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Dunster
2012.13.1.6.234 · Item · July 1982
Part of J. Kent Sedgwick fonds

Image depicts an old, rundown building in Dunster, B.C. Possibly a disused Rail Station.

Dunster
2012.13.1.6.232 · Item · July 1982
Part of J. Kent Sedgwick fonds

Image depicts an old, rundown building in Dunster, B.C. Possibly a disused Rail Station.

Dunster
2012.13.1.6.233 · Item · July 1982
Part of J. Kent Sedgwick fonds

Image depicts an old, rundown building in Dunster, B.C. Possibly a disused Rail Station.

Dunster
2012.13.1.6.235 · Item · July 1982
Part of J. Kent Sedgwick fonds

Image depicts an old, rundown building in Dunster, B.C. Possibly a disused Rail Station.

Dunster Station
2012.13.1.011 · Subseries · [between 1982 and 1983]
Part of J. Kent Sedgwick fonds

File contains slides depicting images of Dunster Station from 1982 to 1983.

East Line
2012.13.2.17 · Subseries · 1972-2011
Part of J. Kent Sedgwick fonds

Subseries consists of material collected by Kent Sedgwick for research regarding the communities along the East Line of the Grand Trunk Pacific Railway in Central British Columbia, particularly between Prince George and McBride. These communities and locations include, among others, Shelley, Willow River, Sinclair Mills, Longworth, Dunster, Tete Jaune, Valemount, Mount Robson, and the Yellowhead Pass. Research on these communities was conducted during Kent Sedgwick's involvement in the UNBC-led Upper Fraser Historical Geography Project. The files primarily consist of research notes, audio and transcripts of oral interviews, and photographs of the East Line communities.

2017.6 · Collection · 1999-2002

The Upper Fraser Historical Geography Project was conducted by UNBC faculty and a team of researchers between 1999 and 2002. The lead researchers were Aileen Espritiu, Gail Fondahl, Greg Halseth, Debra Straussfogel, and Tracy Summerville. The project resulted in the creation of 93 oral history records and their transcripts. Participants included regional forest industry executives, politicians (including former MLA Ray Williston, local mayors and Fraser Fort George Regional District representatives), forest industry workers, and former and contemporary Upper Fraser community residents. The oral histories document the rise, consolidation and demise of the forestry-based settlements along the Upper Fraser River between 1915 and 2000.