Bear cub at P.R.A. camp 7, mile J
- D-01010
- Item
- 1932
The item is a b&w photograph of a bear cub at camp 7 in the Peace River district.
Bear cub at P.R.A. camp 7, mile J
The item is a b&w photograph of a bear cub at camp 7 in the Peace River district.
Caribou cub at P.R.A. camp 7, mile J
The item is a b&w photograph of a Caribou calf at camp 7 in the Peace River district.
The item is a b&w photograph of Dunvegan, Alberta, showing the Hudson's Bay Company post at Peace River.
Dunvegan, first town in Alberta on Peace R.
The item is a b&w photograph of Dunvegan, Alberta on the Peace RIver.
"Finlay Junction, Peace River"; lunch at camp
Part of Frank Cyril Swannell fonds
Part of Frank Cyril Swannell fonds
Same view as I-57969 with group of 4 men in foreground and others in background.
Part of Frank Cyril Swannell fonds
Two log cabins and elevated log building (storehouse?)
Hudson's Bay Company warehouse at Dunvegan
Part of Frank Cyril Swannell fonds
Looking up Peace River Valley from hill behind Dunvegan
Part of Frederick Dally fonds
Mt. Selwyn, Peace R. from the Parsnip R.
The item is a b&w photograph of Mount Selwyn in the Peace River district, taken from the Parsnip River.
"Old church, Dunvegan, Peace River"
Part of Frank Cyril Swannell fonds
On wagon road from Peace R. crossing...
The item is a b&w photograph of a wagon and team on the wagon road in the Peace River area.
The item is a b&w photograph of an open cut mine at Mount Selwyn in the Peace River district.
The Peace River; a few miles from Dunvegan; between Fort St. John and Rocky Mountain Portage
...to Lesser Slave Lake, Alta.
The item is a b&w photograph of wagon team on the wagon road to Lesser Slave Lake, Alberta.
Trapper with a huge timber wolf, mile J
The item is a b&w photograph of a trapper with a large dead timber wolf hanging from his cabin at mile J in the Peace River district.
Where the Peace R. crosses the 120th Meridian or provincial boundary of B.C.
The item consists of two b&w photographs glued together to form a panoramic view of the Peace River at the boundary of British Columbia and Alberta. The approximate position of the line is indicated on the photograph.