The North Pacific Lumber Company in Barnet was one of Burnaby's first industrial developments and one of the largest in the British Empire. Partners James MacLaren and Frank Ross built the mill in 1889 (activated in 1899) as a requirement for obtaining 84,000 acres of timber rights in northern BC. Due to the mill's isolation, the firm built homes for its employees with families and bunkhouses for the bachelors which separated Caucasian workers from Chinese and Sikh workers. Barnet became a distinct company town with its own general store, school, post office, community hall and telephone exchange.
1 photograph : b&w ; 10 x 14 cm on page 21.5 x 28 cm (pasted in album)
Scope and Content
Photograph of three men standing outside a fence next to a log cabin. The man standing to the right with the white shirt may be Claude Hill, but the others are unidentified. This cabin may have belonged to early Burnaby resident Charles Sprott. During the late 1880s and early 1890s, Charles Sprott…
1 photograph : b&w ; 10 x 14 cm on page 21.5 x 28 cm (pasted in album)
Description Level
Item
Record No.
477-829
Access Restriction
No restrictions
Reproduction Restriction
No known restrictions
Accession Number
2007-12
Scope and Content
Photograph of three men standing outside a fence next to a log cabin. The man standing to the right with the white shirt may be Claude Hill, but the others are unidentified. This cabin may have belonged to early Burnaby resident Charles Sprott. During the late 1880s and early 1890s, Charles Sprott settled on a piece of land in Murrayville (Langley) near the border with the United States. When his cabin burned down in 1891, Sprott moved to Burnaby where another former Murrayville resident, Claude Hill had also relocated.
1 photograph : b&w ; 9.8 x 13.3 cm on page 21.5 x 28 cm (pasted in album)
Scope and Content
Photograph of a cottage identified as the Kirby cottage in Whonnock, BC. The members of the Kirby family shown here are unidentified, but Claude Hill can be seen sitting (wearing hat) in front of the cabin.
1 photograph : b&w ; 9.8 x 13.3 cm on page 21.5 x 28 cm (pasted in album)
Description Level
Item
Record No.
477-896
Access Restriction
No restrictions
Reproduction Restriction
No known restrictions
Accession Number
2007-12
Scope and Content
Photograph of a cottage identified as the Kirby cottage in Whonnock, BC. The members of the Kirby family shown here are unidentified, but Claude Hill can be seen sitting (wearing hat) in front of the cabin.
Photograph of baby Edna Caroline Annie Bateman in a dress, seated on a bench covered with fur. Edna Caroline Annie Bateman (later Corner), the eldest daughter of Edwin and Catherine "Cassie" Bateman, born in 1889.
Photograph of baby Edna Caroline Annie Bateman in a dress, seated on a bench covered with fur. Edna Caroline Annie Bateman (later Corner), the eldest daughter of Edwin and Catherine "Cassie" Bateman, born in 1889.
History
Edna Bateman is the oldest daughter of Edwin W. Bateman.
Photograph stamp on verso reads: "J. Barron's, / Photograph Gallery, / (over A. Ley's Store,) / Sarnia / Copies can be had at any time. / Negatives kept."
Note in pencil on album page reads: "Aunt 'Jue' (Julia) / B. 1873 . M. William G. Owens"
1 photograph : sepia ; 19 x 23cm, mounted on card 30 x 35 cm
Scope and Content
Photograph of a team of four oxen and their handler working near Kingsway on Gilley Avenue. A second lumberjack is resting on a log as the team moves past.
1 photograph : sepia ; 19 x 23cm, mounted on card 30 x 35 cm
Scope and Content
Photograph of a team of four oxen and their handler working near Kingsway on Gilley Avenue. A second lumberjack is resting on a log as the team moves past.
Photograph of the McClean family gathered together at a wooden bench on their property in Wexford, Ireland. Mr. Washington Gilliland McClean and Mrs. Honor Delamore McClean are seated on the bench, holding their youngest child, Mabel (she is blurred because she was moving while the photograph was b…
Photograph of the McClean family gathered together at a wooden bench on their property in Wexford, Ireland. Mr. Washington Gilliland McClean and Mrs. Honor Delamore McClean are seated on the bench, holding their youngest child, Mabel (she is blurred because she was moving while the photograph was being taken). Standing behind them are Mabel’s older brother Charles McClean and sisters; Elsie and Evangeline Mai "Eva" McClean.
