Correspondence of Walter Parlby
- RED MG 7-iw-red-254
- Item
- [ca. 1872 - 1884]
Part of Parlby family fonds
Correspondence of Walter Parlby
Part of Parlby family fonds
[Riders at Indigenous Grave Site] Original Title: Native Grave Site
Part of William Alexander Family fonds
Image shows three people seated on horses by an unidentified Indigenous grave site near Fort St. John. Original description: Riders, including Maggie (left) and Jean (middle?) Alexander at a Native Grave Site near Fort St. John.
Part of William Alexander Family fonds
Jean and Maggie at their mother’s reed organ.
Alexander Family at the Bent in Laurencekirk, Scotland
Part of William Alexander Family fonds
Alexander Family at the Bent, Laurencekirk, Scotland, about 1866. Back row, left to right: Tom, Jean, William Sr. (father), Maria, Jessie (mother)? holding Maggie, Jim, and Jessie. Front row, left to right: Willie, Mina (Willamina), Ack (Alexander), Lizzie, Euphemia, and Charles.
Alexander Boys and their Father
Part of William Alexander Family fonds
Left to right: Ed, Art, William (father), and Bill Alexander.
At the English Farm near Beaverlodge
Part of William Alexander Family fonds
Left to right: Ruth English, Bill Alexander, Mrs. English, Vera, Maggie Alexander, Mr. Johnson, and Grace Johnson at the English Farm near Beaverlodge. William had come to pick up Maggie from CGIT camp.
Part of William Alexander Family fonds
"This is a photo of our little Spirit River girls taken on the first of July." Left to right: Oma Tomson, Mag. Tomson, Peace Brooks, Jean Alexander, Florence Brooks, and Maggie Alexander.
Alexanders at their Rycroft Farm
Part of William Alexander Family fonds
The Alexander family on their farm near Rycroft with a slaughtered pig. Left to right: Art, Emilie, Maggie?, Jean?, Bill or Ed?, William Alexander, and Mr. Leslie.
Part of William Alexander Family fonds
Ed, Maggie, and Jean Alexander in a boat on the Peace River at Fort St. John in 1922.
Mountain Springs School Reunion
Part of Bill and Eva Scott fonds
Eva (Kenneway) Scott on the right talks to two older men at the Mountain Springs School reunion. The school started in 1935.