Stores & shops

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Stores & shops

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Stores & shops

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Stores & shops

15 Archival description results for Stores & shops

15 results directly related Exclude narrower terms

Bamberg General Store in Wellesley Township

  • CA MAO 1984-1 180
  • Item
  • 1970

Bamberg General Store in Wellesley Township, which was destroyed by fire in the 1970s. Originally identified as the Floradale General Store, and corrected in 2014.

Kitchener-Waterloo Record

Henry J. Banman and Sherman Godkin outside Banman's store

This photo is of Henry Banman (left) and Kronsgart (Manitoba) elevator operator Sherman Godkin standing outside by Banman's store in their work clothes. There is a bicycle on the left.
Banman's store was originally the Hamburg Old Colony church building (Manitoba). After the move to Mexico in the early 1920s, the church building was cut in half, placed on wagons and moved to Kronsgart by William Enns in 1926. Here Banman put the two halves together and made it into a store. To the right on the photo can be seen the seam created after the building was cut in half. By 1932 the building was no longer in use.

J. C. Nimmo store

Front exterior of 'J.C. Nimmo' store in Langford, British Columbia. Caption in album reads: "Nimmos Store Langford." Caption on back of photo reads: "Store at Langford across the road from the ranger station with two foresting trucks and ranger car; 8/42."

Main Street, Laird

Row of business facades. Sign on building second from right: Western Merchants Ltd., Dealers in Oils, Hardware, Paints.

Unknown

The Kronsgart general store

This photo is of two men and a boy sitting out in the front of the Kronsgart General store in the springtime (Kronsgart, Manitoba). Left to right is Ross Godkin (son of Kronsgart elevator agent) sitting on car running boards, G.G. Dueck owner of the car. This building was originally the Old Colony Church in Hamburg, Manitoba until the church members moved to Mexico in the 1920s and the building was cut into two, moved are reassembled by Henry Banman and used as a general store. The seam can be seen on the right of the building. The lean-to was added later and acted as living quarters for the Banman family.