The old fireplace of Bracken Arms Hotel
- CA SQPL 06-060
- 1960 - 1965
Fait partie de Scott and Mildred MacDonald Photograph Collection
The old fireplace of Bracken Arms Hotel which was built in 1910. Picture was taken between 1960 and 1965.
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The old fireplace of Bracken Arms Hotel
Fait partie de Scott and Mildred MacDonald Photograph Collection
The old fireplace of Bracken Arms Hotel which was built in 1910. Picture was taken between 1960 and 1965.
Elvira and Charles Schoonover, 1947
Fait partie de Scott and Mildred MacDonald Photograph Collection
Fait partie de Scott and Mildred MacDonald Photograph Collection
Elvira Schoonover sitting outdoors at the Schoonover place.
Fait partie de Scott and Mildred MacDonald Photograph Collection
Picture of the snowplow on Engine No. 59
Fait partie de Scott and Mildred MacDonald Photograph Collection
Picture taken at 19 mile bridge, 4 miles above Swift Creek. Circa 1930.
Fait partie de Scott and Mildred MacDonald Photograph Collection
"Dirty Face Jones", picture taken in the 1930's near his cabin around Leski's Crossing.
Bob Schoonover with his Model T Ford
Fait partie de Scott and Mildred MacDonald Photograph Collection
Al Armstrong, Johnny Fleurs, Scott MacDonald
Fait partie de Scott and Mildred MacDonald Photograph Collection
Left to right: Al Armstrong, Johnny Fleurs, and Scott MacDonald posing outdoors wearing hats.
Fait partie de Scott and Mildred MacDonald Photograph Collection
The Newport Hotel during the flood of 1921.
Fait partie de Scott and Mildred MacDonald Photograph Collection
Located behind the present day Kaos Kids store (where Pharmasave used to be), the kitty corner to Fields. Logs used to be unloaded here. Picture taken in 1920.
Alex and Scott MacDonald, 1918
Fait partie de Scott and Mildred MacDonald Photograph Collection
Alex (left) and Scott (right) MacDonald
Fait partie de Scott and Mildred MacDonald Photograph Collection
Chief Jimmy and his wife pictured between 1912 and 1914. Picture was taken at the home of Elvira Schoonover.
Fait partie de Scott and Mildred MacDonald Photograph Collection
Building called the "Bucket of Blood" on Cleveland Avenue between 1912 and 1914. Charlie McKinnon had a restaurant below while Holland & Edwards had a poolroom above.
Fait partie de Scott and Mildred MacDonald Photograph Collection
Squamish, when the Blind Channel used to be a part of the Mamquam River. Red Bridge and Magee's hay field can be seen.
Fait partie de Scott and Mildred MacDonald Photograph Collection
Firefighters at the "halfway" between Upper Squamish and Cheekye. Paid $0.25 / hour.
Seated far left, Mr Morbray (fire warden); seated left with white hat, Oswald (Ozzie) Ray; far right seated on bench, Charles Sherman Schoonover; seated next to him, Paul Sellons; standing far right, Compton Reade.
In front of logging locomotive
Fait partie de Scott and Mildred MacDonald Photograph Collection
Left to right: Harry Brightbill, Sainsbury (cook), Amedy Levesque in front of logging locomotive, 1910-1013.
Amedy Levesque and his partners, Leviolette, McIntyre, and Levesque Co. ("The French Boys") were the first to use high rigging extensively in the valley. To rig a 70 foot high spruce tree, Arthur McIntyre would go up the tree, no spures, and chop off branches as he went. When he was tired, Amedy Levsque went up, finished chopping off the branches, topped the tree, and hung the two guy lines and blocks.
Fait partie de Scott and Mildred MacDonald Photograph Collection
"The Chief" photographed in 1912 from the home of E.D. Reeves, the first telegraph operator in Squamish.
This granite monolith is approximately 700 metres high and is second only to Gibraltar in size. It is so named because its outline against the sky forms the profile of a sleeping Indian chief. The profile of a chief's face can also be seen in the rock.
Dick Bracken, son of John Bracken
Fait partie de Scott and Mildred MacDonald Photograph Collection
Fait partie de Scott and Mildred MacDonald Photograph Collection
Elvira Schoonover with Billy Goat
Fait partie de Scott and Mildred MacDonald Photograph Collection
Elvira Schoonover with "Billy Goat". Picture taken where present Easter Seal Camp stands.
Elvira's husband brought home an orphaned kid goat one day and Elvira raised it on the bottle. It became quite tame but as it grew it became a loving nuisance. The Schoonovers didn't know where to put it until an ad for "wild" animals in a Vancouver paper gave them an "out". An answer brought the agent for a noble English lord to Schoonover Manor and soon Big Billy was part of the Duke of Bedford's estate.
Fait partie de Scott and Mildred MacDonald Photograph Collection
Man second from left is Dutch Charlie. Hunters were mostly from Vancouver. Photo taken between 1910 - 1911.
Fait partie de Scott and Mildred MacDonald Photograph Collection
Brittania in harbour around 1910 - 1911
Fait partie de Scott and Mildred MacDonald Photograph Collection
Steam donkey along Cheekye at Yapp's Logging Camp
Fait partie de Scott and Mildred MacDonald Photograph Collection
Squamish Timber Company's yarding donkey.
In 1907, Allan Newton Barbour and his brother Charles came to Squamish and logged using 6 yoke of oxen and took out six 24' logs a "turn" (load). The area logged was near the PGE Shops (by Castle's Crossing), across the river rom the shops, on the Burnt Ground near the cemetery, at Paradise Valley, and about five miles north of Cheekye. 2 to 20 men were employed. It was customary to log close to the river so the logs just had to be dragged into the river and floated to the Howe Sound where they were picked up by the Powell River company tugs and taken up to their mills. Log jams were broken up by men in canoes. Mr McComb was the first to tow logs down the river in a boat. The Barbours would later sell out to Mr Yapp. Mr Yapp's Squamish Timber Company was incorporated on March 21, 1907. In 1910, the Yapp Company cleared the Cheekye area. A steam donkey would haul the logs 400 feet and then an 8 horse team hauled them 1/2 mile on a skid road. Another donkey, called a roader, took the logs to the river. Here the logs followed a log trough. Instead of chokers, logging dogs were used. When the Howe Sound Northern Railway came into Cheakamus, the Yapp company used the train to transport logs to the booming grounds at Squamish. In 1911, a company owned by Mr Lamb took over the Yapp stand of timber.
In 1912, Arthur McIntyre, Fidolle Laviolette, Amedy Levesque, and George Laviolette ("The French Boys") won a steam donkey from Al Barbour in a poker game. Barbour had refused to sell it to them earlier. Mr Barbour went back to logging with horses hauling the timber out on skid roads until he could afford another donkey. The boys formed a partnership called the Laviolette, McIntyre, and Levesque Logging Co.
Charlie Schoonover and his son Robby
Fait partie de Scott and Mildred MacDonald Photograph Collection
Charlie Schoonover and his son Robby (about 5 years old). Picture taken around 1910, north of Leski's crossing at the Schoonover place. Martin, mink, weasel, black bear, and grizzly furs are shown.