grading the road from Squamish to Cheekye (30-35).
Left to right: Claude Hertnell, Lawson Rae.
Clearing being done for new United Church, 1962
Fait partie de Aleeta Armstrong Photograph Collection
The church purchased two lots behind the building in 1962 to construct additions to meet the need of more room for their growing number of children in Sunday School.
This church (38014 Fourth Avenue) was built for the Presbyterian community in 1921. After several years of services held in the Anglican Church, the Presbyterian community raised this second church in Squamish.
Original use: Church.
Current use: Church.
Current condition: Well maintained, still in use as a church.
Building railway through Cheakamus canyon
Fait partie de Bob Armstrong Photograph Collection
Laying steel over Merrill & Ring Mud Creek Bridge
Fait partie de Ed Aldridge Photograph Collection
Laying steel over Merrill & Ring Mud Creek Bridge, 1927 (now called "Ring Creek").
Photo by: Ed Aldridge.
Sans titre
Merrill & Ring "4 Spot" with low built steel laying flatcar
Fait partie de Ed Aldridge Photograph Collection
Merrill & Ring 4 Spot with low built steel laying flatcar, ~1928 in Stawamus Valley. Climbing 6% grade on branch that ran south to Bughouse Heights.
Photo by: Ed Aldridge.
Sans titre
Fait partie de Aleeta Armstrong Photograph Collection
Vic Hurford (left) and Les Armstrong in front of a gravel truck
Merrill & Ring Bridge over the little Mamquam
Fait partie de Ed Aldridge Photograph Collection
Merrill & Ring Bridge over the little Mamquam (Mashiter Creek) picture taken looking north showing sky line for taking Pile Driver to north side of canyon (1928 - 1929).
Left to right: Brian Buckley (?), "Big Dave" Thompson (steel boss-track layer), Freddy Tom (Merrill & Ring car builder son), Billy Dawson (?).
Photo by: Ed Aldridge.
Mashiter Creek was named after William Mashiter.
Sans titre
Road construction to Britannia, ~1939
Fait partie de Harvey Hurren Photograph Collection
Driver thought to be Buzz Downer.
Road construction to Britannia, ~1939
Fait partie de Harvey Hurren Photograph Collection
Driver thought to be Buzz Downer.
Road construction to Britannia, 1939
Fait partie de Harvey Hurren Photograph Collection
Man thought to be Buzz Downer.
Construction of Mashiter School
Fait partie de Rose Tatlow Photograph Collection
Photo taken on June 25, 1915 of the construction of Mashiter School.
Construction crew at the site of Bracken Arms Hotel
Fait partie de Scott and Mildred MacDonald Photograph Collection
Construction crew at the site of the Bracken Arms Hotel. Picture taken around 1909 - 1919. Lance Bracken on far left and his brother Dick Bracken sitting cross-legged in the center (both are sons of John Bracken). The second man from the right with the baby is Forbes, a friend of the Schoonovers.
Fait partie de Squamish Times Photograph Collection
Construction of new M Creek Bridge
Fait partie de Squamish Times Photograph Collection
Construction of Intermediate Care Facility
Fait partie de Squamish Times Photograph Collection
Fall of 1983
Construction of the Civic Center
Fait partie de Squamish Times Photograph Collection
A dance was held in 1978 at the newly opened Civic Center. It became known as the "Loggers Sports Stomp".
Road construction from Squamish to Britannia, 1939
Fait partie de Harvey Hurren Photograph Collection
Fait partie de Harvey Hurren Photograph Collection
Construction of BC Tel on Cleveland Avenue with the Firehall in the background. Finished in 1950.
Evelyn Lamport on Merrill & Ring railroad trestle
Fait partie de Ed Aldridge Photograph Collection
Evelyn Lamport on Merrill & Ring railroad trestle (present site is just north of Ayr Drive in Garibaldi Highlands). Built along the face of rock bluffs. Photo taken ~1928 on the way to Alice Lake.
Merrill and Ring, an American company bought their claim in 1888 for 25 cents per acre. This went from Valleycliffe through the foothills to Brohm Lake. They did not set up in the valley until October 1926. The operation had come from Duncan Bay, before that they had been at Camp O near Alert Bay. Their first camp is where Valleycliffe is located now. They employed 200 people. The hiring was done by Loggers' Agencies in Vancouver. They would fall the trees with cross cut saws then haul the logs with a steam donkey to the train. They used a steam axe to split the wood as machines used only wood fuel at the time.
A lot of Merrill and Ring timber was burnt in a Norton McKinnon fire in 1927. The McKinnon's engine was given as payment. Aloysius McNalley and John Broomquist collected it. The same year, Arthur Edwards assisted in the building of the Merrill & Ring camp at Edith Lake.
In 1929, Merrill and Ring moved their operation across the Mamquam valley to Edith Lake east of Alice Lake. A settlement of 225 men was set up there. Railway track covered the mountainside from Cheekye River southward.
Merrill and Ring closed in 1930 due to the low price of logs during the Depression. Logs were selling from 5 to 6 dollars per thousand. At this time, the logs were hauled by train to the dump at the mouth of the Stawamus River. Merill and Ring started back up in 1932.
Merrill and Ring shut down 3 times in 1937: after New Years due to snow, due to fire season, and in the fall when a bridge over the Cheekye River was washed out. Merrill and Ring left Squamish in 1940.