Image depicts a boat dock on the Nechako Reservoir at Kenny Dam.
Image depicts a playground in Willow River, B.C. The slide labels it as being a "former hotel site." Map coordinates 54°04'23.7"N 122°28'26.9"W
Image depicts a row of houses in Upper Fraser, B.C. Map coordinates 54°06'51.6"N 121°56'26.3"W
Image depicts the Duchess engine, which was built in 1878 and taken out of service in 1919. It was part of a matched set with the Duke and is now a tourist attraction in Carcross, Y.T.
Image depicts the Pine Tree Restaurant in Atlin, B.C. It is possibly part of the Atlin Museum.
Image depicts the Moose Hall in the Atlin Museum. A sign above the door reads: "In 1905 this building was the new Arctic Brotherhood Hall in Discovery. Some years later it was hauled here in two parts by horses to become the Moose Lodge and Community Hall."
Image depicts the government liquor store in Atlin, B.C.
Image depicts a house with stairs up to a small patio area on its roof in Atlin, B.C.
Image depicts the bus depot in Skagway, Alaska (USA).
Image depicts one of the main streets, Broadway, in Skagway, Alaska.
Image depicts the old railroad building in Skagway, Alaska.
Image depicts a snow sculpture of a man with a shovel, possibly during the Winter City Conference, in Prince George, B.C. Taken at the Prince George Civic Center. Map coordinates 53°54'45.6"N 122°44'59.6"W
Image depicts the Northwood Bridge in Prince George, B.C.
Image depicts what appears to be a footbridge at an uncertain location.
Image depicts a dock on the shore of Atlin Lake, as well as a building that may have once been a hospital. The slide is simply labelled "hospital."
Image depicts a sign in the Atlin Cemetery, it reads: "In 1898, Fritz Miller and Kenny McLaren found gold on nearby Pine Creek, triggering British Columbia's last placer gold rush. The boom subsided by 1908, but gold has kept Atlin alive. Now Miller and McLaren lie here among hard-bitten prospectors, young miners, northern aviators, brave women and new-born infants, all part of Atlin's pioneer heritage R.I.P."
Image depicts a memorial plaque which reads: "In memory of the Atlin men who gave their lives for their country in World War II," and then proceeds to list several individuals.
Image depicts the original steam engine for the White Pass Train, located in Skagway, Alaska.
Image depicts an old trestle along the White Pass railway.
Image depicts Nautley and the Nautley River near Fraser Lake, B.C.
Image depicts a section of land on the east end of Francois Lake. The lake is visible in the distance.
Image depicts Nautley and the Nautley River near Fraser Lake, B.C.
Image depicts a house in the process of being demolished in Prince George, B.C.
Image depicts the post office in Atlin, B.C.
Image depicts an old building which used to be the Discovery Jail. The plaque on it reads: "It cost $800 to build this two cell jail in 1902. The solid walls are 2"x6" laid flat one on top of the other. It was skidded to Atlin in the 1920s and used as a residence for many years."
Image depicts the Garrett Store in Atlin, B.C. A plaque on it reads: "John Garrett, a prominent English cricket player, came to Atlin in 1910 to mine gold. In 1917 he opened this grocery and dry goods store where he also sold his wife's fresh baked bread and sweets."
Image depicts a mural of Atlin with information about the Globe Theatre and Edwin L. Pillman on it. It reads: "Talented businessman arrived in Atlin in 1899, and for nearly fifty years operated a variety of businesses ~ grocery and drug stores, undertaker, market gardens and the theatre. Assissted by his loyal wife Elizabeth." It also states that the Globe Theatre was built in 1917 and was used until the early 40's.
Image depicts numerous graves in the Atlin Cemetery.
Image depicts the grave of John Elmwood Simons in the Atlin Cemetery. It reads: "died Feb. 8, 1914, age 61 yrs. froze to death."
Image depicts the grave of Charley William Rudolf in the Atlin Cemetery. It reads: "Born July 2, 1923. Died May 21, 1940. Age 16 years. Died from gunshot wounds, mistaken for a bear."
Image depicts the Robert Lowe Bridge, built in 1922, in the Miles Canyon near Whitehorse Y.T.
Image depicts the White Pass Train crossing over a railway bridge at an uncertain location.
Image depicts an old trestle along the White Pass railway.
Image depicts an old trestle along the White Pass railway.
Image depicts an old trestle along the White Pass railway, and the White pass Train on the left of the image.
Image depicts a train on the Hansard Bridge across the Fraser River looking west. Map coordinates 54°04'37.7"N 121°50'39.9"W
Image depicts the small town of Fraser, B.C. Located on the Klondike Highway.
Image depicts the Caribou Hotel and the Matthew Watson General Store in Carcross, Y.T.
Image depicts the travel infocentre at the Atlin Museum. The slide labels it as having once been a school.
Image depicts the UNBC partnership campus in Atlin, B.C. The slide also labels it as being a former courthouse.
Image depicts a building which once served as the residence for two nurses in Atlin, B.C. A sign in front of the house reads: "Grateful Atlinites built this house in 1902 for their first missionary nurses, Helen Bone and Elizabeth Mitchell, who came here in 1899 and lived in a crude shack while valiantly and humanely caring for sick and dying pioneers."
Image depicts a pair of mannequins in the second story windows of a building, possibly located in Skagway, Alaska.
Image depicts a swimming pool filled with debris in the interior of the Ginter House in Prince George, B.C.
Image depicts a Prince George residential area from the viewpoint of the Ginter Property.
Image depicts a Prince George residential area from the viewpoint of the Ginter Property.
Image depicts the Ginter Property in Prince George, B.C.
Image depicts what appears to be a part of a fence on the Ginter Property in Prince George, B.C.
Image depicts a stained glass window showing Saint Nicholas from the interior of a church in Shelley, B.C.
Image depicts the church after its restoration in Shelley, B.C.
Image depicts the interior of the Ginter House in Prince George, B.C.