Brass Band in Labour day Parade, 1950
- CA SQPL 31-001
- 1950
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Brass Band in Labour day Parade, 1950
Bag Piper Bill Webster leading May Day parade on Cleveland Avenue
Mashiter home to the left.
Interior of St John (Anglican) Church
Part of St. John's Scrapbook Collection
Original altar windows (1913-1920) donated by "friends in England". Later when they were damaged beyond repair, they were replaced by those that were a memorial to Mrs Mashiter. Organ thought to belong to Mrs Mashiter, used until the present organ was acquired in 1920.
This Anglican Church on Sixth Avenue was the only church north of Gibson's Landing for many years. The church served the needs of the entire Christian community from the earliest days when Mr Mashiter alternated his Anglican Sunday services with Presbyterian Minister Dr. Robert Young, to the first Lutheran services in town held there by Reverend C. Guebert in the late 1950's.
For a brief period in the early 1920's, the church boasted fine stain glass windows until the stone-throwing enthusiasm of local children forced their removal. Many of their children now own windows of their own in Squamish.
The church has now been tastefully converted into a Dance Studio.
Original use: Church.
Current: Dance studio.
Current condition: Well maintained, new use as dance studio respects original character.
Vancouver Ladies Pipe Band in Labour Day Parade, 1953
Part of Anne Moore Photograph Collection
Present location: accross from apartments on Wilson Crescent.
Characters in Longfellows play
Characters in Longfellows play, the Chronicles of Miles Standish.
Left to right: Grace Climie (as John Alden), Dorothy Ludke (as Priscilla), Jack McKenzie (as Miles Standish).
Parade float in the 1950's (for May Day or July 1st). Red and White Food Store (formerly David Galbraith's buildings in the 1984 location of Shell carwashes) and Firehall in the background.
Front to back: Olive Judd, Carey Bateman, Ruth Judd, Edith Judd canoeing in Judd Slough.
Clifford Thorne and Lottie Fulk on horseback
Part of Magee Photograph Collection
Research compiled by Eric Andersen: Logging manager's daughter Lottie Fulk on hourseback riding with Cliffe Thorne, son of Squamish Valley Hop Raising Co. manager Fred Thorne, ca 1907. Lottie Fulk's father was Owen Fulk of Skagit County (WA) who was hired by the manager of E.K. Wood Lumber Co. to supervise Squamish River logging operations. During the five years Fulk was in Squamish, he was the valley's preeminent man of business.
Sam M Bonde sporting bowling trophy
Sam M. Bonde sporting a bowling trophy. (Alderman 1969 - 1970)
Left to right, bottom row: Raymond Fogolin, Billy Malen, Mark Waldron, Terry Waldron.
Top row: Burnett Woods, Ron Knowles, Norman Chadwick, Rodger Graveling, Harry Rae, Harry Tutin.
Grace White (?) and Mr Fillmore on August 1941. Black Tusk is in the background.
Harriet Harry (Tsawaysia) with son George (Xwach-la-nexw) playing 'Cowboys and Indians'.
Harry, Harriet
Bill Wotruba (2nd from right) in a group of four men wearing swim trunks. The three other members in the photo are unknown.
G.T. Wallis, a member of the BC Mountaineering club who often had Alec Munro pack him into Garibaldi Park.
British Columbia Mountaineers (expedition team) at the Judd residence.
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.
Orval Van Horlick demonstrates gold panning
Orval Van Horlick demonstrates gold panning at Coast Mountain Outdoor School.
George Munro and Bill Pendergrast boxing at a picnic on June 11, 1933.
Squamish Nation Marching Band in Vancouver