Emails, posts in tideline, brainstorming ideas and notes for the Big Tree exhibit; posts about the medicinal and endangered agarikon mushroom and Paul Stamets; receipts and donations related to the exhibit; Big Tree postcards; contest tickets; exhibit activity book. Historical context for oldgrowth, Douglas Fir, and logging: scans from Whaletown album, 1922-1930; article on tree diseases in Forest and Mill, 1948; article about Douglas Fir in Maclean's Magazine, 1958
Emails, posts in tideline, brainstorming ideas and notes for the Big Tree exhibit; posts about the medicinal and endangered agarikon mushroom and Paul Stamets; receipts and donations related to the exhibit; Big Tree postcards; contest tickets; exhibit activity book. Historical context for oldgrowth, Douglas Fir, and logging: scans from Whaletown album, 1922-1930; article on tree diseases in Forest and Mill, 1948; article about Douglas Fir in Maclean's Magazine, 1958
Family trees of Cortes residents throughout history. Filing note: if a file exists for the person, put their family tree there rather than the general file
Family trees of Cortes residents throughout history. Filing note: if a file exists for the person, put their family tree there rather than the general file
Madeleine Emanuelson, wife of Aaron Emanuelson, is at the left; Meg Shaw is far right. The woman and child in the middle are possibly Hazel McCoy and her daughter Barbie (need to corroborate ID).
Madeleine Emanuelson, wife of Aaron Emanuelson, is at the left; Meg Shaw is far right. The woman and child in the middle are possibly Hazel McCoy and her daughter Barbie (need to corroborate ID).
Photograph of what Gilean Douglas called the Indian tree. It was a large cedar tree which grew close to a rock face on the trail between the house and garden at Channel Rock. The bottom facing the rock face was burnt out and formed a natural hearth, where a fire could be built; the rocks would reflect the heat and the cedar branches would give protection from the rain, thus creating a space for people to keep warm and dry.
Photograph of what Gilean Douglas called the Indian tree. It was a large cedar tree which grew close to a rock face on the trail between the house and garden at Channel Rock. The bottom facing the rock face was burnt out and formed a natural hearth, where a fire could be built; the rocks would reflect the heat and the cedar branches would give protection from the rain, thus creating a space for people to keep warm and dry.
Photograph of two women standing on the dock at the government wharf in Whaletown. Gertrude McDonald (R) was a cousin of Doris Maclean and owned the property in Whaletown where the Macleans built their house after moving out of the mission house.
Photograph of two women standing on the dock at the government wharf in Whaletown. Gertrude McDonald (R) was a cousin of Doris Maclean and owned the property in Whaletown where the Macleans built their house after moving out of the mission house.