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Archival description
Alert Bay Item
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Congregation from the back

  • 30-30-01-30-01-02-a039017
  • Item
  • [1862-1937, predominant 1930-1937]
  • Part of John Mennie fonds

View from back of congregation. Three ministers in background, facing the camera. Soccer goalpost visible over crowd.

Class picture

  • 30-30-01-30-01-10-a039144
  • Item
  • [1862-1937, predominant 1930-1937]
  • Part of John Mennie fonds

Item is a photograph of an unidentified adult and students posing outdoors

Class picture

  • 30-30-01-30-01-10-a039147
  • Item
  • [1862-1937, predominant 1930-1937]
  • Part of John Mennie fonds

Item is a photograph of two unidentified adults and students posing outdoors

Class picture

  • 30-30-01-30-01-10-a039146
  • Item
  • [1862-1937, predominant 1930-1937]
  • Part of John Mennie fonds

Item is a photograph of two unidentified adults and students posing outdoors

Class picture

  • 30-30-01-30-01-10-a039145
  • Item
  • [1862-1937, predominant 1930-1937]
  • Part of John Mennie fonds

Item is a photograph of an unidentified adult and students posing outdoors

Children Playing at St. Michael's Residential School

Item is a hand-tinted glass lantern slide of five children in playing attitude with the sea in the background. Based on the original order of the collection, photograph might have been taken in Alert Bay and the children might have been students at St. Michael's Residential School. The Anglican Church established a day school at its mission in Alert Bay, British Columbia in 1878. It opened a small boarding school there in 1882 and an industrial school in 1894. In 1929, a new building was constructed. The school was known for the arts and crafts produced by the students and the two large totem poles in front of the school building. In 1947, two-dozen children ran away from the school. The subsequent investigation into conditions at the school led to the resignation of both the principal and the vice-principal. By 1969, when the federal government assumed administration of the school, all residents were attending local schools. The residence closed in 1974. (National Centre for Truth and Reconciliation)

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