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3-D Images of Canada's Early Years THE PRAIRIES |
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Stereoview of Ackerman Brothers ~ Rosser Avenue, Brandon
Bank of Montreal at Portage and Main,, Winnipeg, Manitoba
Prairie Sheep
Manitoba Stone Arch in Minneapolis, Minnesota
Boys visit RCMP HQ in Alberta
Parliament Buildings, Regina
Boys from the US visit the RCMP/NWMP HQ in Alberta
Flatfoot Indians near the Rockies
Drying Meat in a Sioux Camp
Evolution of Sickle and Flail - 33 Horse Team
Indians Tracking
Indian Warriors in Council
Indians talking to cowboy in sign language
Winnipeg Looking West
Description on the Back of the Card You are looking west. Montreal is nearly 1500 miles away behind you and Vancouver is at about the same distance straight ahead, away beyond these enormous open plains of the REd River Valley and beyond the walls of the Rockies and the Selkirks that separate this middle of the continent from the Pacific slopes. It is a substantial, prosperous city; you see there is nothing pretentious about its architecture but it is dignified so far as it goes, without the grotesquely dramatic look of a newly rich mining town -- that is because its wealth comes through the more sober, conservative channels of agricultural enterprise. Thirty years ago there were only about two hundred people here. Today there are more than fifty thousand and the bank clearances are exceeded only by Montreal and Toronto. It is the land and the railroad that have effected this transformation. Thousands of square miles in the province of Manitoba all around here are rich alluvial plains like those you see at this moment stretching toward the west -- the bed of a prehistoric lake. It is nearly treeless so no great labour is necessary to prepare it for tillage. Its fertility is something enormous. The summer sun shines tremendously warm and long on the farmers' fields. They say the standing crops get the sun "eight days in the week" because of the increased length of summer days in this high latitude, and, since the completion of the Canadian Pacific railway made it practicable to dispose of large crops, farmers all around here have gone into wheat-raising on a gigantic scale. More than 20,000,000 bushels are exported yearly from Manitoba farms.From Descriptive Bulletin No. 4 -- Bird's eye View of Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada --
Copyrighted by Underwood and Underwood.
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Horsedrawn Carriage
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Coming Through the Rye
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High Wheel Locomotive
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Spooning
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Upper Fort Garry, Winnipeg
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Woman with Box Camera
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In the Thriving Metropolis of Western Canada
Main Street, Winnipeg
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The Banking Section, Main Street Near Union Trust Building, Winnipeg
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Part of the
Hillman
Brandon History Photo Archive Project
and
WEB
GRAFFITI ZINE ARCHIVE
All Original Work Copyright 2005
William Hillman
hillmans @ westman.wave.ca
Bill
and Sue-On Hillman Eclectic Studio
www.hillmanweb.com