Records With Access Point "Bridges"
59 results found (58 digitized image(s) available).
Entrance to Grand Falls bridge looking north.
Item - 1895-1905
P9\6
Men and women pose in the foreground, one man holds a bicycle. The bridge bears the inscription “1860” showing its construction date. Across the bridge a sign on a building is just visible, possibly reading “GB McCluskey”.
Bridge in East Florenceville
Item - [ca.1905]
P11\68
Originally known as Buttermilk Creek, the community of Florenceville was renamed in 1855 during the Crimean War to mark the contributions of nursing pioneer Florence Nightingale (1820-1910). At the extreme left, the long white sided home belonged to Frank Smith and Harry Smith, father and son, roughly on the grounds where the McCains plant would later be built. On the centre of the photo there are a group of barns in a field, these belonged to Harry Burnham, at the right hand where the thick line of trees enters (just above the Burnham barns) may be the homestead of Milo Clark. Just at the end of the bridge the tall white building on the far right of the street was Jim Davis's store. This shot depicts the bridge before any section of it was covered.
Trestle bridge over the Madawaska River
Item
P11\100
The bridge was built to convey a trolley, line from the Murchie Mill to a burning pile on the opposite shore. Dam and mill pond may be seen immediately to the rear. Towards the left background is the school built around 1894.
Wharf of and warehouse of CRC (Charles Robin and Company) at Paspébiac, Gaspésie, Quebec
Item
P11\199
Previously identified as Dalhousie breakwater and ground fish plant - later information from Tim Jacques of "The Tribune" in Campbellton, informed PANB that this image is not Dalhousie but "may have been on the Gaspe Peninsula, an operation run by Channel Island firms". This led to the discovery that this image is of the CRC (Charles Robin and Company) fish plant at Paspébiac, QC.
St. Stephen Bridge
Item
P12\6
International bridge between St. Stephen, NB and Calais Maine, USA a.k.a St. Stephen Bridge, Charlotte County.
Panoramic view of mountains, river, and a small house
Item - 19-
P12\47
Panoramic view of a mountain and large river. There is a large house with a red roof and a white fence along with a train station. There are two bridges - one for railroad trains, and one for vehicles.
Wooden bridge at Fredericton
Item - 1890-1900
P13\58
Some freshet ice on shores. View of train bridge in Fredericton from Southeast shoreline, man and two boys in a rowboat visible in foreground.
Andy Morasse photographs
Fonds - 1965, 1968
P17
Andrew Morasse was born in Port Colborne, Ontario, and attended school there and later at Welland. He came to St. Thomas University as a student in Liberal Arts Program in 1965. These photographs were taken during several trips over to the Miramichi for that purpose during the summer of 1968. They were intended and used for a “Miramichi Night”, held October 12th, 1968 at the Town Hall Auditorium in Newcastle, NB.