For custodial history see the collection level description of the Lawrence Stuckey collection.
Scope and Content
Image of Bethel Church (1895) on Highways 2 & 21 west of Deleau, Manitoba.
Notes
[Brandon SW includes communities south of Trans-Canada #1 highway and west of PTH #10.] [Images 349a and 349b are images of the exterior of the church, and images 349c-349-e are images of the stained glass windows.]
For custodial history see the collection level description of the Lawrence Stuckey collection.
Scope and Content
Image of Bethel Church (1895) on Highways 2 & 21 west of Deleau, Manitoba.
Notes
[Brandon SW includes communities south of Trans-Canada #1 highway and west of PTH #10.] [Images 349a and 349b are images of the exterior of the church, and images 349c-349-e are images of the stained glass windows.]
For custodial history see the collection level description of the Lawrence Stuckey collection.
Scope and Content
Image of Bethel Church (1895) on Highways 2 & 21 west of Deleau, Manitoba.
Notes
[Brandon SW includes communities south of Trans-Canada #1 highway and west of PTH #10.] [Images 349a and 349b are images of the exterior of the church, and images 349c-349-e are images of the stained glass windows.]
For custodial history see the collection level description of the Lawrence Stuckey collection.
Scope and Content
Image of Bethel Church (1895) on Highways 2 & 21 west of Deleau, Manitoba.
Notes
[Brandon SW includes communities south of Trans-Canada #1 highway and west of PTH #10.] [Images 349a and 349b are images of the exterior of the church, and images 349c-349-e are images of the stained glass windows.]
For custodial history see the collection level description of the Lawrence Stuckey collection.
Scope and Content
Image of Bethel Church (1895) on Highways 2 & 21 west of Deleau, Manitoba.
Notes
[Brandon SW includes communities south of Trans-Canada #1 highway and west of PTH #10.] [Images 349a and 349b are images of the exterior of the church, and images 349c-349-e are images of the stained glass windows.]
For custodial history see the collection level description of the Lawrence Stuckey collection.
Scope and Content
CPR Ice House Fire with engine 701
Notes
This large ice house, located between the CPR tracks and Assiniboine Avenue at 3rd Street, was filled with blocks of ice from the Assiniboine River each winter. It had a long high platform for [loading ice blocks into] refrigerator cars, and also handled charcoal braziers for heating these same cars in winter. The new ice house structure that was built after this fire was much smaller, as it had an artificial ice plant.
With mechanically temperature-controlled cars replacing ice-cooled refrigerators, it was demolished in the 1970's.
This photograph shows how steam switch engines were used as fire engines. A hose carried in a box under the tender was fitted into a branch of the boiler feed pipe (discharge pipe). When the injector was turned on it gave a nozzle pressure of over 200 psi.