- CA SQPL 20-046
Flooded field off Highway 99 (behind Golden's).
Flooded field off Highway 99 (behind Golden's).
Flooded road caused by overflow
Flooded road in Valleycliffe caused by overflow of Stawamus Creek in October 1981.
Flooding in Brackendale near MacKenzies Farm
Flooding in Brackendale near MacKenzies Farm by previous Big Chief Drive-In (Government Road).
Freda Clarke (nee Lasser) in front of home on 2nd Avenue during 1940 flood.
Guilford Road - Valleycliffe flood
Harold Thorne in canoe during the 1940 flood
Part of Squamish Valley Museum (Brightbill House) Photograph Collection
Photo by: Jean Reid
Harvey Hurren in Squamish Post Office
When tidewater flooded Downtown, December 1967.
House damaged by flood washout, 1940
Part of Squamish Valley Museum (Brightbill House) Photograph Collection
Photo by: Jean Reid.
Intersection of Victoria and Cleveland Ave during 1940 flood
Intersection of Victoria and Cleveland Avenue during the 1940 flood. Building in background is Yarwood Drugs. Margaret McCallum in foreground.
Margaret McCallum (nee Dewar) owned the first cafe: Waltz Inn Cafe. She married Donald McCallum in March 1913.
Judd residence looking into backyard during flood of 1906 (September 6).
The present form of Brackendale did not begin to take shape until the subdivision of the Judd property in 1910 into 20 large lots along the Government Road, including the original lot purchased for the Brackendale Store. The original Judd Home itself burnt to the ground in 1916 and was rebuilt as the structure which stands there today as the current home of Mrs Farquharson, one of Henry and Anne Judd's youngest daughters.
Henry Judd (or Harry, as he was also known) and his wife Anne were among that small group of settlers which included the Robertsons, the Raes, William Mashiter, E.B. Madill, George Magee, Tom Reid, and a few others who are now regarded as the Pioneers of the Squamish Valley.
Having made purchase by public lottery of a major piece of property covering much of what is Brackendale today, Henry Judd arrived in the Valley in 1889 to begin farming his land. Building his original home at the present site of the Brennan Home, Judd sold that house to his parents after marrying Barbara Anne Edwards, who had come to work at the Squamish Valley Hop Ranch. A new home was built by the young couple on the site of the present Judd House.
House later turned 90 degrees clockwise.
On October 28, 1981, 4 vehicles plunged into a creek after debris flow had destroyed the M Creek Bridge on the Squamish Highway during heavy rains. 9 people died including Tammi Lee Boscariol, daughter of Squamish residents William and Anne Boscariol, and her boyfriend William Stewart Short.
Suspected to be 1962.
During the flood in December 1941.
Mamquam River Bridge - 1941 flood
Mamquam River was named for the Indian word meaning "smelly water".
McDonald's house in North Yards during 1940 flood
Photo by: H. Brightbill
Brightbill, Harry
Newport Hotel burning in December 1956.
Canadian Pacific Railway during October 1921 flood.