Skip to main contentGelatin silver film negative - After a fire, Thomas May's Building, McGill Street, Montreal, QC, 1901 | McCord Museum Online Collections | McCord Museum - Montreal Social History Museum
Gelatin silver film negative
After a fire, Thomas May's Building, McGill Street, Montreal, QC, 1901
Photographer
William Haggerty
Photographer (copy)
Wm. Notman & Son
(1882-1919)
Photography studio
Wm. Notman & Son
(1882-1919)
SignatureL. l. imprinted within image, NOTMAN, MONTREAL.
Date
1930-1950
Medium / Technique
Silver salts on film
Gelatin silver process
Gelatin silver process
Dimensions20.1 x 25.1 cm
Origin
Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Object NumberVIEW-3340.0
CollectionMcCord
CreditPurchase, funds graciously donated by Maclean’s magazine, the Maxwell Cummings Family Foundation and Empire-Universal Films Ltd.
Status
Not on viewInformation 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.
After a fire, Thomas May's Building, McGill Street, Montreal, QC, 1901
William Haggerty
1901/01
VIEW-3340
Building after a fire, east of Place d'Armes, Montreal, QC, 1888
William Haggerty
1888/01/21
VIEW-1593
Mrs. May's little girls, Montreal, QC, 1890
Wm. Notman & Son
1890/09
II-93270
After a fire, Board of Trade building, Montreal, QC, 1901
Inconnu / Unknown
1901/01/23
MP-0000.1861
Sacred Heart boarding school in ruins after the fire, Sault-au-Récollet, QC, ca. 1930
Harry Sutcliffe
About 1930
M2011.64.2.2.313N
Sacred Heart boarding school in ruins after the fire, Sault-au-Récollet, QC, ca. 1930
Harry Sutcliffe
About 1930
M2011.64.2.2.312N
Sacred Heart boarding school in ruins after the fire, Sault-au-Récollet, QC, ca. 1930
Harry Sutcliffe
About 1930
M2011.64.2.2.315N
Sacred Heart boarding school in ruins after the fire, Sault-au-Récollet, QC, ca. 1930
Harry Sutcliffe
About 1930
M2011.64.2.2.317N
This project is made possible thanks to the generous support of the Azrieli Foundation and Canadian Heritage.