Wesley choir picnic, Stanley Park, Vancouver, B.C. June 22nd, 1929
- AM336-S3-3---: CVA 677-221.6
- Item
- 1929
Photograph shows a group portrait of church choir.
Wesley choir picnic, Stanley Park, Vancouver, B.C. June 22nd, 1929
Photograph shows a group portrait of church choir.
Wesley choir picnic supper, June 22nd 1929 Stanley Park, Vancouver, B.C.
[Willows and bridges at Stanley Park]
Notes on original mounting board read: "Weeping willows, in their winter sleep. Stanley Park, Vancouver, B.C. Van. Nat. History. - Timms"
[Willows and bridges in Stanley Park]
A note on the original mounting board reads: "Landscape. The Willow's looking glass. Winter in Stanley Park, Vancouver, B.C. 1939. Van. Nat. History - Timms."
[Five cars at Prospect Point, Stanley Park]
Photograph shows men, women, and children in cars around Prospect Point. Two young men and a child are seated on a tree stump.
[Intersection of two paths next to lake]
A note on the original accompanying envelope reads: "Stanley Park, a driveway, a pathway, and a tree."
[Woman and girl looking at large tree in Stanley Park]
[Young boy watching a squirrel climb a tree at Stanley Park]
A note on the back of the photograph mounting board reads: "Stanley Park c. 1902. Boy is probably Harold Timms."
[Shoreline of Stanley Park, showing Siwash Rock in the distance]
Big spruce and cedar, Stanley Park
Photograph shows a man on a path looking up at trees.
A glimpse of the city from Stanley Park
Photograph shows a young boy standing behind a bench, looking across Coal Harbour to Downtown Vancouver.
Coaxing the blue jay, Stanley Park
Photograph shows a young boy crouching by a tree, holding out his hand out to a bird.
Cedar walk, Stanley Park, Vancouver, B.C.
Attached label reads: "Thirty-seven years ago in Stanley Park. Along the trail to 3rd Beach, about 150 feet west of the clump of Fir trees called the Seven Sisters. This is the remains of an Indian dug-out canoe that was abandoned on account of "dry rot" in the log. What is left of it is covered with dense green moss. The newly chopped chips were lying about when I made the above photograph. Philip Timms."