Trinity College, Toronto Canada.
- CA ON00239 F1424-1714
- Pièce
- [18--]
Fait partie de Shortt-Haydon collection
Item is an electro-steel engraved print from a newspaper. It shows Trinity College in Toronto Canada.
Trinity College, Toronto Canada.
Fait partie de Shortt-Haydon collection
Item is an electro-steel engraved print from a newspaper. It shows Trinity College in Toronto Canada.
Toronto- Upper Canada College. King Street.
Fait partie de Shortt-Haydon collection
Item is an electro-steel engraved illustration from a newspaper. It is from a photograph by Notman & Fraser.
The New Departmental Buildings, Ottawa , Known as the "Langevin Block."
Fait partie de Shortt-Haydon collection
Item is a half- tone print from a photograph by W. J. Topley. It shows the new Departmental Buildings in Ottawa, called the Langevin Block.
Fait partie de Shortt-Haydon collection
Item is a half-tone print from a magazine. It shows the side view of Rideau Hall in the summer. It is from a photograph by Topley.
Ground Floor Plan of Parliament
Fait partie de Shortt-Haydon collection
Item is a photostat photograph of the floor plan of a building, most likely the main Parliament building. It shows labels for rooms such as the Senate, Court, Committe room, Newspaper Room, and Commons.
Fait partie de Shortt-Haydon collection
Item is an electro-steel engraving of the Town of Amherst Nova Scotia from sketches by A.J. Hill, C.E.
Fait partie de Shortt-Haydon collection
Item is a lithograph illustration from a newspaper showing Block House from Annapolis Nova Scotia.
Halifax, N.S.- Negresses Selling Mayflowers on the Market Place
Fait partie de Shortt-Haydon collection
Item is an electro-steel engraving from a newspaper. It is an illustration, from a sketch by W.O. Carlisle.
New Provincial Buildings, Halifax, Nova Scotia.
Fait partie de Shortt-Haydon collection
Item is an electro-steel engraved illustration of the new Provincial Buildings in Halifax, Nova Scotia.
Pirate Harbour, Straits of Canso, N.S.
Fait partie de Shortt-Haydon collection
Item is an electro-steel engraved illustration from a newspaper. It is from a sketch by H.H. Scranton.