View Near Pulp Mill – Bathurst | Forestry Fridays: Historic Views of Lumber Mills & Logging Scenes in Eastern Canada
This is an early 20th century postcard titled “View near pulp mill, Bathurst, New Brunswick“.
Excerpt: The Bathurst Pulp and Paper Industry -A Tale to Tell
” ….. Later Commodore Walker, followed by the Rankins and Cunards, established trading centers in the Bathurst area. Bathurst became an important shipbuilding port. Sawmills were established and by the turn of the 20th Century, two major mills were operating in the Bathurst area. A young man with great ambitions, Angus L. McLean, bought the two mills which became the building block for the establishment of the Pulp and Paper Industry in Bathurst. Construction of the mill began in Read more »
Theriault Marriages (Brides) Extracted from Canadian Family Tree (5) | Theriault, Madeleine to Theriault, Prudente
This is the 5th in a series of posts in which I share marriages from my database where the bride was a Theriault.
Please see notes & series index at
Theriault Marriages (Brides) Extracted from Canadian Family Tree (1)
before using this information.
Marriages: Theriault, Madeleine to Theriault, Prudente
Marion, Antoine II | Theriault, Madeleine
Married: 7 Nov 1785 St-Jacques-de-L’Achigan Montcalm Lanaudiere QC CAN
Hudon / Beaulieu, Francois Firmin | Theriault, Madeleine Read more »
Chief Poking Fire’s Son Walking Sky | In Costume
In her 1980 Montreal Gazette article
Caughnawaga Designs All The Rage In Europe .
journalist Iona Monahan talked about the fine textile work of Mohawk Margie Karaqwisake who had started out making costumes for the Chief Poking Fire Village dancers and who then went on to make “soft leather dresses and vests – to order” for European clients.
Karaqwisake was married to Red Pathfinder, son of Walking Sky and grandson of Chief Poking Fire. It is Walking Sky who is pictured in the chrome postcard to your right.
I learned from this article that Karaqwisake was passing on her skills to her children, and it makes me wonder whether I saw any of their handiwork on display last summer at Kahnawake’s Echoes of a Proud Nation Pow Wow. Read more »
Index: Chief Poking Fire Museum & Indian Village, Kahnawake, Quebec
The Museum
Chief Poking Fire Indian Museum, in black and white
Chief Poking Fire Indian Museum – a colour view
* * *
The Entertainers Read more »
Theriault Marriages (Brides) Extracted from Canadian Family Tree (4) | Theriault, Ida to Theriault, Lumina
This is the 4th in a series of posts in which I share marriages from my database where the bride was a Theriault.
Please see notes & series index at
Theriault Marriages (Brides) Extracted from Canadian Family Tree (1)
before using this information.
Marriages: Theriault, Ida to Theriault, Lumina
Long, Jean Baptiste | Theriault, Ida
Married: 2 Aug 1898 Fort Kent Aroostook ME USA
Martin, Jean | Theriault, Ida
Married: 9 Apr 1918 Victoria Madawaska NB CAN
Larocque, Armand | Theriault, Ida
Married: est.1925
Thibodeau / Thibaudeau, Zephirin | Theriault, Jane Read more »
Chief Poking Fire | Indian Village & Museum | Caughnawaga, Kahnawake
Chief Poking Fire Caughnawaga (KA_NA_WA_KE) Indian Reserve, Canada.
from: Unpacking Culture: Art and Commodity in Colonial and Postcolonial Worlds
“Beadwork sells much better in a set-up like Poking Fire than through shops where it will just sit on a shelf,” Leo Diabo remarked …..The Poking Fire “set-up” to which he referred was a tourist attraction developed by John McComber, aslo known as Chief Poking Fire, in the village of Kahnawake in the 1930s. Originally known as “Chief Poking Fire Totum [sic] Pole Indian Village, McComber’s enterprise provided visitors with a highly staged representation of Indians as exotic Others … ” Read more »
Theriault Marriages (Brides) Extracted from Canadian Family Tree (3) | Theriault, Febronie to Theriault, Hortense
This is the 3rd in a series of posts in which I share marriages from my database where the bride was a Theriault.
Please see notes & series index at
Theriault Marriages (Brides) Extracted from Canadian Family Tree (1)
before using this information.
Marriages: Theriault Febronie to Theriault Eloise
Martin, Basile | Theriault, Febronie
Married: 20 Feb 1860 Van Buren Aroostook ME USA
Martin, Onesime | Theriault, Febronie
Married: 1874 Madawaska NB CAN
Dupuis, Adolphe Maximilien | Theriault, Felicite Read more »
My Most Boring Postcard Ever
If I had to choose the single most boring postcard in my collection then this one would definitely make the top 5!
It’s an early 20th century view of the old cantilevered C.P.R. bridge which connects Montreal Island’s Lachine to south shore Kahnawake and I’m sure it’s something only a railroad enthusiast could love! But what many people don’t know is that this bridge had a profound effect on the lives of the Kahnawake Mohawk in the 19th and 20th centuries.
The story began in the mid-1880s when the Dominion Bridge Company of Canada was contracted to erect a railroad bridge for the Canadian Pacific Railway. Dominion Bridge soon found that they needed a piece of Caughnawaga’s land for the south shore end of the bridge, so in exchange for
permission to build, the company agreed to give as many jobs as possible to the Mohawk of Caughnawaga. The work began and they kept their promise, but the jobs they offered were only for menial labour and they soon found that the Mohawk …..
“were dissatisfied with this arrangement and would come out on the bridge itself every chance they got. It was quite impossible to keep them off. As the work progressed, it became apparent to all concerned that these Indians were very odd in that they did not have any fear of heights. If not watched, they would climb up into the spans and walk around there as cool and collected as the toughest of our riveters, most of whom at that period were old sailing-ship men especially picked for their experience in working aloft. These Indians were as agile as goats. They would walk a narrow beam high up in the air with nothing below them but the river, which is rough there and ugly to look down on, and it wouldn’t mean any more to them than walking on solid ground. They seemed immune to the noise of the riveting, which goes right through you and is often enough in itself to make newcomers to construction feel sick and dizzy …..”
Joseph Mitchell, Skyscrapers and Oysters at:
























