Item is a report written by Kayla Blinkhorn submitted as an Applied Research Project (ARP) for the MBA program at Cape Breton University.
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- Pitawpo’q
Item is a report written by Kayla Blinkhorn submitted as an Applied Research Project (ARP) for the MBA program at Cape Breton University.
Item is a photograph of Baddeck and the Bras d'Or Lakes from the souvenir album "Nova Scotia."
Item is a photograph of boats on the Bras d'Or. The Cabot Trail is to the right with small fishing crafts in the harbour at Cheticamp.
Item is a marine map of Bras d'Or area
Item is a photograph of the Bras d'Or Lakes from the souvenir album "Souvenir of Cape Breton."
Item is a photograph of the Bras d'Or Lakes.
Two ledgers for 1889-1900 and 1889-1915. Records indicate that an interpreter was employed at the quarry to communicate with the immigrant miners who were of Polish, Hungarian, Russian, Yugoslavian (Croatian) and Greek descent. See MB 40.
Item is a photograph of the employees of the #4 Colliery, Bras d'Or, Cape Breton. Robert Dickson, manager, is highlighted in the photograph.
Item is a photograph of the narrow bridge which spanned Little Bras d'Or from Mill Creek to Alder Point.
Item is a photograph of seven men standing on the narrow suspension bridge spanning the Bras d'Or River from Mill Creek to Alder Point.
Item is a reproduction of a photograph of a Mi'kmaw wi'kuom along the shores of Pitu'pok, Bras d'Or Lake. Steamer in the background is possibly the May Queen of North Sydney or the SS Marion.
Item is a photograph of Rev. M.A. MacPherson, a parish pastor in Bras d'Or who died in 1913.
Item is a photograph of St. Joseph's church in Bras d'Or, Cape Breton.
Item is a composite photograph showing St. Joseph's Church in Bras d'Or, Fr. M.A. MacPherson and St. Joseph's Glebe.
Item is a photograph of a steamer close to New Campbellton on the Bras d'Or Lakes from the souvenir album "Nova Scotia."
Item is a photograph of Villa Madonna in Bras d'Or, Cape Breton. The Villa Madonna was used as a retreat house for the Diocese of Antigonish for over 60 years. Before this, it operated as an orphanage. It was demolished after a fire in 2018.