The Last Rest-Mackenzie River. [Marked on the back of the photo is] Waterways, Alta. June 19, 1922. The burying ground of the Indians. Auntie Flo
Many of the photographs are postcards mounted on scrapbook pages. The photographs were taken in the 1920s and depict Fort Simpson, New Chicago, riverboats, Arctic Red River, the ramparts and Fort Norman as well as other scenes from around Great Slave Lake and along the Mackenzie River as far north as Aklavik.
Watching the Boat-Fort Simpson. [Group of people standing along the shoreline.]
Fort Norman, N.W.T.
No. 1 [Oil] Well near [Fort] Norman.
The Ramparts, Mackenzie River.
Bear Rock-Fort Norman.
Winters supplies [for] I.O.C. [Imperial Oil Company] Camp.
Liard River Indian. [Unidentified South Slavey man.]
[Unidentified man standing at the ] Fitzgerald Rapids-Slave River.
Hare Indians at Mackenzie River.
A Winters Fur Catch. [Two unidentified men standing over bales of fur marked L&H Nelson.]
[Paddle steamer the "Slave River"]
[Legislative Assembly building in Edmonton, Alberta]
3 Generations of an Eskimo [Inuit] family.
Outward bound for the North. [Group of unidentified people boarding a train marked Alberta-Great Waterways.]
On Peel River-Arctic Circle.
The Banks of the Athabaska.
Eskimo [Inuit] Family of Aklavik, A.C.
[S.S. Distributor] at [Fort] Simpson, Mackenzie River.