Photograph of Emmeline Pickles and two others, labelled on the back "Mrs. Pickles, Dad and I". From an envelope "May Ellingsen photos Manson's Landing")
Photograph of Emmeline Pickles and two others, labelled on the back "Mrs. Pickles, Dad and I". From an envelope "May Ellingsen photos Manson's Landing")
Photograph of a large group of soldiers, some wearing kilts, from World War I. (In envelope "found when cleaning old farmhouse" with a note for May Ellingsen from Frances Guthrie) In oversize box
Photograph of a large group of soldiers, some wearing kilts, from World War I. (In envelope "found when cleaning old farmhouse" with a note for May Ellingsen from Frances Guthrie) In oversize box
A description of the event may be found in “Whistle Up the Inlet,” by G.A. Rushton (J.J. Douglas Ltd., Vancouver BC,1974; p 50):
"Good teamwork in the handling of the ships by the Union Company’s marine department was evidenced when, on September 19, 1907, at 4:30 a.m., the Comox, running in a heavy fog, went aground on Cortez Island reef. All passengers were landed safely in small boats, then picked up by the Cassiar and taken to Heriot Bay for transfer to their destination aboard the Coquitlam. The Comox was pulled from her rocky perch at high water the following day and beached at Mansons, where a three-foot hole between the boiler and starboard bunker were patched. The vessel was towed back to Vancouver on September 22 by the tug Tartar.”
A description of the event may be found in “Whistle Up the Inlet,” by G.A. Rushton (J.J. Douglas Ltd., Vancouver BC,1974; p 50):
"Good teamwork in the handling of the ships by the Union Company’s marine department was evidenced when, on September 19, 1907, at 4:30 a.m., the Comox, running in a heavy fog, went aground on Cortez Island reef. All passengers were landed safely in small boats, then picked up by the Cassiar and taken to Heriot Bay for transfer to their destination aboard the Coquitlam. The Comox was pulled from her rocky perch at high water the following day and beached at Mansons, where a three-foot hole between the boiler and starboard bunker were patched. The vessel was towed back to Vancouver on September 22 by the tug Tartar.”
Photograph of a child, Colin Campbell, wearing night clothes, yawning and stretching on the porch of a house. Note cat door and feeding bowl on the right.
Photograph of a child, Colin Campbell, wearing night clothes, yawning and stretching on the porch of a house. Note cat door and feeding bowl on the right.