- BARR_2011_042-01
- Séries
- [1927]-1938
Parte deBarr Fonds
Photographs belonging to Ross and Alison Barr documenting their life at Parkhurst sawmill on Green Lake, Whistler.
3 resultados con objetos digitales Muestra los resultados con objetos digitales
Parte deBarr Fonds
Photographs belonging to Ross and Alison Barr documenting their life at Parkhurst sawmill on Green Lake, Whistler.
Parkhurst Nov 1937 Station Cookhouse Bunkhouses
Parte deDeBeck Fonds
Photograph of the Parkhurst Pacific Great Eastern Railway station, cookhouse, and bunkhouses for the logging camp at Parkhurst in November, 1937. Caption on verso.
July 1939 Green Lake L[um]b[e]r Co. Flume MA - Dennis + Micky
Parte deDeBeck Fonds
Photograph of Dennis DeBeck, a woman who may be his mother, and a dog named 'Micky' at the Green Lake Lumber Co. flume at Parkhurst in July, 1939.
Parte deDeBeck Fonds
Photograph of Jack Beaumont, Ben Dyke, and Bert Heely standing at the bunkhouse of Green Lake Lumber Co.'s logging camp at Parkhurst in October, 1939.
Green Lake L[um]b[e]r Co. Planer Shed Ollie Kitteringham cutting off Ben's head The Axe Man
Parte deDeBeck Fonds
Photograph of Ollie Kitteringham pretending to cut off 'Ben's' head with an axe at the Green Lake Lumber Co. planer shed in Parkhurst in the 1930s.
Parkhurst Sept 1937 Northern Mills in full swing
Parte deDeBeck Fonds
Photograph of the Northern Mills in Parkhurst in full swing in September, 1937.
Parte deBarr 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.
Photographs belonging to Ross and Alison Barr documenting their life at Parkhurst sawmill on Green Lake, Whistler. One comic poem about Parkhurst.
Photographs of Parkhurst taken by Dennis and Dorothy DeBeck, who lived there in the 1930s.
Parte deDeBeck Fonds
Photographs of Parkhurst taken by Dennis and Dorothy DeBeck, who lived there in the 1930s. The photographs arrived in an envelope marked "Dennis + Dorothy DeBeck lived in Parkhurst from about 1935-" and "Photos of Parkhurst for Whistler Museum".