- 81-04-a033233
- Stuk
- September 1954
View of Alert Bay, B. C. taken September 1954. Initials R S appear in lower right of card. Photo is an aerial view, so structures are difficult to distinguish.
View of Alert Bay, B. C. taken September 1954. Initials R S appear in lower right of card. Photo is an aerial view, so structures are difficult to distinguish.
Part of Anthony Carter fonds
Image looking across the water from Alert Bay, with cloudy mountains visible in the distance.
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Part of Anthony Carter fonds
Image looking across the water from Alert Bay, with cloudy mountains visible in the distance.
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An alkali pond [high desert, BC]
Part of Harry B. Hawthorn fonds
Badger Lake, ponderosa pine, North Thompson(?)
Part of Harry B. Hawthorn fonds
Image of Badger Lake, in the Thompson-Nicola region of British Columbia. The lake is seen through a cluster of ponderosa pine trees.
Part of Robert Reford fonds
Item is an image of a bridge over a river. According to annotations, the bridge was made by the indigenous peoples in the area and the location may be the Skeena River.
Part of Anthony Carter fonds
Image of three or four long canoes full of rowers on the Fraser River
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Part of Anthony Carter fonds
Image of two canoes on the Fraser River, possibly part of a race.
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Part of Anthony Carter fonds
Image of canoes on the Fraser River, possibly part of a race.
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Part of Anthony Carter fonds
Image of canoes on the Fraser River, possibly part of a race.
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Part of Anthony Carter fonds
Image of the Capilano River, seen from the road.
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Cathedral Lake - where goats wintered(?)
Part of Harry B. Hawthorn fonds
Image of Cathedral Lake, located in Cathedral Provincial Park in southern British Columbia.
Part of Anthony Carter fonds
mage of three individuals standing on the platform of a fishing weir on the Cowichan River, holding spears. A similar image is printed on page 15 of Carter's book "From History's Locker," with the caption: "Salmon weir on the Cowichan river, the native people continue a very ancient form of spear fishing for migrating salmon. The weir is not a trap but merely a means to slow the fish on the way up the river."
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Part of Anthony Carter fonds
Image of a wooden building with a sign hanging from the front of it that says "Salmon for Survival." The building appears to be a place where salmon is processed, dried, and/or sold. It is located next to a creek or low lying river.
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Part of Anthony Carter fonds
mage of three individuals standing on the platform of a fishing weir on the Cowichan River, holding spears. A similar image is printed on page 15 of Carter's book "From History's Locker," with the caption: "Salmon weir on the Cowichan river, the native people continue a very ancient form of spear fishing for migrating salmon. The weir is not a trap but merely a means to slow the fish on the way up the river."
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Part of Anthony Carter fonds
Image of a salmon weir on the Cowichan River, Vancouver Island. The weir is seen from a slight distance up or down the river.
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Part of Anthony Carter fonds
mage of three individuals standing on the platform of a fishing weir on the Cowichan River, holding spears. A similar image is printed on page 15 of Carter's book "From History's Locker," with the caption: "Salmon weir on the Cowichan river, the native people continue a very ancient form of spear fishing for migrating salmon. The weir is not a trap but merely a means to slow the fish on the way up the river."
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Part of Anthony Carter fonds
mage of three individuals standing on the platform of a fishing weir on the Cowichan River, holding spears. A similar image is printed on page 15 of Carter's book "From History's Locker," with the caption: "Salmon weir on the Cowichan river, the native people continue a very ancient form of spear fishing for migrating salmon. The weir is not a trap but merely a means to slow the fish on the way up the river."
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Part of Anthony Carter fonds
mage of three individuals standing on the platform of a fishing weir on the Cowichan River, holding spears. A similar image is printed on page 15 of Carter's book "From History's Locker," with the caption: "Salmon weir on the Cowichan river, the native people continue a very ancient form of spear fishing for migrating salmon. The weir is not a trap but merely a means to slow the fish on the way up the river."
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Cowichan salmon weir and man with spear
Part of Anthony Carter fonds
Image of a man seated on the side of the Cowichan River (Vancouver Island) holding a fishing spear.
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