Showing posts with label Photos. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Photos. Show all posts
Tuesday, August 14, 2012
Foresters
Catholic Order of Foresters, c. 1916. Courtesy of the Archives of Manitoba (n165).
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This is the second item on this blog that touches on the Ancient Order of Foresters.
Here's a slightly longer excerpt from Esyllt's introduction to Imagining Winnipeg, which I think gives you a sense of both Foote's early history and of recruitment practices that fraternal orders such as the AOF practiced:
"For a time in PEI, Foote had sold photo coupons to families that they could reimburse at local studios, and he took this up again in Halifax and Dartmouth, selling coupons for sessions at the Cogswell Photo Company. He sold mostly to young military men and their girlfriends, and working-class families. He began to work in a team with a photographer, not in a studio, but at soldiers’ barracks and hangouts, and community events like boat races. At this time, Foote himself was a salesman, not a photographer. He purchased a cylinder phonograph, rigged it up so that twenty-four people could listen to it at once, and charged for the privilege at local fairs all over Nova Scotia. At the same time, he began taking his own photographs, of local churches and their ministers, which he would sell. He also worked as a recruiter for the Order of Foresters, playing his autoharp and hosting entertainment all along the south shore of Nova Scotia, encouraging people to join the Order."
Again, this image came to us courtesy of film editor Bob Lower.
Shooting star
Jimmie Ward's "Shooting Star", 1911. Courtesy of the Archives of Manitoba (n892).
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From the Free Press archives:
"Heading off the programme and perhaps of the most lively interest will be the aviation performance of George Mestach and Jimmie Ward. Monoplane and biplane will be seen for the first time side by side in the west. Mestach has a French machine, the very one which, driven by Jules Vedrines, took first place in the famous flight from Paris to Madrid last year. Mestach makes his specialty the delivery of letters and parcels and will no doubt oblige those who are desirous of taking advantage of the new mode of quick delivery at the fair. Ward is more of a sensationalist and his "Shooting Star" is a well known machine through the States, where he has electrified the spectators on more than one occasion by his daring." - July 6, 1912 description of the Canadian Industrial exhibition in Winnipeg.
For a more detailed discussion of Ward's history, see the 1995 article in the Minnesota Historical Society's History magazine.
(Born Jens P. Wilson, Ward changed his name to avoid a number of speeding tickets: "His affinity for speed soon caused him to take on a new last name, because his police record for speeding stood in the way of keeping his license.")
Again, this image came to us courtesy of film editor Bob Lower.
Giant horseshoe
Blacksmith with giant horseshoe, 1912. Courtesy of the Archives of Manitoba (n404).
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Lately, we've been talking a LOT about the process of putting together Imagining Winnipeg, but there are thousands of Foote photos that didn't make it into the book.
So we thought we'd share this trio of images that came to us courtesy of film editor Bob Lower.
We couldn't find any more information about the people in this particular photo or the occasion that necessitated a giant horseshoe, but we were able to find advertisements from the same era that mimicked those on the wall behind the...giant horseshoe.
From the Free Press archives:
Thursday, November 10, 2011
Stag

Jewish Ladies Stag Party at home of H.L. Weidman, 130 Furby St., 1920. Courtesy of the Archives of Manitoba (n2448).
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A biography of Hiram L. Weidman (1863-1933) is on the Memorable Manitobans section of the Manitoba Historical Society's website.
Boys Captured

Boys captured for murder that took place on Greater Winnipeg Water District, 1918. Courtesy of the Archives of Manitoba (n15801).
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From the Free Press archives:
In June 1918 cousins Mike and Nick Powdochuk (or Podelezuk), aged 14 or 15, were arrested for murder.
The crime took place in a Greater Winnipeg Water District railway camp, which, according to the City of Winnipeg Water and Waste Department, "was built to transport men and supplies for the construction of an aqueduct from Shoal Lake on the Manitoba-Ontario border to Winnipeg."
Mike was eventually tried for the axe murder of Louis Marcie, described by the then Manitoba Free Press as "an old logger."
"The deceased was not of a quarrelsome nature, but he sometimes got 'peeved,' and in that state, he had a peculiar habit of whispering to himself. The boys were apt to note his infirmity and make fun of him, but he had warned them against the annoyance they were inclined to give the man." (June 18, 1918)
Monday, October 31, 2011
Testing the Water

Artic Ice Co. employees “testing the water,” 1924. Courtesy of the Archives of Manitoba (n1703).
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A description of the Arctic Glacier (Arctic Ice) company is on the MHS Centennial Business section of the Manitoba Historical Society's website.
Triplets

Major Mrs. Louise Payne with triplets, 1916. Courtesy of the Archives of Manitoba (n2489).
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From the Free Press archives:

Lions Convention

Delegates to Lions Convention, Fort Garry Hotel, 1926. Courtesy of the Archives of Manitoba (n2825).
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