Photograph of Kitimat Junior Girls Basketball Team from 1980. Kitimat Junior Girls Basketball Team. Back row (left to right): Gary Maitland, Sheila Hatch, Joanna Galloway, Lisa Knight, Marie Gubbels, Kelly McClelland, Petula Dedish, Donna Rhindress, Karen Bosiak, Tamara Thomson, Ron MacAuley. Front row (left to right): Tracey Stephens, Alison McDonald, Donna Brodie, Jackie Trach, Sharie Reithaug, Janet Meyer and Angie Williams.
Photograph of Kitimat Junior Girls Basketball Team from 1980. Kitimat Junior Girls Basketball Team. Back row (left to right): Gary Maitland, Sheila Hatch, Joanna Galloway, Lisa Knight, Marie Gubbels, Kelly McClelland, Petula Dedish, Donna Rhindress, Karen Bosiak, Tamara Thomson, Ron MacAuley. Front row (left to right): Tracey Stephens, Alison McDonald, Donna Brodie, Jackie Trach, Sharie Reithaug, Janet Meyer and Angie Williams.
Alice Dicker's father, Benard, came to Canada to work in 1955. He was a forman D-shift for Alcan. He married Anna in 1959. Alice and her sister Claudia were born in Kitimat and the family lived here until 1969, at which time they returned to Germany.
Scope and Content
Photograph of Haisla Boulevard. Area around highway is cleared with few buildings.
-Photograph of site at Gobeil Island, Haisla Chiefs' burial grounds. In summer 1979 only a few burned boards were left and a few bones scattered around by a marten. Receding tide freed more human bones which were put to rest under a rock out-crop. Tree burials in boxes most likely.
-Photograph of site at Gobeil Island, Haisla Chiefs' burial grounds. In summer 1979 only a few burned boards were left and a few bones scattered around by a marten. Receding tide freed more human bones which were put to rest under a rock out-crop. Tree burials in boxes most likely.
- Photograph of site at Gobeil Island, Haisla Chiefs' burial grounds. In summer 1979 only a few burned boards were left and a few bones scattered around by a marten. Receding tide freed more human bones which were put to rest under a rock out-crop. Tree burials in boxes most likely.
- Photograph of site at Gobeil Island, Haisla Chiefs' burial grounds. In summer 1979 only a few burned boards were left and a few bones scattered around by a marten. Receding tide freed more human bones which were put to rest under a rock out-crop. Tree burials in boxes most likely.