Calendar
- Repository
- Burnaby Village Museum
- Accession Code
- BV020.8.14
- Description
- A Childhood Safety Calendar from Helen's Children's Wear from 1966. The front page of the calendar has a airbrushed image of a small girl smiling with blue eyes. She has a headband with silver pom-poms. She is holding a doll with a red hat and braids.
The first two pages of the calendar are entitled "Children's Safety Diary.
Each month of the calendar has a different image of a child.
The back page has a reading entitled "Safety: Your Child's Most Important Lesson!"
- Object History
- Helen's Children's Wear was a popular and well known shop in Burnaby
- Helen's Children's Wear was located at 4142 Hastings Street. Owner Helen Arnold opened the store on East Hastings Street in 1948. She moved to the 4142 Hastings Street location in 1955, and added a landmark neon sign to the building in 1956. The sign featured a girl on a swing, and served as an important landmark in the neighbourhood. The store closed in 2007.
- Category
- 08. Communication Artifacts
- Classification
- Documentary Artifacts - - Other Documents
- Object Term
- Calendar
- Marks/Labels
- Helen's Children's Wear
Specializing in Brand Name Merchandise
4142 E Hastings Street, North Burnaby, BC
- Measurements
- 21 cm l x 17cm h
- Country Made
- United States of America
- Title
- Childhood Safety Calendar
- Publication Date
- 1966
- Subjects
- Buildings - Commercial - Stores
- Clothing
- Documentary Artifacts
- Persons - Children
- Historic Neighbourhood
- Vancouver Heights (Historic Neighbourhood)
- Planning Study Area
- Burnaby Heights Area
Less detail
doll crib
- Repository
- Burnaby Village Museum
- Accession Code
- BV013.21.4
- Description
- Doll Crib - The doll crib is large. The solid ends and bottom are made from 3/8 " plywood. The sides are eight, 3/8 ' dowels set in an upper and lower rail. The whole is screwed and glued together. There is the remains of a decal on the inside face of one end panel. The wood has been finished with a yellowed shelac or varnish.
- Object History
- Donor states that the object was one of a pair of doll beds made by Ed Simpson for the donor and her sister. Mr Simpson was a carpenter who was a member of the Longshoreman's union.
- Category
- 09. Recreational Artifacts
- Classification
- Toys
- Object Term
- Doll Accessory
- Measurements
- L: 71.0 cm W: 35.5 cm H: 66.5 cm
- Subjects
- Toys
- Names
- Conway, Olymbia “Lym” Basil
- Historic Neighbourhood
- Vancouver Heights (Historic Neighbourhood)
- Planning Study Area
- Burnaby Heights Area
Less detail
neon sign
- Repository
- Burnaby Village Museum
- Accession Code
- BV016.18.2
- Description
- Eagle Ford neon sign. It is a large double-sided hollow sheet metal sign measuring 13.3 feet tall and 8.9 feet wide. The sheet metal and structure of the sign retains most of the eagle's original painted image, including the dramatic wings with their blue and white feather pattern.
- Object History
- Eagle Motors Limited was established by the well-known Burnaby businessman Frank McCracken at 4161 Hastings Street in 1948. The car dealership became a successful local Heights business and was the largest Ford car and truck retailer in the province during its operation. The company had adopted the silhouette of the classic Bald Eagle in full flight to serve as a logo which was utilized in advertising and promotional materials. The eagle symbol was famously developed into a classic chrome badge with the name "Eagle Ford - Burnaby, BC" that was installed on all the Eagle Ford cars and trucks sold by the dealership. After a new showroom building was constructed on the site in 1950, the company commissioned Neon Products of Vancouver to manufacture a very large double-sided neon eagle. Typical of neon signs of the era, the eagle was painted with dramatic designs and bright primary colours on metal with blue, white, and gold neon tubing serving to highlight the outline of the eagle.
- The "Burnaby Eagle" sign immediately became a landmark on the Burnaby Heights business district. From its high perch atop the dealership building, located at Carleton Street, the Burnaby Eagle shared the night sky with other nearby classic neon signs of the era including the "Swinging Girl" sign of the Helen's Children's Wear store. Eagle Motors was a successful dealership until the recession of the 1980s, and in 1985 the business was closed. Vandalism on the site resulted in damage to the neon tubing of the sign before the leased sign was reclaimed by its owner, Neon Products Limited. The sign was obtained by a local collector, who carefully looked after it for 25 years. In 2012, the sign was sold to the City of Burnaby.
- The sign will be restored and installed near its original location on Hastings Street in 2024.
- Reference
- Community Heritage Commission report to Council, September 17, 2012.
- Measurements
- Height: 14 ft. Width: 9 ft. Thickness: 14 in.
- Subjects
- Advertising Medium - Signs and Signboards
- Historic Neighbourhood
- Vancouver Heights (Historic Neighbourhood)
- Planning Study Area
- Burnaby Heights Area
Less detail
Program
- Repository
- Burnaby Village Museum
- Accession Code
- BV020.33.8
- Description
- Burnaby North Senior Secondary School theatre program for Guys and Dolls [1970]. Front cover; light blue legal size cartridge paper folded in half with black text "Burnaby North Senior Secondary School / Presents / Guys & / Dolls" and illustration of a woman and man in fedora hat smoking a cigarette and a set of dice. Interior of program; three pieces of legal sized cartridge paper folded in centre; stapled; printed on both sides with black typewritten text. Three pieces of fake paper money; dollar bills; printed in blue/green ink on white paper and illustrated to appear as United States dollar bills.
- Object History
- From Burnaby North Secondary School, Burnaby in the early 1970s. Handmade dollar bills were props in Burnaby North's production of Guys and Dolls. They were drawn by the art students for the musical. Darleane Hewstan was in the concert band, and she remembers the bills been thrown around the stage by the gamblers. One of the student actors in the production, Gerry Martin, played Nathan Detroit, said that the dollar bills were used in the floating crap game.
- Category
- 08. Communication Artifacts
- Classification
- Documentary Artifacts - - Other Documents
- Object Term
- Program
- Colour
- Blue
- White
- Measurements
- 21.5 cm high x 7 cm wide
- Maker
- Burnaby North Senior Secondary School
- Country Made
- Canada
- Province Made
- British Columbia
- Site/City Made
- Burnaby
- Subjects
- Documentary Artifacts - Programs
- Names
- Burnaby North High School
- Geographic Access
- Pandora Street
- Historic Neighbourhood
- Vancouver Heights (Historic Neighbourhood)
- Planning Study Area
- Burnaby Heights Area
Less detail