Item is a photograph of the "Welcome to Glace Bay" sign mounted for the 1998 Canadian Little League Championship.
Prendergast, PaulItem is a photograph of United Baptist Church in Glace Bay.
This item is a photograph of a Ukrainian band taken by Ostrander Studios in Glace Bay in the late 1930s. Pictured left to right are Vasyl Markew, Fedyo Hutch, Harry Segdon, and Pavlo Drabek. The tsymbaly (цимбали) , a traditional Ukrainian instrument is part of the ensemble.
Item is a photograph of a photograph of a tram car near the Glace Bay General Hospital.
Sub-series consists of annual reports produced by the Town of Glace Bay, Nova Scotia.
Town of Glace BayFonds consists of a range of municipal records documenting the operation of the Town of Glace Bay from its incorporation until amalgamation in 1995. The bulk of the records in the fonds include hundreds of ledgers including: assessment, rate, and tax rolls, cashbooks, tax records, legal records and documents, financial records, receipts, and account books, public utilities records including electrical, water, and public works, and finally municipal department records including police, the school board, and the board of health. An earlier accrual included a petition to the Honorable Jean Marchand requesting re-opening of Number 20 Colliery; minutes of Town Council meetings; and an annual report from1954.
The fonds is arranged by series according to department function with sub-series noting the type of information recorded. Item level description is primarily provided in a chronological arrangement where possible.
Town of Glace BayMichael Earle: "In December 1929 the first edition of a new paper, The Nova Scotia Miner, was printed in Glace Bay, declaring itself the "organ of District 26 Left Wing Committee." Worked into the masthead, on either side of the emblem of a crossed pick and shovel, was the slogan "Workers of the world unite, you have nothing to lose but your chains."
Gertrude E. N. Tratt: "Apparently a weekly for the first five years of its existence, the Gazette then became the first of the two dailies in the newspaper history of Glace Bay. It terminated about 1950, although its circulation figures were well over four thousand at that time. Independent for most of its fifty years, it became a Labour organ about 1948. Published by the Gazette Publishing Company, its manager in 1909 was John Byrenton, who was replaced in 1923 by A. D. MacNeil.
Originally it had eight 16" x 22" pages. The number later varied between eight and sixteen and there were always seven column on each page. Its circulation has also varied widely between 2,000 and 8,200. Its price of $3 eventually doubled."
The Daily Gazette was published in Glace Bay, Nova Scotia by the Gazette Publishing Co., Limited. It was published every afternoon, Sundays and legal holidays excepted. The price of a single issue was 2 cents.
The Clan Macneil News was "The Official Organ of the Clan Macneil Association of America" and was published every two months by the Kisimul Sept of the Association at Glace Bay, Nova Scotia. Subscriptions costed $1 per year. Macneil of Barra was listed as editor in chief and A. D. MacNeill was listed as secretary of the Kisimul Sept.
The Clan Macneil News: "The Macneil News, circulating as it does among Scots all over North America, will be a good medium for advertising especially for houses dealing in goods and publications of special interest to Highlanders, and more particularly to clan societies. It is the aim of the publishers to produce a periodical of interest to clansmen generally and it will have a special appeal to Cape Breton Scots abroad."
Item is a photograph of a street advertisement made for a street scene in the film "The Bay Boy."
Item is a photograph of storefronts designed for use in a street scene in the film "The Bay Boy."
Item is a photograph of storefronts designed for use in street scenes in the film "The Bay Boy."
Item is a photograph of a street featuring signs and storefronts designed for use in street scenes in the film "The Bay Boy."
Item is a photograph of a large street advertisement designed for use in street scenes in the film "The Bay Boy."
Item is a photograph of movie posters designed for use in street scenes in the film "The Bay Boy."
Item is a photograph of a storefront designed for a street scene in the film "The Bay Boy."
Item is a photograph of storefronts designed for use in a street scene in the film "The Bay Boy."
Item is a photograph of a storefront designed for use in a street scene in the film "The Bay Boy."
Item is a photograph of a storefront designed for use in street scenes in the film "The Bay Boy."
Item is a photograph of a storefront designed for use in street scenes in the film "The Bay Boy."
Item is a photograph of a store front designed for use in street scenes in the film "The Bay Boy."
Item is a photograph of McRae Block with storefronts designed for use in a street scene in the film "The Bay Boy."
Item is a photograph of a storefront designed for use in street scenes in the film "The Bay Boy."
Item is a photograph of the front of Wong's Chinese restaurant as it was used for street scenes in the film "The Bay Boy."
Item is a photograph of a street featuring signs and storefronts designed for use in street scenes in the film "The Bay Boy."
Item is a photograph of storefronts designed for use in street scenes in the film "The Bay Boy."
Item is a photograph of a street advertisement and store front designed for a street scene in the film "The Bay Boy."
Item is a photograph of two storefronts used in a street scene in the film "The Bay Boy."
Item is a photograph of vehicles in front of storefronts designed for use in a street scene in the film "The Bay Boy."
Item is a photograph of the entrance to the Scotia Hotel as designed for use in street scenes in the film "The Bay Boy."
Item is a photograph of large street advertisements designed for use in street scenes in the film "The Bay Boy."
Item is a photograph of a street featuring signs and storefronts designed for use in street scenes in the film "The Bay Boy."