Note on verso of photograph reads: “Grandfather McClean / Mabel McClean / Grandmother McClean / Front Row / 1888 / Wexford Ireland / Back Row / Elise, Charles + Eva / McClean / Older sisters and brother”
Item consists of a handwritten note addressed to Mrs. Honor McClean from her daughters Eva, Elsie and Mabel on February 28, 1888. Note reads: "Our Wish / God Bless / thee today / WIth joy that never / shall fade / away / Beloved thine / is the portion that / edureth ever, / through lifes long endle…
Item consists of a handwritten note addressed to Mrs. Honor McClean from her daughters Eva, Elsie and Mabel on February 28, 1888. Note reads: "Our Wish / God Bless / thee today / WIth joy that never / shall fade / away / Beloved thine / is the portion that / edureth ever, / through lifes long endless day" and " To Our own dear / Mamma / From her / loving / Children / Eva + / Elsie / Little Mabel"
Shortly after the townsite of Port Moody was surveyed in the early 1880s, a resort community developed on the border of Burnaby and Port Moody that would come to be called Aliceville. Located near the north end of North Road, in 1886 the Canadian Pacific Railway established a flag station there and the settlement was named after Alice May Webster who, with her sister Mrs. Jenns, operated the Aliceville Hotel.
Photograph of Edwin Wettenhall Bateman and Catherine (Cassie) Dale Bateman taken in a photographic studio. Edwin Bateman is seated on a studio prop fence wearing a three-piece suit. Cassie Bateman is leaning over a wooden fence post with an open book under her hand, wearing a darkly coloured dress …
Photograph of Edwin Wettenhall Bateman and Catherine (Cassie) Dale Bateman taken in a photographic studio. Edwin Bateman is seated on a studio prop fence wearing a three-piece suit. Cassie Bateman is leaning over a wooden fence post with an open book under her hand, wearing a darkly coloured dress and a long wedding veil. The couple were married in Portage La Prairie, Manitoba on November 9th, 1886. They had four daughters and three sons. After Cassie died in Portage La Prairie in 1909 Edwin married her sister Mary Dale. E. W. Bateman was the builder and the first owner of the Elworth house.
1 photograph : b&w ; 14.5 x 9.5 cm mounted on cardboard 16.5 x 10.7 cm
Scope and Content
Photograph of Phineas Taylor Barnum (1810-1891), the founder of the circus that would eventually become the Ringling Brothers and Barnum and Bailey Circus. He is 76 years of age at this time with grey hair, wearing a suit with a vest and a bow tie. Annotated or stamped on the bottom front of the ph…
1 photograph : b&w ; 14.5 x 9.5 cm mounted on cardboard 16.5 x 10.7 cm
Scope and Content
Photograph of Phineas Taylor Barnum (1810-1891), the founder of the circus that would eventually become the Ringling Brothers and Barnum and Bailey Circus. He is 76 years of age at this time with grey hair, wearing a suit with a vest and a bow tie. Annotated or stamped on the bottom front of the photograph: "P.T. Barnum. 1886." Printed on the bottom front of the card: "Eisenmann / New York." Printed on the back of the card, "Chas. Eisenmann / Instantaeous Photographer / Trade Mark / The Popular Photographer / 229 Bowery, N.Y. / Branch Gallery 18 West 14th Str. N.Y."
Recording is of John Burton discussing the history of the weekly newspaper and of the types of printing presses that have been used in Canada, as well as exactly how their parts function. John appears to be describing printing presses that are in the room with him.
Biographical Notes
John Burton was born in 1912 in New Westminster. He went to Second Street School, then Edmonds, then Saint Anne's Convent, and St. Louis College and Connaught before graduating from Burnaby South School in 1930.
While at High School, John worked at Cowan's Music Store at 716 Columbia Street in New Westminster on Saturdays and after school.
John Burton's grandfather John Foley was the founder of the Orangeville Sun newspaper in Orangeville, Ontario, established in 1861. He ran the paper until his death in 1882, when his son, John Foley Jr. took over as editor and publisher at the age of sixteen. Two of his daughters were involved in the newspaper; Margaret Foley was a regular contributor to the paper, and John Burton's mother was a typesetter.
When John Burton was a teenager, he went to Orangeville to learn the trade from his uncle. Unfortunately, he was only there eighteen months when his uncle died December 21, 1932. The family was unable to hold on to the business and the paper amalgamated with the Orangeville Banner newspaper in 1933.
Interview was digitized in 2010 allowing it to be accessible on Heritage Burnaby. The digitization project was initiated by the Community Heritage Commission with support from City of Burnaby Council and the BC History Digitization Program of the Irving K. Barber Learning Centre, University of British Columbia. It was recognized by the Heritage Society of BC with an award in 2012.
Photograph is a portrait of Jane Hill (seated, left), her sons Louis Claude (standing, left), Bernard (standing, right) and Bernard's wife Marian (seated, right).
Photograph is a portrait of Jane Hill (seated, left), her sons Louis Claude (standing, left), Bernard (standing, right) and Bernard's wife Marian (seated, right).