From all over the place, girls and man in boat
- 25-02-11-a037776
- Pièce
- [196-?]
Fait partie de Anthony Carter fonds
Image of three girls and a man in a boat on the water, with land visible in the background.
Sans titre
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From all over the place, girls and man in boat
Fait partie de Anthony Carter fonds
Image of three girls and a man in a boat on the water, with land visible in the background.
Sans titre
Cecelia John with young boy and girl
Fait partie de Anthony Carter fonds
Portrait of Cecilia John with a young boy and girl. She is pictured on page 99 of Carter's book "From History's Locker," with the caption: 'Teh is um'. Cecelia John, 83 yrs, Nootka name, 'Mo ah chat."
Sans titre
Fait partie de Anthony Carter fonds
Portrait of an unidentified young boy and girl.
Sans titre
Children playing near totem pole and Dance house, Alert Bay
Fait partie de Anthony Carter fonds
Image of children playing near a totem pole and Dance house in Alert Bay.
Sans titre
Fait partie de Anthony Carter fonds
Image of two young Musqueam boys kneeling down at the edge of the Fraser River. The boys are facing away from the camera. A different image of the same scene is printed on page 59 of Carter's book "Abundant Rivers."
Sans titre
Fait partie de Anthony Carter fonds
File consists of images First Nations children in the Kamloops, BC area.
Sans titre
Children Playing at St. Michael's Residential School
Fait partie de Missionary Society of the Church of England in Canada Slide Collection
Item is a hand-tinted glass lantern slide of five children in playing attitude with the sea in the background. Based on the original order of the collection, photograph might have been taken in Alert Bay and the children might have been students at St. Michael's Residential School. The Anglican Church established a day school at its mission in Alert Bay, British Columbia in 1878. It opened a small boarding school there in 1882 and an industrial school in 1894. In 1929, a new building was constructed. The school was known for the arts and crafts produced by the students and the two large totem poles in front of the school building. In 1947, two-dozen children ran away from the school. The subsequent investigation into conditions at the school led to the resignation of both the principal and the vice-principal. By 1969, when the federal government assumed administration of the school, all residents were attending local schools. The residence closed in 1974. (National Centre for Truth and Reconciliation)
Four Children at Elkhorn Residential School
Fait partie de Missionary Society of the Church of England in Canada Slide Collection
Item is a glass lantern slide of four children by the entrance of a building. Based on the original order of the collection, photograph might have been taken at Elkhorn (Washakada) Residential School. The Elkhorn Residential School started as the Washakada Home for Girls and the Kasota Home for Boys were established in the village of Elkhorn, MB in 1888. Following a fire, the school was rebuilt outside the town in 1895. Ongoing financial problems led to a government takeover of the school. It was closed in 1918 but reopened in 1923, under the administration of the Anglican Church’s Missionary Society. Many students came from northern Manitoba. The leaders of The Pas Indian Band made a number of complaints about the conditions at the school, which was eventually closed in 1949. (National Centre for Truth and Reconciliation)
Fait partie de Reverend Thomas Crosby fonds
Image is a head and shoulders portrait of a boy. Photographer information printed on verso with the inscription "Geo. Kirton, Photographer, Woodstock, ONT. Rooms on Ground Floor, opp. the Market".