Item is a photograph of a road leading to Stanstead covered in floodwater from the Niger River, with three men standing in it.
Hatley, Township of
36 Archival description results for Hatley, Township of
Item is a photograph of a car parked down by the Ripple Cove public beach in Ayer's Cliff.
Item is a photograph of New Cliff House with two cars parked in front of it.
Item is a photograph of a car coming out of a covered bridge. This particular bridge was located on the road to Burrough's Falls, past the railroad tracks on the way to the Stanstead highway.
Item is a photograph of the Lake Edge Cabins and boats tied at a dock located in Ayer's Cliff.
Item is a photograph of the surrounding area of the Tapatco factory with many people looking at what is left.
Item is a photograph of Main Street located in Ayer's Cliff.
Item is a photograph of the steamboat called the Pocahontas on Lake Massawippi.
Item is a photograph of a log cabin where Arthur Thompson's father was born, just west of Ayer's Cliff, with a horse-drawn vehicle in front.
Item is a photograph of a train station located in Ayer's Cliff.
Item is a photograph of Main Street located in Ayer's Cliff, with some stores and cars visible.
The item contains information on the personal lives of people from the early 1910s. It depicts the steamer Pocahontas on Lake Massawippi in 1912.
The item is a postcard showing a view of Lake Massawippi from Ripplecove in Ayer’s Cliff, with a boat visible, probably taken around the 1940s.
Item is a photograph postcard of an aeriel view of the Boston & Maine Railroad station (leased to Quebec Central Railway) and buildings along Main Street in Ayer’s Cliff, from around 1925. The Ayer’s Cliff Academy also visible in background.
Item is a photograph postcard of the Eastern Townships Mounted Rifles in camp at the Ayer’s Cliff exhibition grounds (fair grounds) with tents visible and a passenger train car in the foreground, take in 1921.
Item is a photograph postcard of view of Lake Massawippi, with boathouse visible, taken around 1925.
Item is a photograph postcard of Main Street in Ayer’s Cliff, looking west, taken around 1915. Visible in the image is the Canadian Bank of Commerce, McIntyre Paints, possibly a public drinking fountain, a car, and a horse and wagon.
Item is a documentary project researched and produced by Barbara Verity and narrated by Joyce Cochrane on covered bridges in the Eastern Townships, produced around 1977. Included in the documentary are images of the covered bridges at Fitch Bay (Narrows), Milby, Capelton, Coaticook (Drouin), Stanbridge East (Monaghan), Melbourne (Creek/Gibson), Highwater (Province Hill/de la Frontière), Gould (Fisher Hill/McVetty-McKenzie), Ste-Catherine-de-Hatley (Rexford), Cowansville (Freeport), Notre-Dame-de-Stanbridge (Pike River/des Rivières), and Island Brook (McDermott).
The item is a photograph showing the collapse of the North Hatley steel bridge February 1918. Houses and buildings along Main and Sherbrooke Streets are also visible.
The item contains information on the professional lives of the Reed family in the 1910s. It depicts J.B. Reed's grist mill in 1916.
The item contains information on the social life in downtown North Hatley at the end of the XIXth and in the early XXth century. It depicts downtown North Hatley on Canada Day.
The file contains a photograph of the steamship "Pocahontas" on Lake Massawippi, ca. 1910.
The item is a postcard view of a sailboat on Lake Massawippi from about the 1910s.
The item is a postcard showing the steamboat "Pocohontas", with people on board, at a wharf in North Hatley from about 1906.
The item is a postcard with a view of the Quebec Central Railway station (originally the Massawippi Valley Railway, later the Canadian Pacific) and water tower in North Hatley in 1908.
The item is a postcard with view of North Hatley and Lake Massawippi from around the 1900s.
The item is a postcard with a view of North Hatley and Lake Massawippi from about 1907.
The item is a postcard showing people on a steam boat, the Pocohontas, on Lake Massawippi from around 1906.