Photograph showing seventeen young male hockey players and two male adults. The young men are wearing white jerseys that say Kitimat. All the people are in an arena on the ice.
Photograph showing seventeen young male hockey players and two male adults. The young men are wearing white jerseys that say Kitimat. All the people are in an arena on the ice.
Photo showing 73-year-old Mrs. Minnie Krimm of Terrace smiles as 13-year-old Doris Loveless and 14-year-old Elsie Bellamy, both members of the Terrace Branch of CGIT (Canadian Girls in Training), get down to shining her shoes; a fundraiser
Photo showing 73-year-old Mrs. Minnie Krimm of Terrace smiles as 13-year-old Doris Loveless and 14-year-old Elsie Bellamy, both members of the Terrace Branch of CGIT (Canadian Girls in Training), get down to shining her shoes; a fundraiser
Photo showing "Craftsmen's room". In the industrial arts room D'arcy Lynch, grade 8 student, hollows out a bowl from a maple block under the watchful eye of I.C. Scott, instructor in industrial training. Over 150 boys from grades 8 to 12 take courses in woodwork, metalwork, draughting and electricity. Mrs. R.S.S. Wilson, a visitor to the school last thursday night shows keen interest in the results obtained by the young craftsman. It is estimated that 82 percent of the classes in industrial arts is absorbed into industry on leaving school.
Northern Sentinel: Box #4: (A) Historical (1) School District #80 (a) Board of Trustees
Scope and Content
Photo showing "Craftsmen's room". In the industrial arts room D'arcy Lynch, grade 8 student, hollows out a bowl from a maple block under the watchful eye of I.C. Scott, instructor in industrial training. Over 150 boys from grades 8 to 12 take courses in woodwork, metalwork, draughting and electricity. Mrs. R.S.S. Wilson, a visitor to the school last thursday night shows keen interest in the results obtained by the young craftsman. It is estimated that 82 percent of the classes in industrial arts is absorbed into industry on leaving school.
Photo showing 1st train over CNR line linking Terrace with Kitimat 14 January 1955.
L/R Jim Douglas (CNR Veteran Conductor); George Little (Terrace-Pioneer); Wilbur H. Sparks (1st Reeve of Kitimat)
Photo showing 1st train over CNR line linking Terrace with Kitimat 14 January 1955.
L/R Jim Douglas (CNR Veteran Conductor); George Little (Terrace-Pioneer); Wilbur H. Sparks (1st Reeve of Kitimat)
Photo showing Canadian Girls in Training (CGIT) Christmas Candlelight service. Front, from left: Carol Osborne, Kathy Payne, Heather Dockrill, Joyce Dixon, Coleen Blake, Patsy Shannon. Back from left: Olive Kakuno, Sue Dixon, Angelica Lange, Lorraine Trudeau, Roland Nelson.
Photo showing Canadian Girls in Training (CGIT) Christmas Candlelight service. Front, from left: Carol Osborne, Kathy Payne, Heather Dockrill, Joyce Dixon, Coleen Blake, Patsy Shannon. Back from left: Olive Kakuno, Sue Dixon, Angelica Lange, Lorraine Trudeau, Roland Nelson.
Photo showing CNR - 1st train over CNR line linking Terrace to Kitimat 14 January 1955. L/R H. Gittigan, Brakeman; Tony Glayer, Fireman; Bob McKenzie, Engineer; Jim Douglas, Conductor; K.T. McKay, Brakeman; Sam Bell, Car Man.
Photo showing CNR - 1st train over CNR line linking Terrace to Kitimat 14 January 1955. L/R H. Gittigan, Brakeman; Tony Glayer, Fireman; Bob McKenzie, Engineer; Jim Douglas, Conductor; K.T. McKay, Brakeman; Sam Bell, Car Man.
Photograph of A.W. Whitaker, Jr. vice president and General manager of the Aluminum company of Canada, and Mr. Eva Waldie, the superviser of communications for the company as they watch the first message recieved in Montreal over the longest industrial teletype system in th world.
Photograph of A.W. Whitaker, Jr. vice president and General manager of the Aluminum company of Canada, and Mr. Eva Waldie, the superviser of communications for the company as they watch the first message recieved in Montreal over the longest industrial teletype system in th world.
Notes
Montreal, 1 April 1955- A.W. Whitaker, Jr, Vice-President and General Manager of the Aluminum Company of Canada, Limited and Mrs. Eva Waldie, Supervisor of the Communications for the Company, watch as the first message is received in Montreal over the longest industrial teletype system in the world. Installed by the Trans-Canada Telephone System, it went into operation today and provides instant communication between Alcan's head office in the Sun Life Building, Montreal and the company's plant at Kitimat, 400 miles north of Vancouver, in British Columbia. Messages between these two points travel a distance in excess of 5200 miles. Alcan, which is presently producing 91,500 tons of aluminum a year at Kitimat, has announced plans for expanding Kitimat capacity to 330,000 tons and this direct communications link between Kitimat and the company head office is expected to prove invaluable.