The Last Rails, Canadian Pacific Railway, Vancouver, BC
The Last Rails, Canadian Pacific Railway, Vancouver, BC
Deadman's Island Off Stanley Park, Vancouver
English Bay, Stanley Park, BC
Customs House, New Westminster, BC
View from Prospect Point, Stanley Park
The Fraser Coat of Arms
Terminal station of Collins Overland Telegraph, New Westminster, BC.
Granville [Vancouver In Embryo] In 1883.
[J.A.R. Homer Reads The Proclamation Of The Union Of British Columbia And Vancouver Island, 1866]
[J.A.R. Homer Reads The Proclamation Of The Union Of British Columbia And Vancouver Island, 1866]
[HMS Satellite II And USS Active In Semiahmoo Bay]
[New Westminster, A Thriving Frontier Town]
[New Westminster, A Thriving Frontier Town]
[18-gun salute by HMS Malacca following the opening of the legislative council of British Columbia, 1867] Sapperton, near New Westminster.
[18-gun salute by HMS Malacca following the opening of the legislative council of British Columbia, 1867] Sapperton, near New Westminster.
[The First Passenger Train Arrives At Port Moody, July 4, 1886]
[The First Passenger Train Arrives At Port Moody, July 4, 1886]
[Captain George Vancouver Meets Galiano And Valdes Off Point Grey, 1792]
The First Passenger Train Arrives At Port Moody, 1886.
The First Passenger Train Arrives At Port Moody, 1886.
British Columbia Enters Confederation, 1871.
The "Empress Of India" Arrives In Vancouver, 1891
The "Empress Of India" Arrives In Vancouver, 1891
The Dedication Of The Peace Arch, 1921
The Dedication Of The Peace Arch, 1921
Burrard Inlet from Kitsilano
Burrard Inlet from Kitsilano
Looking West From The Hastings Mill.
Burrard Inlet Looking Up Seymour Creek From Balcony Of Brighton Hotel, Hastings.
Burrard Inlet From Hastings.
Burrard Inlet, View up the North Arm from Bedwell Bay
Near Granite Falls, Burrard Inlet.
Captain Vancouver Explores Burrard Inlet (1792), #12
Captain Vancouver's Chart of the Burrard Inlet Section, #14
New Westminster, Capitol [Sic] Of BC (1860), #1
The First Shipment Of Lumber From Burrard Inlet (1864), #15.
Gassy Jack Declares His Hotel "Deighton House" Open (October 2, 1867), #17
Granville (1871)