Items
Tag
Photograph
-
Raymond Knister
-
Itinerant Workers on Cart During Hop Growing Season
Faded black and white photograph of itinerant workers during hop growing season at Hiram Walker Farms in Sandwich East Township; there are a large number of men, women and children in the photograph; in the foreground are two carts full of people in dark coats and hats; each cart is being pulled by two horses; in front of the first cart, in the bottom right corner of the photograph, is a little boy in a white jacket; in the background there are several more carts filled with people, several farm buildings and a number of people standing on a stack of filled bags; there are also some people standing in a tree in the background, centre, of the photograph -
York University campus
Two photos of York University campus at dusk with slightly different exposures. -
Woodslee United Church Cemetery sign
-
Gravestone of Henry B Knister and Christine Anne McNaughton
Gravestone of Henry B Knister (1851-1940) and Christine Anne McNaughton (his wife) (1854-1936) at Ruscom United Church Cemetery. -
Ruscom United Church sign
Ruscom United Church sign. -
Gravestone of W. M. H. Knister and A. Pearl Wilcox
Gravestone of W M. H. Knister (1879-1967) and A. Pearl Wilcox (1884-1971) at Wooslee United Church Cemetery. -
Gravestone of William Henry Knister
Gravestone of William Henry Knister (1879-1967) at Woodslee United Church Cemetery. -
Gravestones of brothers, Christian and George Knister.
Gravestones of brothers, Christian (1864-1880) and George Knister (1853-1880) at Ruscom United Church Cemetery. -
Wesleyan Church stone cairn
Stone cairn of the Wesleyan Church , 1855, rebuilt in 1889. -
Gravestone of Francis Knister
Gravestone of Francis Knister. -
Former Knister home
Former Knister home near the Ruscom River. -
Former house of John Wesley Knister
Former house of John Wesley Knister, Raymond Knister's uncle. -
Former house of Dr. Knister, front
Front of the former house of Dr. Knister. -
Former house of Dr. Knister, back
Back of the former house of Dr. Knister. -
St. Andrew's United Church
St. Andrew's United Church in Comber, Ontario. Potential place of Raymond Knister's funeral wake. -
Lake shore with limestone boulders
Shoreline at Lake St. Clair with limestone boulders. -
Lake shore
Limestone boulders on the edge of Lake St. Clair. -
Pumping station and house, back
Back of fenced pumping station and house with concrete pathway in between. Formerly a grassy thoroughfare to the beach. -
Pumping station and house, front
Front of fenced pumping station and house with concrete pathway in between. Formerly a grassy thoroughfare to the beach. -
Public works building
Public works building which now stands adjacent to the cottage Raymond Knister was renting at the time of his death. -
Cottage at Stoney Point
Cottage formerly owned by John Goatbe, Raymond Knister's uncle. This was the same cottage rented by Knister on the weekend of August 29, 1932. -
Stoney Point road sign
Photo of Stoney Point welcome sign on Highway 77. -
York University campus 2
Campus of York University at dusk. -
York University campus
Campus of York University at dusk. -
Raymond Knister
Faded and damaged photo of Raymond Knister standing with hands holding suspenders. -
Young Raymond Knister
Collage of Raymond Knister at 14 and a bit older. -
Raymond Knister with Imogen
-
Raymond Knister
Collage of various Raymond Knister photos. -
Collage of Myrtle and Raymond Knister
-
Raymond Knister and sister, Marjorie
Collage with photo of Raymond, and sister, Marjorie. -
Raymond Knister
-
Dr. Duncan Campbell Scott
Portrait of Dr. Duncan Campbell Scott -
Morley Callaghan
-
Unidentified men with horse-driven thresher
Photo of two unidentified men leading a team of two horses harnessed to a wheat thresher; this image shows the wheat at right to still be whole; the horses display a unique cord and bead tackle. -
Amherstburg: Park Street.: Fred Bertrand Livery
From back of photo: Roy Sawyer, (team of grey and brown horses)/ Loraine Bertrand (Mrs. Harry Kemp) holding centre team in front Fred Bertrand, proprietor (holding team at right in front row). Drifford Bertrand, son, holding team at left, in front row. -
Construction of Barn on Spruceholme Farm
Black and white photograph of a partially constructed barn on the Spruceholme Farm; the farm was located south of Highway 98, between Ruscom and Woodslee; the framing of the barn looks to be near completed and concrete blocks have been laid for the main level and ramp; there are a large number of men and women standing along the top of the completed blocks, as well as men sitting and standing on the wooden frame; building supplies (wooden planks, concrete blocks) are in evidence surrounding the structure. The farm was owned by John Wallace and the barn was still standing in 1962. -
Man with grain cradle
Black and white photograph of a man with a grain cradle. He is standing in a field with a grain cradle, there is a house behind him. The man is wearing dark pants and shirt with suspenders and a large, wide brimmed hat. He has a mustache and long, full beard. -
Ice harvesting
Prior to the age of refrigerators and air conditioning, lake and river ice cut in the winter was used to keep food cold and create cool spaces in the summer. -
Raymond Knister and wife, Myrtle
Raymond Knister and wife, Myrtle -
Raymond Knister
Raymond Knister -
John Wesley Knister's house
Home of Raymond Knister's uncle John Wesley Knister in Ruscom. -
Gravestone of John Wesley Knister, his wife and son
Gravestone of Raymond Knister's uncle, aunt and cousin: John Wesley Knister, Mary M. Thompson Knister, and Cecil A. Knister respectively. -
Stoney Point road sign
Highway welcome sign for Stoney Point. -
Stoney Point water's edge
The water's edge at Stoney Point. -
Marjorie Willan
Raymond's sister Marjorie Willan. -
Knister home in Northwood, 1980s
Photo taken in the 1980s by Jim and Lisa Gilbert of the Knister home at Northwood. -
Knister home in Northwood, 1927
Photo of Knister home at Northwood, taken in 1927 and kept by Myrtle Knister (Raymond's wife). Raymond moved here after returning from Iowa and Chicago in order to help his father with the family farm. -
Home of John Wesley Knister 2
Home of Uncle John Knister at RR#1 Ruscom. -
Home of John Wesley Knister
Home of John Wesley Knister (Raymond Knister's uncle) at RR#1 Ruscom. The Commemorative Biographical Record of the County of Essex indicated that "In 1901, at a cost of $4,500, he erected one of the finest brick dwellings west of London, planned by himself and his wife, and fitted with all the improvements modern ingenuity has contrived for the comfort of man."