Helen Dawe Collection
Series
6.11
Ships,
A-Chea
Ships,
Che-I
Ships,
K-R
Ships, S-Ta
Ships,
Te-Y
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Series 6.11 -- Ships (1887-1977)
-- S-Ta, Page 2
Most photographs are of Union Steamship vessels,
which operated between Vancouver, Sechelt and Powell River.
Some are of other steamship lines' vessels or are of privately
owned ships with connections to Sechelt.
1
2 3
4 5
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6.11.75
Date unknown - A B. C. ferry boat, the
Sechelt Queen, sailed the local waters
Photograph by Mrs. Marcia Wheeler, courtesy
the Peninsula Times newspaper and the Alsgard family
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6.11.76
circa 1912 -- A double-ended rowboat with No
3 STC on the prow probably shows it belongs to Herbert
Whitaker's Sechelt Trading Company which was the
umbrella company for his various businesses from 1898
until the middle of WW1.
Photographer unknown
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6.11.77
circa 1914 and later -- Photographs of the
S.S. Selma in Trail Bay and at Sechelt wharf. The S.S.
Selma, previously Santa Cecelia and later Chasina, was
operated by the All Red Line until sold to the Union
Steamship Company in 1917. She gave her name to Selma
Park the All Red Line resort. In 1923 she was sold
again to become a rum running boat and when the liquor
trade slumped she vanished en route from Vancouver to
Macao.
Photograph by Charles Bradbury
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6.11.78
circa 1914 and later -- Photographs of the
S.S. Selma in Trail Bay and at Sechelt wharf. The S.S.
Selma, previously Santa Cecelia and later Chasina, was
operated by the All Red Line until sold to the Union
Steamship Company in 1917. She gave her name to Selma
Park the All Red Line resort. In 1923 she was sold
again to become a rum running boat and when the liquor
trade slumped she vanished en route from Vancouver to
Macao.
Photograph by Charles Bradbury
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6.11.79
circa 1914 and later -- Photographs of the
S.S. Selma in Trail Bay and at Sechelt wharf. The S.S.
Selma, previously Santa Cecelia and later Chasina, was
operated by the All Red Line until sold to the Union
Steamship Company in 1917. She gave her name to Selma
Park the All Red Line resort. In 1923 she was sold
again to become a rum running boat and when the liquor
trade slumped she vanished en route from Vancouver to
Macao.
Photograph by Charles Bradbury. See also
oversize photograph 6.15.171
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Copyright
© The Sechelt Community Archives
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