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Mount Logan Expedition Lantern Slides

https://archives.whyte.org/en/permalink/descriptions54652
Part Of
Alpine Club of Canada fonds
Scope & Content
File consists of 237 lantern slides from the Mount Logan expedition of 1925; some are survey maps with the route plotted out in typed text. Photos taken by H. F. Lambert, and some by A. H. MacCarthy. Original listing of the lantern slides numbers them at 231 total, 15 are missing and some were labl…
Date Range
1925
Reference Code
V14 / AC 0P / 813 / PS-1 to PS-254
Description Level
5 / File
GMD
Transparency
Lantern slide
  237 images  
Part Of
Alpine Club of Canada fonds
Description Level
5 / File
Fonds Number
M200 / S4 / V14
Series
813
Sous-Fonds
AC 0P
Accession Number
ACC
Reference Code
V14 / AC 0P / 813 / PS-1 to PS-254
GMD
Transparency
Lantern slide
Date Range
1925
Physical Description
327 photographs : b&w and col. slides ; 10.2 x 8.2 cm
History / Biographical
The Mount Logan expedition was a joint mission between the Alpine Club of Canada and the American Alpine Club that took place in 1925. The expedition was led by A. H. MacCarthy, who had participated in the first accent of Mount Robson in 1913, and officially began in February, 1925 when the team, using horses and dogs to pull sleighs, cached supplies along the route. The ascent started on 12 May when they left the town of McCarthy, Yukon and the summit was reached on 22 June. The Mount Logan expedition was noted as being extremely difficult due to cold temperatures and violent storms. No members of the team were lost.
Scope & Content
File consists of 237 lantern slides from the Mount Logan expedition of 1925; some are survey maps with the route plotted out in typed text. Photos taken by H. F. Lambert, and some by A. H. MacCarthy. Original listing of the lantern slides numbers them at 231 total, 15 are missing and some were labled as "duplicates" (see Notes).
Notes
PS-58, 59, 60, 61, 84, 112, 145, 160, 184, 185, 187, 196, 197, 206, 218 missing from order. PS-208 initially listed as missing, now replaced by "duplicate." Box 6/6 contained slides labled as "duplicates," upon comparison they were determined to be originals and added to the order; they now make up PS-232 to PS-254. This listing was originally part of a larger entry (containing textual records and photographs) for the Mount Logan expedition.
Name Access
Alpine Club of Canada
Subject Access
Lantern slide
Mount Logan
Alpine Club of Canada
Climbing
Discovery and exploration
Geographic Access
Mount Logan
Yukon
Canada
Language
English
Conservation
15 slides missing; locate if possible. All slides were cleaned prior to scanning.
Related Material
M200 / AC 0M / 017 ; M200 / AC 00M / 152-168 ; V14 / AC 0P / 003-009 ; V14 / AC 0P / 410-599 ; V14 / AC 0P / 600-629 ; V14 / AC 0P / 708-716 ; V14 / AC 0P / 808 (1-127) Papers are Director's papers, financial records, publicity and public relations records, reports, newsclippings; also telegrams to Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Lambart. Includes material produced by J. W. A. Hickson, H. F. Lambart, A. H. MacCarthy and A. O. Wheeler. Photographs of the Mount Logan Expedition were mainly produced by H. F. Lambart; also some by A. H. MacCarthy. Includes air and ground survey photographs, Mount Logan to Mounts Bess and Alexander, including Mount Robson and area, 1924. Includes a lantern slide set of 231 items, accompanied by an inventory (AC 0M-146). Some prints are panoramas. Material is closely related to expedition material in Sous-fonds III. Personal papers and photographs (H. F. Lambart papers and photographs; W. W. Foster photographs). Related oversize display prints can be found in Series I.A.1.j. (AC 00P / 137-147 and AC 00P / 275-280).
Creator
Alpine Club of Canada
Biographical Source Notes
https://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca/en/article/mount-logan
The Alpine Club of Canada Gazette, vol. 21, No. 1, Winter 2006, pp. 40-41.
Title Source
Title based on content of file
Content Details
Titles of images found on slides.
Processing Status
Processed
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This material is presented as originally created; it may contain outdated cultural descriptions and potentially offensive content. Read more.

