Canada (nation)
Found in 2828 Collections and/or Records:
Loading timber on to ship, 1909
On the La Have river at Bridgewater, N.S.
Loading train with fruit, 1908-09
Quarter-plate (landscape format). St Catharines, Ontario.
Loading waggons and threshing wheat, 1908-08 - 1908-09
Quarter-plate (landscape format). Near Portage La Prarie [i.e. Prairie], Manitoba.
Locks at Sault Ste. Marie, 1919
Locks, Kingston Mills, on the Rideau Canal, 1832
Pencil drawing.
Locks, Kingston Mills, on the Rideau Canal, Upper Canada, 1929 - 1970
Reproductions of original artwork by Frome
Log burling, 1909
Log burling, 1909
Landscape format. Rolling log round in the water with the feet.
Log burling, 1909
Rolling log round in the water with the feet.
Log Cabin Hotel, Spruce Brook, 1899 - 1911
202 x 152 mm. Showing an H-shaped wooden hotel building near the riverside.
Logging, British Columbia , 1950 - 1967
Showing a huge raft of logs being towed along a British Columbian river. Photograph by Canadian Pacific Railways.
Logging trains in Hudson Bay , 1950 - 1967
Showing a truck pulling sleds loaded with timber.
Logging, Vancouver Island, British Columbia , 1950 - 1967
Showing logs being tipped from freight trucks into the water. Photograph by Canadian Pacific Railways.
Logs above the railway bridge on the La Have river, 1909
Near Bridgewater, N.S.
Logs coming through the sluice, 1909
Quarter-plate. At Shellcamp Dam seen from below.
Logs coming through the sluice, 1909
Quarter-plate. At Shellcamp Dam seen from below.
Logs in the boom at Mistake Lake, 1909
Quarter-plate (landscape format). The boom is a line of chained logs arranged to enclose a space of water, in which the mass of logs may be confined and directed. The logs in these views are of mixed kinds : about equal quantities of pine, spruce and hemlock. It would be safe to say that anything with rough bark on in these views is hemlock, with smooth bark spruce.
Logs in the boom at Mistake Lake, 1909
Quarter-plate (landscape format). The boom is a line of chained logs arranged to enclose a space of water, in which the mass of logs may be confined and directed. The logs in these views are of mixed kinds : about equal quantities of pine, spruce and hemlock. It would be safe to say that anything with rough bark on in these views is hemlock, with smooth bark spruce.
Logy Bay, 1908-09
Quarter-plate. East of St. Johns.
Logy Bay Fishing Settlement, 1899 - 1911
202 x 151 mm. Showing the small inlet with moored rowing boats and rough wooden shacks built on the Cliffside. Lying about seven miles from St John’s, Logy Bay was used as a summertime fishing station.
London, Ontario, 1919
Long - eared owl (plate XXII), 1876
103 x 140 mm.
Looking along main street, 1909
Portland, St. John, New Brunswick.
Looking back from Osyoos to Fairview, 1908-09 - 1908-10
Landscape format.
Looking back toward Wapta, 1908-08 - 1908-09
Landscape format. From the point above field. Mass of wild flowers in foreground.