Northumberland House, Beechey Island. Original picture reputed to have been taken by Captain Sir Allen Young of the Pandora 1875-.
Alan Hardisty - Catechist, wife and some of the family. H.L.D. [Man, woman and 5 children.][Allan Lenoir (birth name) Hardisty, Mary (Ann nee Koketta), Sarah Jane, Bella, Eliza (baby, born 1887) and Arthur Hardisty]
"The founders: left to right, 1st row, Sr. Bousier [Boursier], Sr. Colombine, Sr. Boivert [Boisvers]; left to right, 2nd row, Sr. Aigle D'Aigle], Sr. Brunelle, Sr. Ward, Sup. Sr. Michow, Sr. Masse."
Hislop and Nagle's post, now Fort Rae, 1890. When I was living in Fort Rae 1902-3, the caribou were along the shore west of the channel in thousands. There were only 4-5 men in the Post. You could hear them shooting. Later, they came with caribou on toboggans to the post. Unloading the fresh meat and returning. The thing that always stayed in my mind was when they dumped the meat out - the blood ran on to the snow. I don't know how many caribou were killed but the whole channel west near the other shore was black with animals, it seemed miles long.
One black and white print and corresponding negative of Hugh St. Quenton Cayley, Member for Calgary, Northwest Territories Council and Legislative Assembly, 1886-1894 (Saskatchewan Archives number R-A6914). The image was copied from a composite photograph of the members of the 2nd Legislative Assembly for the Northwest Territories, 1891 (Saskatchewan Archives number R-B1490).
[11 men photographed after graduation - some of them were later ordained as members of the Anglican Church. Each has signed their names at the bottom of the photo]. Back row left to right: Fred Wilkinson (later Bishop of Toronto), H.Caylwin, John T. Bryan, C.A. Sadleid [?], Thos. J. Marsh (Thomas Jabez Marsh - later Archdeacon). Center row left to right: Carl [?], I.O. Stringer (later Bishop of the Mackenzie), [?]. Front row left to right: Ed Softley, Randolph F. Nies [?], [?] King. [pre-1892]
Left to right, 1st row, Sr. Boursier, Sr. Boisvers, Sr. Douset, Sr. D'Aigle, Sr. St. Pierre. Left to right, 2nd row, Sr. Pigeon, Sr. Seguin, Sr. Galipeau.
Thomas Simpson, The Arctic Discoverer.
Rt. Hon. Const. John Phipps, Lord Mulgrave
Sir George Nares
Arktische Fauna [Arctic Fauna - shows artists rendering of various animals of the arctic - all names in German]
[On negative] First passenger train over White Pass and Yukon Route to summit Feb. 20 – 1899 [Archival description] [People stand behind White Pass and Yukon Rail train cars stopped on a trestle bridge.]
[Colour illustration of two images - top] Un eskuimau dans son canol [An inuit man in a kayak - and bottom] Esquimaux du cote du Nord-Ouest de la Baye de Hudson [Inuit family from Hudson's Bay in front of stone structure.]
Fort Simpson, 1900 [Hudson's Bay Co. compound]
Old Fort Rae, Great Slave Lake. Built 1804 during search for Franklin Expedition. Taken by James Hislop from his York boat, 1900. This post abandoned when Hudson's Bay Co. moved to Hislop's post and present Fort Rae.
- l->r "Margaret (Firth) McLeod, William Firth, John Firth, Joanne (Firth) McDonald Helen (Firth) Parson, Mrs Caroline Firth (Stewart), Catherine (Firth) Cardinal" Maragaret McLeod is Laura Loutitt's mother
Midnight Sun and Coming In From The North. [A composite of two photographs - the midnight sun and a dog team pulling a sled. C.W. Mather's image, 1901].
Interior of the R.C. Church, on the Arctic Circle at Fort Good Hope, Mackenzie River. [C.W. Mather's image, 1901].
Indians packing goods up from the shore of Great Slave Lake at Fort Resolution. [C.W. Mather's image, 1901].
Hislop & Nagle trading steamer, bringing their supplies into their post at Resolution, Great Slave Lake. [C.W. Mather's image, 1901].