- CA BWGPL LHC-BraPh-PH19629-OS8843
- Deel
- 2007
Part of Local History Collection
Barns on the Langford Farm.
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1813 results with digital objects Show results with digital objects
Part of Local History Collection
Barns on the Langford Farm.
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Part of Local History Collection
R. Gummerson home with school in the background.
Part of Local History Collection
Photograph of the old Bradford Public School on Queen and Rebecca Streets
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Part of Local History Collection
Photograph of the old Bradford High School on Queen Street
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Part of Local History Collection
Photo taken atop the Bradford Co-op of the truckloads of farmers bringing their produce to the market. The caption reads: "The above picture, taken from the roof of the Bradford Co-Operative Storage Ltd., shows only a section of the trucks, large and small, which formed the huge cavalcade of Holland Marsh growers and their vehicles, just before they moved off on their trek to Toronto City Hall to present to Mayor McCallum several truck-loads of vegetables for Toronto orphanages and the Hospital for Sick Children. Approximately 125 trucks made up a procession, about a mile and a quarter in length, which went right through with motorcycle police from Bradford to the City Hall without a stop."
More information in the Related Description links.
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Part of Local History Collection
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Part of Local History Collection
This is the Holland Street Theatre
Part of Local History Collection
Postcard advertising the large crops grown in Bradford, 1930s.
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Part of Local History Collection
A photograph of the Bradford Post Office, taken by Lewis (Lew) Campbell in 1938.
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House of Dr. Frederick Coney Stevenson - c. 1905
Part of Local History Collection
Photograph of the home of Dr. Frederick Coney Stevenson at 136 Barrie Street, c. 1905. In the 1940s it was added to, the facade changed and turned into a nursing home. This picture was given to Lew Campbell by Ken Stevenson, Dr. Stevenson’s grandson. Lew Campbell and his family lived at 129 Barrie Street, across the street from this house . Dr. Stevenson can be seen in the photo (sitting on the lawn).
One of Campbell's strongest childhood memories was seeing Dr. Stevenson collapse while cutting his lawn in 1927. He was pronounced dead when Dr. Lewis H. Campbell arrived minutes later.
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