Image depicts a view south, possibly of an abandoned grade for the BCR; possibly somewhere near Woodpecker, B.C.
Image depicts a north view of a road somewhere in Woodpecker, B.C.
Image depicts the Mud River.
Image depicts a rail road bridge over the Mud River.
Image depicts a creek near Iron Road North, north of Woodpecker, B.C.
Image depicts a ditch near a road somewhere in Woodpecker B.C.
Image depicts a pair of dogs in a forest, possibly somewhere near Woodpecker, B.C.
Image depicts a forest, possibly somewhere near Woodpecker, B.C.
Image depicts a tree line in Woodpecker, B.C.
Typed message on front reads: “Happy Birthday Your Honour, You have a way of making each person you come in contact with feel so special, so we all want to wish you the happiest birthday year ever. Staff of Government House, October 18, 2002.” Signed by the staff of Government House.
Handwritten annotation on verso reads: “The Rock - I spent 6 years creating 6 gardens surrounding”.
Image depicts Iron Road South, which is located north of Woodpecker, B.C.
Image depicts a creek near Iron Road North, north of Woodpecker, B.C.
Image depicts a pair of dogs in a forest, possibly somewhere near Woodpecker, B.C.
Image depicts a tree line in Woodpecker, B.C.
Image depicts a road somewhere in Woodpecker, B.C.
Image depicts the Mud River.
Image depicts the Cottonwood Canyon.
Image depicts the street sign for Iron Road South, which is located north of Woodpecker, B.C.
Image depicts a clearing through the woods, possibly an abandoned grade for the BCR. It is possibly located on Iron Road South, near Woodpecker B.C.
Image depicts a back road at an uncertain location, possibly near Iron Road North, north of Woodpecker, B.C.
Image depicts a water-filled ditch near a road somewhere in Woodpecker B.C.
Image depicts a north view of a road somewhere in Woodpecker, B.C.
Item is a British Columbia Forest Cover Map, serial number 093J010. Includes full format forest cover labels.
Image depicts Prince George, with the picture looking North-Northeast from University Way.
Image depicts Prince George from University Way, with the P.G.I pulp mill in the distance.
Image depicts a view of the south direction of the grade for the British Columbia Railway, which was formerly known as the Pacific Great Eastern until 1972. It is at an uncertain location, possibly near Woodpecker or Prince George.
Item is a presentation of research about the transfer of Aboriginal knowledge to early female scientists for Ainley's Social Science and Research Humanities Council (SSHRC) project, "Re-explorations: Gender, Science and Environment in the 19th and 20th Century Canada and Australia."
Image depicts Prince George from University Way, with the P.G.I. Pulp Mill in the distance.
Image depicts Prince George from University Way, with the P.G.I. Pulp Mill in the distance.
Image depicts Prince George from University Way, with the P.G.I. Pulp Mill in the distance.
Item is a British Columbia Forest Cover Map, serial number 093I001. Includes full format forest cover labels.
Al Elsey compiled this commercial video using footage he filmed in 1964 and 1965 in the Bella Coola area. The video provides a compilation of film footage shot by Elsey and is narrated by him describing the activities related to the Grease Trail. Description verso of VHS commercial box reads:
"Al Elsey's friendship with Margaret Siwallace with other people of the Nuxalk Nation dates back over fifty years. This, his premier documentary, produced from vintage 16 mm movie film taken in the Bella Coola Valley in 1963, invites us to witness their tradition of making Ooligan Grease. The process, followed for centuries by the Nuxalk and other coastal First Nations people, was of such importance that their trading routes from the Coast to the Interior of British Columbia were called Grease Trails. The Ooligan were netted by the ton each year, returning from the ocean to spawn in early spring. The destruction of the Ooligan runs in the Bella Coola and other coast rivers of Southern B.C. probably resulted from over-fishing by shrimp trawl draggers during the late 1990s. GREASE shows catching the Ooligan with conical nets and dugout canoes, rotting them in "stink boxes," then rendering and purifying the Grease. Elsey's captivating narrative and brilliant footage transport us back to another time on the shores of the Bella Coola River."
Image depicts the Lheidli T'enneh Burial Grounds in Fort George Park.
Image depicts the Lheidli T'enneh Burial Grounds in Fort George Park.
Image depicts the Fraser River at Paddlewheel park, with a train on the other side of the river, in Prince George B.C.
Image depicts the Northwood Pulpmill in Prince George, B.C. taken from above the Nechako River looking east. Map coordinates 53°56'00.0"N 122°44'29.7"W
Image depicts a view of Prince George from an uncertain location.
Image depicts the Lheidli T'enneh Burial Grounds in Fort George Park.
Image depicts a view of Prince George.
Image depicts a river, possibly near Bear Lake, B.C.
Image depicts a truck parked on a beach in Mackenzie, B.C.
Image depicts an uncertain street in Prince George, B.C.
Image depicts the Lheidli T'enneh Burial Grounds in Fort George Park.
Image depicts a view of the Millar Addition suburb from Connaught Hill in Prince George, B.C.
Annotation on slide: "[mostly illegible] Km 3 [?] pinker [?] cubic block"
Image depicts downtown Prince George taken from across the Nechako River looking south. Map coordinates 53°56'00.0"N 122°44'29.7"W
Image depicts McLeod Lake.
Image depicts a road, forest, and hill rise in an uncertain location possibly near Red Rock, B.C.
Image depicts a river, possibly near Bear Lake, B.C.
Image depicts Prince George with numerous trees obscuring most of the view.