Skip to main contentGelatin silver film negative - Wheat stacks and wagon load of grain, Portage La Prairie, MB, 1887 | McCord Museum Online Collections | McCord Museum - Montreal Social History Museum
Gelatin silver film negative
Wheat stacks and wagon load of grain, Portage La Prairie, MB, 1887
Photographer
William McFarlane Notman
(1857-1913)
Photographer (copy)
Wm. Notman & Son Ltd.
(1919-1954)
Photography studio
Wm. Notman & Son
(1882-1919)
SignatureL. r. imprinted within image, WM. NOTMAN & SON, MONTREAL
Date
1930-1950
Medium / Technique
Silver salts on film
Gelatin silver process
Gelatin silver process
Dimensions20.1 x 25.2 cm
Origin
Canada
Object NumberVIEW-1623.0
CollectionMcCord
CreditPurchase, funds graciously donated by Maclean’s magazine, the Maxwell Cummings Family Foundation and Empire-Universal Films Ltd.
Information about the objects in our collection is updated to reflect new research findings. If you have any information to share regarding this object, please email reference.mccord@mccord-stewart.ca.Information about rights and reproductions is available here.
Wheat stacks and wagon load of grain, Portage La Prairie, MB, 1887
William McFarlane Notman
1887
VIEW-1623
Wheat stacks, Big Bend Land Company, Rosebud, AB, 1920
Wm. Notman & Son
1920
VIEW-8592
Steam threshing, Portage La Prairie, MB, 1887
William McFarlane Notman
1887
VIEW-1620
Steam threshing, Portage La Prairie, MB, 1887
William McFarlane Notman
1887
VIEW-1621
Farm yard, Portage La Prairie, MB, 1887
William McFarlane Notman
1887
VIEW-1624
Flour mill and elevator, Portage La Prairie, MB, 1884
William McFarlane Notman
Copied about 1884-1930
VIEW-1393.0
Portage La Prairie, MB, 1884
William McFarlane Notman
1884
VIEW-1392
Flour mill and elevator, Portage La Prairie, MB, 1884
William McFarlane Notman
1884
VIEW-1393.1
Hay stacks, La Sarre, QC, 1916 (?)
Wm. Notman & Son
1916?
VIEW-6004
Hay stacks, La Sarre, QC, 1916 (?)
Wm. Notman & Son
1916?
VIEW-6003
Stacks, Hamilton Powder Company, Nanaimo, BC, 1909
Wm. Notman & Son
1909
VIEW-8928
This project is made possible thanks to the generous support of the Azrieli Foundation and Canadian Heritage.