Photograph depicts a sailboat towing two smaller canoes on the water with mountains visible in the background.
Image depicts a saw and numerous wooden boards at an uncertain location.
Photograph depicts a view from Billing siding toward a river with mountains behind.
Dirt roads crossing a large, cleared section of land. Some buildings seen along the left edge of the image.
Photograph depicts a wooden walkway with trees crowding close. Handwritten annotation below photograph reads, "a shady walk".
Image depicts what appears to be a shed at an uncertain location.
Photograph depicts a ship beached on rocks, leaning heavily to one side with a forested shoreline in the background.
Photograph depicts a steamboat on the water with forested mountains in the background.
Typed annotation on verso of photograph reads: "The Old and the New on the Skeena." Part of a set of 41 original black & white photographs [1908-1933-?]) of the Grand Trunk Pacific Railway line in BC depicting surveying crews, town sites (Prince Rupert and its port, Hazelton and Fort George), and First Nations Peoples.
Image depicts a street in Island Cache.
Image depicts a street in Island Cache.
Image depicts a street in Wells, B.C.
Image depicts a street in Wells, B.C.
Image depicts a street in Wells, B.C. The Sunset Theatre and Gold Country Food Market are both present in the image.
Image depicts a street in Wells, B.C. The Wells Hotel is present in the image.
Image depicts a street in Wells, B.C.
Image depicts a street in Wells, B.C. The Sunset Theatre is located on the left of the image, and the Jack O' Clubs Hotel is the building with the green roof on the right. The hotel burned down on February 14th in 1994.
Item is "A Study of Coniferous Reproduction by Direct Seeding Methods on Various Forest Site Types at Aleza Lake, B.C.: An Essay submitted during the Third Year of the Course in Forestry at the University of British Columbia" by Everett Bruce Peterson.
Item is a photocopy reproduction of "A Thousand Miles Exploring on Horseback in Northern British Columbia" by Mary Gibson Henry. The original document may have been a draft article written for the Canadian Geographical Society in 1935.
Photograph depicts a tiny coastal village nestled on the shore. Treed hills surround the village, there are snow topped mountains in the background.