Gare du Grand-Tronc (Grand Trunk Railway/GTR) à Richmond.
Richmond, County of
43 Archival description results for Richmond, County of
The series contains information on locomotives in Kingsbury, East Angus, and Sherbrooke from around 1945 to 1959. It includes locomotives from the Canadian Pacific Railway and the Quebec Central Railway, as well as historical and technical notes on the various locomotives. Included among the views are the CPR turntable and station at Kingsbury and the QCR turntable at Sherbrooke.
Item is a photograph of the C. A. Thurber and Son carriage factory in Danville, there is a sleigh and a few people standing in front of the factory.
Item is a photograph of the St. Francis river during the winter of 1901, in the background a bridge is visable.
Item is a photograph of a quarry in Kingsbury, a horse pulling a cart of lumber is visable.
Item is a photograph of view down a river in Windsor.
Item is a photograph of a wooden covered bridge located in Richmond.
Item is a photograph of train wreck of a passenger train on the Grand Trunk Railroad, in Richmond.
Item is a photograph of the Asbestos mine locomotive that would transport mined resources to refinery.
Item is a photograph of train wreck on the Asbestos and Danville railroad, with crews on site.
Item is a photograph of the Asbestos and Danville railroad locomotive #18.
Item is a photograph of the Asbestos and Danville railroad locomotive #14.
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.
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 five people being pulled through a flood in Richmond in a horse-drawn vehicle, September 11, 1924. A church is visible in the background.
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.
The item is a postcard showing Main Street, now Rue Principale, in Richmond around the 1930s.
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.
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.
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 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 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 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).