Skip header and navigation

Revise Search

2 records – page 1 of 1.

Wheat City Business College

http://archives.brandonu.ca/en/permalink/descriptions10213
Part Of
RG 12 Brandon and Area Photograph Collection
Description Level
Item
GMD
graphic
Date Range
1917
Accession Number
10-2007
Part Of
RG 12 Brandon and Area Photograph Collection
Creator
Photographer: Clark J. Smith
Description Level
Item
Series Number
4
Item Number
BAPC 4.29
Accession Number
10-2007
GMD
graphic
Date Range
1917
Physical Description
14 x 11 (b/w)
History / Biographical
Wheat City Business College was established in 1904, when J.W. Beveridge and F.E. Werry resigned from the Commercial Department of Brandon College to establish the Wheat City Business College. It was located originally in the Commercial Building on 10th Street, owned by Hughes and Co. Wheat City Business College continued to operate until the later 1960s.
Custodial History
The photograph as donated to the McKee Archives by alumni of the Wheat City Business College sometime before 1997.
Scope and Content
Portraits of the students and staff of the Wheat City Business College.
Name Access
R. Watt
Mrs. G. Patton
P. Frusler
M. Birin
Mrs. C. Hargraves
L. Muller
E.G. Grant
G. Elkins
E. Neilly
W. Hamilton
C. Walker
C.R. Kennedy
L. Skelding
R. Beaudoin
M. McIntosh
?.C. Prince
G. Knight
M. Fallows
H.F. Harvey
A. Courtice
M. Hamilton
R. Muller
N.A. Phaw
M. Ross
R. McNabb
B. Myles
R. McKenzie
L. Allen
M. Grant
J. Croy
M. Stinson
G. Moore
B. Evans
M. Linklater
?. Tennant
W. Caporn
L. Smith
M. Hedges
L. Corbin
O. Durnin
B. Ferguson
V. Sales
E. McLaren
W.I. Neilly
S. Little
V. Wood
N.S. Shuttleworth
Mrs. L.B. Athey
Mrs. J.H. Snyder
F.A. Wood, Principal
M.J. Macdougall
J.S. Wood
A. Hughes
A. Cunningham
W.H. McTavish
V. Clark
E. MacDonald
W. Ayton
I. Gall
M. Barrett
M. Peppard
I. Ryder
V. Thompson
J. Fraser
M. Stoughton
E. Watkins
E. Clark
D. Duce
P.W. Moore
A. Bellamy
M. Osborne
S. Ross
M.G. Jones
A. Elkins
J. Cristall
Pte. J.R. Thomas
Pte. W. Hill
Pte. J.W. Jenkins
Pte. T. Brenton
Pte. R. Lawrence
Pte. C. Brenton
E. Thompson
K. Hartley
W.E. Fleming
E. Kelly
M. Coffee
W. Hayward
H. Meadows
A. Dilly
J. Lawson
B. Wankling
M. Smith
E. Fullard
M. Nolan
I. Johnston
F. Shingfield
M. Allen
N.A. Murray
K. Scott
M. McFadden
W. Hogsland
J. Gabriel
M. Williamson
G. McIntyre
H. Bonfield
J. Bryant
I.J. Burton
M. McKay
W. Traill
J.M. Patterson
E. Spearin
R. Arthur
G. Little
H. Pottinger
W. Doherty
L. Olson
Subject Access
Education
class portraits
post-secondary education
Storage Location
BAPC oversize storage drawer 2
Show Less

Tenth Street looking towards CPR Station, Brandon, Man.

http://archives.brandonu.ca/en/permalink/descriptions13780
Part Of
Fred McGuinness collection
Description Level
Item
GMD
graphic
Date Range
[1917-1919]
Accession Number
20-2009
Part Of
Fred McGuinness collection
Description Level
Item
Series Number
McG 9
Item Number
20-2009.91
Accession Number
20-2009
GMD
graphic
Date Range
[1917-1919]
Physical Description
5.5" x 3.5" (colour)
Material Details
postcard
History / Biographical
According to Russ Gourluck (Silver Screens on the Prairie, Winnipeg: Great Plains Publications, 2012, 26), the Orpheum Theatre was in operation from 1917 to 1920 when it then became the Willis Theatre.
Scope and Content
Postcard shows the 100 block of 10th Street facing north. The CPR train station can be seen at the end of 10th Street. The sign for the Rex Cafe is visible on the west side of 10th Street. On the east side of 10th Street, billboards for Campbell & Campbell furniture are visible as well as signs for Pianos and the Orpheum Theatre. Motorists and cyclists share the road. Street car tracks run the length of 10th Street.
Notes
Postcard was manufactured by T.B. [Tichnor Brothers, Inc., 1908-1987] Cambridge, Massachusetts.
Name Access
10th Street
CPR Station
Orpheum Theatre
Rex Cafe
Campbell & Campbell
Brandon Municipal Railway
Subject Access
street scenes
building exteriors
store exteriors
automobiles
Transportation
street cars
bicycles
Storage Location
RG 5 photograph storage drawer 2 (hanging photos)
Images
Show Less