Canadian National Railway 4-6-0, No. 1428, Kamloops
Canadian National Railway 4-6-0, No. 1428
Sketch of Fort Kamloops, BC; from "Fort Kamloops Journal" kept by John Tod, 31 August 1841 to 19 December 1843; BC Archives A/B/20/K12 - 1841-43.
John Tod Saves Fort Thompson from Attack, 1843
Fort Kamloops
Thomas Russell Buie.
Grave at Lytton
View of Lytton from the water tank looking north on the Fraser River.
First dwelling In Kamloops.
Ashcroft Manor; Cornwall's Ashcroft ranch.
Lytton.
Spences Bridge, Cook's ferry, where gold was first discovered.
Stagecoaches in front of Clinton Hotel
Kamloops Lake.
Pack Train Encamped On The Thompson River
Clinton.
Kamloops.
View of the Great Chasm.
Lytton.
Kamloops Hudson's Bay Company post.
Side View Of A Chasm, 13 Miles Above Clinton.
Jim Campbell and young girls.
John Clapperton, government agent at Nicola.
A view of the mile 89 post Thompson River.
BC Express Dufferin Coach; J.B. Leighton on the box, James Cran, Charles Miller, and Judge Galliher.
Rev'd. Mr. Good and his indian school at Lytton. Fraser River.
Cornwell's [Cornwall] Ranch on the Thompson River.
Indians at Lytton B.C. Indian group at Lytton where the Thompson River joins the Fraser River. Indian Chief in Buckskin coat and fur hat also Indian woman nourishing her child in a basket cradle. These indians [sic] ride on horseback and differ very much from the Vancouver Island Indians who do not possess horses.