Item is a postcard showing King Street in Asbestos around the 1910s by photograph V. Dubois. A handwritten caption reads "1924-25 Looking E [east] from centre of 'Square.' Sunday A.M. People going into Post Office." There are people visible on the sidewalks and two motor vehicles.
Item is a postcard of the Coney Island Hotel with an indentation on it.
Item is a photograph of the first covered bridge in Richmond looking from the Melbourne side.
Item is a photograph of mounds of ice on the street, left from the St. Francis River flood in Bromptonville in 1948. A bulldozer is visible, pushing the ice blocks from the main street to open the road.
Item is a photograph of P. J. Girard's store located on Main Street, in Richmond, with cars parked in front.
Item is a photograph of Main Street located in Richmond, looking south, with a horse pulling a buggy visible.
Item is a photograph of Main Street in Richmond, looking south, with a horse pulling a buggy visible.
Item is a photograph of Main Street in Richmond, looking south, with a horse-drawn buggy visible.
Item is a photograph of a covered bridge (the first bridge across the St. Francis river at Richmond), with lumber for passing locomotives visible on the side of the road.
Item is a photograph of a $42,000 Cheese Day with horses pulling wagons full of cheese to the train station in Danville, with a portrait of a young boy in the top right-hand corner.
Item is a photograph of an automobile parade in Danville.
Item is a photograph of the Danville square, with people, stores, and a horse and wagon visible.
Item is a photograph of a train wreck near Danville, with floodwater near the tracks.
Item is a documentary project researched and produced by Barbara Verity and narrated by Joyce Cochrane on covered bridges in the Eastern Townships, produced around 1977. Included in the documentary are images of the covered bridges at Fitch Bay (Narrows), Milby, Capelton, Coaticook (Drouin), Stanbridge East (Monaghan), Melbourne (Creek/Gibson), Highwater (Province Hill/de la Frontière), Gould (Fisher Hill/McVetty-McKenzie), Ste-Catherine-de-Hatley (Rexford), Cowansville (Freeport), Notre-Dame-de-Stanbridge (Pike River/des Rivières), and Island Brook (McDermott).
Item is a photograph of the inauguration of the MacKenzie steel bridge in Richmond over the St. Francis River on 25 May 1903, likely with MLA Peter S.G. MacKenzie in the foreground amongst the gathered crowd. Also visible is a horse and carriage.
Item is a photograph of a man standing in front of the MacKenzie steel bridge in Richmond over the St. Francis River, probably taken around 1903-1910.
Item is a photograph of the first bridge in Richmond over the St. Francis River, which stood from 1847 to about 1882. It was the longest wooden covered bridge in the Eastern Townships. Cords of wood are seen piled in the foreground of the photograph.
Item is a photograph of the second bridge in Richmond over the St. Francis River, which stood from 1882 to 1901, until it was washed away from ice and flooding on April 7, 1901.
The item is a copy of a photograph of the Grand Trunk Railway station in Danville, Quebec, with the Queen's Hotel visible in the background.
The item is a postcard showing Main Street, now Rue Principale, in Richmond around the 1930s.
The item is a postcard of the Canadian National Railway station in Richmond around the 1930s.
The item is a postcard showing Main Street, looking north, in Richmond in about the 1930s.
Item is a photograph of five people being pulled through a flood in Richmond in a horse-drawn vehicle, September 11, 1924. A church is visible in the background.
Item is a photograph of the Asbestos and Danville railroad locomotive #31.
Item is a photograph of the Asbestos and Danville railroad locomotive #31, this trains engine runs on gasoline not diesel.
Item is a photograph of the Asbestos and Danville railroad locomotive #21.
Item is a photograph of an Asbestos and Danville railroad locomotive.
Item is a photograph of the Asbestos and Danville railroad locomotives #26 and #22.