Promotional Lantern Slides

https://archives.whyte.org/en/permalink/descriptions25449
Part Of
Canadian Pacific Railway fonds
Scope & Content
File contains slides showing various cities and towns, scenes of nature including waterfalls, mountains, and fields, figures on horseback, dining rooms, a map of Canada and the Canadian Pacific Railway, ships, trains among mountains, and grand buildings. File also includes labels from the original …
Date Range
[c. 1930]
Reference Code
V782 / I / PS - 1 to PS - 42
Description Level
5 / File
GMD
Photograph
  42 images     1 Electronic Resource  
Part Of
Canadian Pacific Railway fonds
Description Level
5 / File
Fonds Number
M584 / V782
Series
I : lantern slides
Sous-Fonds
V782
Accession Number
2014.8366
Reference Code
V782 / I / PS - 1 to PS - 42
GMD
Photograph
Date Range
[c. 1930]
Physical Description
42 photographs : b&w ; 8.2cm x 8.2cm
Scope & Content
File contains slides showing various cities and towns, scenes of nature including waterfalls, mountains, and fields, figures on horseback, dining rooms, a map of Canada and the Canadian Pacific Railway, ships, trains among mountains, and grand buildings. File also includes labels from the original storage box.
Name Access
Canadian Pacific Railway
Subject Access
Lantern slide
Photography
Promo
Trains
Tourism
Language
N/A
Conservation
Replace binding tape.
Title Source
Title based on content of file
Processing Status
Processed
Electronic Resources

v782_i_ps_inserts.pdf

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Less detail
This material is presented as originally created; it may contain outdated cultural descriptions and potentially offensive content. Read more.

