Photograph of Allan (last name?), Pete (Margaret Middleton), Chickie (real name?) and Henry (last name?) seated on a rock beside the dock in Whaletown. A Union Steamship is behind them and the wharf and freight shed are to the right.
Photograph of Allan (last name?), Pete (Margaret Middleton), Chickie (real name?) and Henry (last name?) seated on a rock beside the dock in Whaletown. A Union Steamship is behind them and the wharf and freight shed are to the right.
Photograph of (L to R) Billie (possibly Billie Barrett), Margaret Huck, Mrs. Pauline Middleton, Bob Groochie and Mr. Munn, standing on the wharf in Whaletown.
Photograph of (L to R) Billie (possibly Billie Barrett), Margaret Huck, Mrs. Pauline Middleton, Bob Groochie and Mr. Munn, standing on the wharf in Whaletown.
Photograph of Bob, Margaret Huck, Mabel Huck and Bert Middleton of Braeside ('Boo') at the edge of Delight Lake in Green Valley. (Identification by Doreen Huck Thompson)
Photograph of Bob, Margaret Huck, Mabel Huck and Bert Middleton of Braeside ('Boo') at the edge of Delight Lake in Green Valley. (Identification by Doreen Huck Thompson)
Photograph of a wood shingled house at the Robertson homestead, Burnside. The house is surrounded by bushes and vines. Two men and a boy are standing to the left; a person dressed all in white is lying on the ground.
Photograph of a wood shingled house at the Robertson homestead, Burnside. The house is surrounded by bushes and vines. Two men and a boy are standing to the left; a person dressed all in white is lying on the ground.
Photograph of the Church Hall in Whaletown, which stood in front of the old cemetery at the corner of Carrington Bay and Harbour roads. It served the community as both church and a venue for social events for almost forty years. The original Whaletown school became its kitchen, and a sleeping place for tired children.
Photograph of the Church Hall in Whaletown, which stood in front of the old cemetery at the corner of Carrington Bay and Harbour roads. It served the community as both church and a venue for social events for almost forty years. The original Whaletown school became its kitchen, and a sleeping place for tired children.