- BARR_2011_042-01-021
- Stuk
- [c 1927]
Part of Barr Fonds
Copy of a photograph of Green Lake.
Inscription on the verso reads "Green Lake, near site of Barr Bros Mill, looking south, c. 1927."
Part of Barr Fonds
Copy of a photograph of Green Lake.
Inscription on the verso reads "Green Lake, near site of Barr Bros Mill, looking south, c. 1927."
Part of Barr Fonds
Panoramic photograph of Parkhurst taken from across Green Lake, probably from the Lineham property. The inscription on the verso reads "Green Lake, by PL Tait, 1928, 29?"
Zonder titel
Part of Barr Fonds
Photograph of the logging operation at Parkhurst, showing the railcar, a spar tree, and the steam donkey. The man standing on the log in the foreground is Ross Barr.
Part of Barr Fonds
Photograph of a float plane on Green Lake and the PGE railway tracks at Parkhurst. A freight car is shown on the railway track. The inscription on the back reads "Green Lake, 1928 or 1929. Boat on lake, boat house, PGE." Although the inscription reads "boat" the item on the water is almost certainly a float plane.
Barr family cross country skiing
Part of Barr Fonds
Group photograph of (from left to right) William Barr, Dorothy Barr, and Alison Barr cross country skiing. Lady, the deer, is jumping up at William Barr. Lady was a pet deer that the Barrs looked after until she got a little too rowdy.
Part of Barr Fonds
Photograph of the boat used by the Barrs at Parkhurst for towing the boom. There are several people and a dog on board. The inscription on the verso reads "[June] Thompson"
Part of Barr Fonds
Panoramic photograph of Rainbow Lodge with guests alighting from the Pacific Great Eastern (PGE) train.
Zonder titel
Part of Barr Fonds
Copy of a photograph of Parkhurst taken from up on the mountainside across Green Lake. Inscription on the reverse reads "Parkhurst, Green Lake, Barr Bros Mill and Camp."
Timber air-drying at Parkhurst
Part of Barr Fonds
Photograph of timber air-drying at Parkhurst. More money could be made if the timber was ready-dried, but it was a lot of work to pile the wood so high, according to Norman Barr.
Part of Barr Fonds
Photograph of William Barr and his wife to be, Dorothy Davies, standing by the cairn on Red Mountain (now known as Fissile Mountain). The inscription on the reverse reads "Cairn Red mtn, Dorothy and Will, 1931?"