- CA SQPL 05-137
Pioneers
Taxonomy
Code
Scope note(s)
Source note(s)
Display note(s)
Hierarchical terms
Pioneers
Pioneers
Equivalent terms
Pioneers
Associated terms
Pioneers
221 Resource results for Pioneers
221 results directly related Exclude narrower terms
- CA SQPL 22-003
Previously the Galbraith's store. Built in 1912.
- CA SQPL 11-013
- 1889
Part of Squamish Valley Museum (Brightbill House) Photograph Collection
Albert Chamberlain pre-empted on an island across from the Brennan property. It was named Chamberlain Island. The island is now part of Baynes Island.
Albert also had a farm.
Allan Barbour and Bill Wallace in one of the first cars in Squamish
- CA SQPL 11-058
Part of Squamish Valley Museum (Brightbill House) Photograph Collection
Allan Barbour (left) and Bill Wallace of Cheekye (right) and one of the first cars in Squamish.
Allan Newton Barbour and Reba Barbour
- CA SQPL 16-002
- ~1913
Allan Newton Barbour and Reba Barbour (Charles Barbour's daughter) on Barbour Farm, 1913.
- CA SQPL 11-063
Part of Squamish Valley Museum (Brightbill House) Photograph Collection
Armstrong's barn built by Minnie Armstrong
- CA SQPL 22-004
Drawing of the Armstrong's barn built by Minni Armstrong at 65 years of age.
- CA SQPL 05-019
Herbert Lawson Rae next to horse; Robert Stewart (Bert) Rae on horseback.
Hop farming was Squamish's first major industry. The major producer was Squamish Valley Hop Raising Co. (Bell-Irving Ranch). Hops are perennials and grown about 6 feet apart. They are picked during September and August. Hops are dried and bleached with sulphur in a kiln. In Squamish, Chinese labour was brought in to tend the hops. Local First Nations picked them. They would camp in the area now between Petro Canada gas station and the Cottonwood condominiums. The hops in Squamish were top grade. They were shipped to Vancouver in bales wrapped in Burlap, then shipped to Britain where they were used to make beer.
- CA SQPL 05-117
Auntie Minnie (left) was Mrs Kate Mills' sister, Minerva Robertson. Married name unknown (parents came to Squamish in 1888).
- CA SQPL 22-031
Barbara (nee Edwards) and Harry Judd
Barbara Anne Judd (nee Edwards)
- CA SQPL 11-062
Part of Squamish Valley Museum (Brightbill House) Photograph Collection
Name suspected to be incorrect.
Barbara Anne Judd with grandchild
- CA SQPL 10-010
Part of Jessie Rae Photograph Collection
Barbara Anne Judd (nee Edwards) with grandchild Jimmy.
Bert & Jessie Rae's house in foreground during flood
- CA SQPL 10-019
Part of Jessie Rae Photograph Collection
- CA SQPL 05-016
Bert Rae (left) and Al Armstrong (right).
- CA SQPL 05-052
Bert Rae in his late teens.
- CA SQPL 10-029
Part of Jessie Rae Photograph Collection
- CA SQPL 05-133
- CA SQPL 19-045
- 1910
Part of Unknown Photograph Collection
Brackendale & Cheakamus stage in 1910 (or 1908?), driven by Henry Judd. Judd started with oxen in 1903 and later changed to horses. This pictured incarnation of the stage was known as the "Rapid". In 1912, it was supplemented by a new Garford motor truck. Harry Judd provided transportation services between Squamish Dock and the Cheakamus Lodge at Cheekye -the beginning of the Pemberton Trail.
Brackendale School picture, 1905
- CA SQPL 10-005
- 1905
Part of Jessie Rae Photograph Collection
Left to right: Bert Rae, Maurice Rae, Thorne girl (likely Edna), Ethel Herres, Olive Judd, ?, Wilby Judd, Earl Judd, Lizzy Herres, ?, Harold Thorne, Belle Herres, Rae boy (likely Herbert Lawson).
Teacher: Mr Alexander Stephen.
- CA SQPL 08-016
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.
- CA SQPL 38-003
1958 building that was in the 1984 site of Robinson's.
Left to right: Frank Buckley, Angus McRae, Frank Scott.
- CA SQPL 16-007
- ~1925
Building the Cheakamus Bridge (~1925).
Left to right: Herb Armstrong, Mart McIntyre, Allan Newton Barbour, Paul Sellons.
- CA SQPL 01-017
- 1926
Robert Stewart (Bert) Rae (left) and Scott MacDonald (right) at bunk houses at Cheekye (now in the location of Fergies) in 1926.
- CA SQPL 08-006
- 1919
Front to back: Olive Judd, Carey Bateman, Ruth Judd, Edith Judd canoeing in Judd Slough.
- CA SQPL 05-050