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Maynard family collection Nanaimo (B.C.) With digital objects
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Nanaimo

Item consists of one photograph of Nanaimo. Cleared trees are in the foreground and a man is standing on a large stump. The city and waterfront are in the distance.

Photographic View Album by R. Maynard, Artist

File consists of one album containing 62 albumen photographic prints mounted on 31 pages. Images depict landscape views that document the coast and interior of British Columbia, as well as Banff, Alberta. Each page contains a title and photographer’s name, but no date. Photographs were likely produced during photographic tours that Richard and Hannah Maynard conducted to document the construction of the transcontinental railway, including the Canadian Pacific Railway (C.P.R.) during the early-to-late 1880s. Images include views of railroad stations, bridge and trestle construction, pathways and routes, field portraits, and settlements including Songhees, Victoria, Esquimalt, Nanaimo, Vancouver, New Westminster, Kamloops, and Banff, Alberta. Landscape views include the Salmon, Harrison, Fraser, Thompson, Columbia, “Illcillewait” and Bow Rivers; Stoney Creek; Devil Lake Creek; Summit Lake; Eagle Pass; Syndicate Peak; “Mount Caroulle”; Kicking Horse Pass; Mount Stephen; Mount Castle; Mount Edith; the Cascade Mountains; Tunnel Mountain; Devil Lake Canon; and the Three Sisters. Several geographical formations such as “Lady Franklin Rock, Fraser River” are identified as well as a number of parks, including Harrison River Hot Springs and Hot Springs at the National Park (Banff). There is one image identified as the coal mining district of Anthracite, Banff. The Maynards commercially sold their C.P.R.-related photographic views to the public. They were available for order or purchase at Mrs. R. Maynard’s Photographic Gallery and other commercial operations in Victoria and elsewhere in BC.

Maynard, Richard

The E & N Bridge over the Nanaimo River

Item consists of one photograph of an Esquimalt and Nanaimo Railway Company (also known as E&N Railway) trestle bridge spanning the Nanaimo River. Image is taken from water level, looking up the banks of the river towards the bridge.

The Nanaimo Post Office

Item consists of one photograph of the Nanaimo post office, built in 1884 on Front Street. Nine men and a horse-drawn wagon are posed in front of the two-storey, stone building that was designed by Thomas Fuller (1823–1898). Nanaimo Harbour and the bows of two ships are visible behind the building