Four guests at Myrtle's dinner party. Inscription on verso : "At Myrtle's Dinner Party / Sat. Aug. 29, 1981 / DICK [Fairhurst] / THERESA AGUAYO (Whister Rotary Exchange Student) / ANDY [Petersen] / MONICA RIOS (friend of Carol's from Mexico)"
Two handwritten notes, one form filled out by Florence and Andy Petersen, and an additional sheet of paper with handwritten anecdotes about 5702 Alta Lake Road, Lot 14. The handwritten notes list the owners of the property over the years, the form lists the price for which it was sold and who it was bought from. The additional sheet gives a much more detailed narrative of Andy and Florence Petersen's life in Whistler.
Photographs of Andy Petersen and friends preparing a barbecue in a kitchen, a train going by on the West side of Alta Lake, and Andy Petersen sitting with friends around a patio table.
Photographs of Pat Carleton, Sig Young, Al Raine, and others at an event, a woman wearing a Whistler sweater, Florence and Andy Petersen posing for the camera, Sid Young at his desk at Sid's Travel in the early 1980s, and Tony Biggen-Pound sitting on a fence with a woman in front of the Skier's Chapel.
Photographs of Florence and Andy Petersen (duplicate of 007), a group of women at Witsend house from December 1955 [Caption reads "Jacquie Pope, June (Tidbull) Collins, Betty (Gray) Atkinson, Florence (Strachan) Petersen, and Eunice ("Kelly" Forster) Fairhurst." Name of house is written in pen on the photograph], a small group of people on the shore of Green Lake with a boat [Caption reads: "April 30, 1966"], and a group of adults and children sitting on a porch [Caption reads: "August 1955"].
Newspaper articles from the Vancouver Sun about real estate development in Whistler, as well as a water main break affecting the residents of Alta Lake Road.
A half-page article on page A3 of the Vancouver Sun from Saturday December 14, 1985. The article is entitled "Big freeze means waterless taps for 41 families." The article is about 41 homes along Alta Lake Road that are without running water throughout the winter due to a water line break.