Photo Booklets

Photo Booklets

Download the Photo Booklets here

 

Photo Booklet notes:

Photos 001 to 009:  Pictures of Mick as a baby taken in December  1949 or January 1950. Scanned at 2400 bpi 16 bit.   Rear of these photos are stamped “660” .

Photos 010 to 035: I believe all of these to be taken in 1950.  There are a few wedding photos here which I should post elsewhere so that perhaps they could be identified.  Scanned at 2400 bpi 16 bit.   All are stamped “003” but fill 3  booklets.  Photo 029 proudly displays the outhouse that I remember.  We later got a chemical toilet, a metal contraption with a metal bucket inside which Dad would proudly take and empty somewhere  alone a logging road; most of the time just downstream from the Sproat river bridge where Faber Rd branches off.

Photos  036 to 044 where all taken in 1950 and are stamped “312”. Scanned at 2400 bpi 16 bit.  

Photos 045 and 046: taken in the early winter on 1959 are stamped “646” and there are only two in this booklet.

Photos 047 to 053: more winter 49/50 of Mick. Stamped  ”882”.

Photo 054: single photo in booklet

Photos 055 & 056: only two photos in this booklet.

Photos 058 to 060: only 3 photos in this booklet, no cover.

Photos 061 to 063: Found these loose and they are stamped “882” so I placed them with photos 047 to 053.

Photos 064 & 065:  Stamped “636”. I found these loose and placed them in with 045 & 046.

Photo 078: Notice the car in the background a 53 or 54 plymouth.

Photos 084 to 090: these are in a vinyl coated booklet.

Photos 094 & 095: Taken at Klitsa Lodge.  Only 2/6 photos from this booklet printed (either repeat or NFG);  all stamped “047”

Photo 127: There are others in this booklet but are of lower quality.

Photos 134 to 138:  These I think were taken out by Deep Lake.  I remember Dad talking about a D-8, D-10 cat that was brought in by train and taken off as the train approached Beaver Creek area.  I believe there was a camp out there somewhere.  If my memory is correct he also mentioned that there was a bigger version of the D-8 or 10 called a goat.  Don’t know.