Promotional Lantern Slides

https://archives.whyte.org/en/permalink/descriptions25450
Part Of
Canadian Pacific Railway fonds
Scope & Content
File contains slides showing various cities and towns, scenes of nature including waterfalls, mountains, and fields, figures on horseback, dining rooms, a map of Canada and the Canadian Pacific Railway, ships, trains among mountains, and grand buildings. File also includes labels from the original …
Date Range
[c. 1930]
Reference Code
V782 / I / PS - 43 to PS - 69
Description Level
5 / File
GMD
Transparency
Lantern slide
  27 images     1 Electronic Resource  
Part Of
Canadian Pacific Railway fonds
Description Level
5 / File
Fonds Number
M584 / V782
Series
I : lantern slides
Sous-Fonds
V782
Accession Number
2014.8366
Reference Code
V782 / I / PS - 43 to PS - 69
GMD
Transparency
Lantern slide
Date Range
[c. 1930]
Physical Description
27 photographs : b&w slides ; 8.2cm x 8.2cm
Scope & Content
File contains slides showing various cities and towns, scenes of nature including waterfalls, mountains, and fields, figures on horseback, dining rooms, a map of Canada and the Canadian Pacific Railway, ships, trains among mountains, and grand buildings. File also includes labels from the original storage box.
Name Access
Canadian Pacific Railway
Subject Access
Lantern slide
Photography
Promo
Trains
Tourism
Language
N/A
Conservation
Replace binding tape.
Title Source
Title based on contents of file
Processing Status
Processed
Electronic Resources
Images
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This material is presented as originally created; it may contain outdated cultural descriptions and potentially offensive content. Read more.
Part Of
Stan J. Carr fonds
Scope & Content
File consists of 8 colour lantern slides, some captioned. File subjects include an unidentified mountain scene, Mount Assiniboine, horse in unientified mountain scene, man posed in campsite in unidentified location, Lake Louise and Victoria Glacier, Hector Lake and Bow Peak, unidentified man in cam…
Date Range
ca. 1912
Reference Code
V127 / PS - 1 to 8
Description Level
5 / File
GMD
Transparency
Lantern slide
  8 images  
Part Of
Stan J. Carr fonds
Description Level
5 / File
Fonds Number
M 179
V 127
Sous-Fonds
V 127
Accession Number
1072
Reference Code
V127 / PS - 1 to 8
GMD
Transparency
Lantern slide
Date Range
ca. 1912
Physical Description
8 photographs : col. slides ; 10.5 x 14 cm
History / Biographical
Additive Colour Screen Plates, first theorized by James Clerk Maxwell in 1861, were the first forms of colour photography. Maxwell’s original process involved printing the same black and white image through different coloured screens onto transparencies and then projecting them overlapped in order to create a single full-colour image. In 1868 Louis Ducos du Hauron expanded on this method by placing a screen made up of microscopic coloured stripes in front of a light-sensitive emulsion before exposing it to light. During exposure, the colours in the screen attached to the developing picture so when viewed back through the screen in a projector the image appeared fully in colour. Neither of these methods were commercially popular during the 19th century since black and white processes were cheaper and more widely available. In 1907 the Lumiere brothers introduced the Autochrome process to wide commercial success. The Autochrome process involved a mix of tiny potato starch grains dyed green, orange-red, and blue-purple that were mixed thoroughly and applied to a glass slide coated in a sticky varnish that held the grains in an evenly-distributed layer. The grains were laminated into the varnish to make them smaller and more transparent, and then the whole thing was sealed with another layer of waterproof varnish. The entire process could be done by machines, which made the slides cheap to produce, easily available to the public and opened up the process to amateur photographers. Photographs developed on Autochrome plates created soft images with relatively natural colour rendering, making them popular with artists and photojournalists. Autochrome plates (which came to refer to all colour screen plates regardless of manufacturer) created one-of-a-kind positive images and required long exposure times. Once an image was complete, it had to be quickly covered with either a strong coating of varnish or another slide of glass and then sealed along the edges with binding tape. Because silver is an element of the sticky base varnish that holds the dyed grains, if moisture was allowed to access the image the layers of varnish could ripple or tear away from the glass, or the dye could bleed or fade. The silver base is highly sensative to oxygen and if improperly sealed images could begin to "mirror," a process in which the exposed parts of the slide become uniform and shiny, obscuring the image. Because of the random distribution of dyed colour grains throughout the image and the lines created by laminating those grains into the base varnish, Autochrome transparencies are often mistaken for hand-painted coloured slides. Autochrome can be identified by looking closely for small dots of colour in all parts of the image, rather than the solid blots of colour found on hand-painted slides.
Scope & Content
File consists of 8 colour lantern slides, some captioned. File subjects include an unidentified mountain scene, Mount Assiniboine, horse in unientified mountain scene, man posed in campsite in unidentified location, Lake Louise and Victoria Glacier, Hector Lake and Bow Peak, unidentified man in camp.
Name Access
Carr, Stan J.
Subject Access
Exploration
Discovery and travel
Lantern slide
Geographic Access
Mount Assiniboine
Lake Louise
Bow Summit
Banff National Park
Alberta
Canada
Access Restrictions
No restrictions on access
Language
English
Conservation
Re-seal all slides appropriately; keep stored in cool, dry, dark area; refrain from exposing to further damage.
Creator
Carr, Stan J.
Category
Exploration, discovery and travel
Biographical Source Notes
http://www.graphicsatlas.org/identification/?process_id=286#overview
https://psap.library.illinois.edu/collection-id-guide/slide#autochrome
Title Source
Title based on contents of file
Processing Status
Processed
Images
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Less detail
This material is presented as originally created; it may contain outdated cultural descriptions and potentially offensive content. Read more.
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