Four women on steps of early Pres. Church in Rosetown
- GR4.021
- Stuk
- [1910s]
Names of the women are unknown. Long dresses, coats, elaborate hats suggest the 1915 era.
Four women on steps of early Pres. Church in Rosetown
Names of the women are unknown. Long dresses, coats, elaborate hats suggest the 1915 era.
Front (east) of hospital built in 1914. Old cars in front, wooden sidewalk to what is now Highway 4.
Early Rosetown area ball players. Names not provided.
International Big Four tractor
Tractor and five men on or beside. Believed to be Linus Kunkel on front right wheel.
Several unidentified children sit on a Model T Ford truck parked in front of an old frame house (shack).
The Ritchie family (3 men, 2 women, 6 children) and two dogs pose in front of their sod house homestead. Only identification provided lists the photo subjects as "Annie and her girls" and "Fairman and Uncle Tom."
Two young men sit in an office at desks. The man on the right is using a typewriter.
A man leans against the counter inside a general store. The chairs and tables along the left-hand side of the photo suggest the store may have also doubled as a diner or other meeting place.
A man in a hat leans against a counter inside a Zealandia shoe store.
Four men and one woman stand inside P.K. Shatilla's General Store behind a display of hats.
One man and two women stand inside an unidentified general store. There are dry goods and textiles for sale.
Four men stand inside what is either a furniture or hardware store.
Three young men stand in the back of a bank.
Four men bundled up for winter in hats and long jackets stand in front of a train. One boxcar says "Canadian Pacific" and the other says "Canadian Northern." The train would be on the CNR track that ran by Zealandia on the north side of town. There is snow on the ground and two of the men are smoking cigars.
A man wearing a bowler hat stands in snow for the camera in front of a train. The train would be on the CNR track that ran by Zealandia on the north end of town. One boxcar reads "Canadian Pacific" and the other "Canadian Northern."