Today we’re in the Calgary community of Victoria Park and right beside the Stampede Grounds. Stampede? It’s a low-key, intimate event that’s been around for a few years, so maybe you haven’t heard of it. The first of our subjects is a replica of Westbourne Church that once stood a...
Presenting two photos of the CC Snowdon Building in Calgary, shot from the same spot and separated by over 100 years. There’s been change, as you’ll see, yet certain elements remain timeless. Even with the building that is our subject overshadowed by something much newer and to which its attached,...
Fabyan Bridge (for trains – aka Battle River Trestle) is a bit short of a kilometre long and on such a scale that it kind of defies description. It’s not the grandest of its kind, and that title belongs to the Lethbridge Viaduct in southern Alberta, which wins by a...
A ride on any of the BC Inland Ferries is an adventure and we do it every chance we get. It’s hard to explain the appeal and silly perhaps, yet if we’re out that way and there’s a route that includes a ferry crossing, we’ll choose it over any other....
The stately structure that is the focus of this “Then & Now” is buried deep within a Calgary campus and known as SAIT Heritage Hall. Earlier home to the Alberta Normal School and Provincial Institute of Technology, today it’s just one part of the sprawling Southern Alberta Institute of Technology...
Bowness Shopping Centre on Bowness Road and in the neighbourhood of (guess where) Bowness, was established before the community even became part of Calgary. The city annexed the land here part way into the ’60s, but before that time it was a town on its own. The shopping centre is...
We could only manage a quick stop at the Coronation Roadmaster’s House Museum on this extended road trip, but you can count on us paying it a revisit next time we’re in the area. We’re out in the east-central reaches of Alberta and it’s a section of flat prairie extending...
We have this thing for trains and photograph them every chance we get. Some might call it a silly obsession and looking inwards, even we think so at times. Truth be told most photos we capture on the subject are not interesting enough to post, but what ever reason they...
Yellow! Don’t you agree it’s good to colour coordinate? Here’s a nice little Boler found in the British Columbia mountain community of Revelstoke and it’s pretty close to the BIGDoer shade, so of course we approve. All around here there’s majestic mountain scenery and here we are obsessing over a...
It happens in Edgemont Ravine, Northwest Calgary, and the hike presented here a nice easy one through park and natural green spaces. You might be deep in the city but it often feels far removed from the usual hustle and bustle. Stop and breathe. To extend the fun one can...
The Team’s out in Big Valley Alberta and having stupid fun in a downpour photographing some elderly motorhomes. What’s not to like? At any rate, it was being done for a project that ultimately got shelved (long story), but at the time we didn’t know it and jumped in with...
Bustling Downtown Argenta British Columbia: well…maybe the word bustling…and downtown for that matter…don’t really apply here, but we’re definitely in Argenta BC, so the title’s at least partly right. Welcome to this little East Kootenay Community, quite remote and off the beaten path and we’re here just because. Look, it’s...
Here’s a home with a view or rather it was previously a home with a view and now just an empty shell. Everyone up and left, so it’s been abandoned for some time now, this once grand farm house on the very edge of a scenic coulee. That it’s devoid...
This Boler was spotted in a Calgary neighbourhood during one of our annual El Camino appreciation walks. We did the legendary trail in Spain in 2018 and getting out like this each year always takes us back. It’s like reliving the experience and for a day, we’re Perigrinos once again....
West Bragg Creek Snowy Owl: for the most part it takes place along the aforementioned trail, in an extensive network of trails convenient to and just a little west of Calgary. The location is the foothills of the Rockies and the loop presented here makes for a pleasant winter’s walk...
Welcome to Main Street in Trochu Alberta and today we’re presenting two photos captured from the same location, but separated by a hundred plus years. As the saying goes, some things change and some stay the same, but here it’s more of one than the other. Much of what’s seen...
Come take a look at a hair raising section of road blasted out of the rock years ago, out in the West Kootenay region of British Columbia and near the community of Slocan City. It’s a narrow winding shelf, barely wide enough for two cars to pass and right there...
Forced perspective (noun): the use of any of various techniques (as in photography…) to create the optical illusion that objects or people are smaller, larger, closer, or farther away than they really are. Credit: Merriam-Webster Dictionary. It’s often done for humorous effect β maybe you’ve seen those pictures where some...
Few Words: The Cutest Little Farm House (ever). It’s charming, cozy and so tiny you might think it’s a doll house. On the main floor there’s a bit of room to move, barely, but upstairs anyone over average height will have to stoop. Claustrophobic types will feel the walls closing...
This urban hike has a definite gritty edge and that’s not necessarily a bad thing in our world, but certain sections had us questioning our own sanity. Still, this Bow River Loop is not without its charms, and the trek thoroughly enjoyable on the return leg, but less so at...
This will be a variation on the theme and the fun happens in Three Hills Alberta, on a wickedly frigid winter’s day, early 2022. Let me tell you, we did this one in record time! Rather than the usual comparison Then & Now type shot everyone’s all used to, which...
The quaint little town of Stavely Alberta is found just over one hundred kilometres south of Calgary and to those travelling the #2, most noteworthy for its huge grain elevator there beside the highway. It can’t be missed and the tall blue/green structure looms over “downtown”, passing motorists and the...
Dateline Torrington Alberta and it’s early in 2022. Someone, and we can’t shake the feeling that it’s a person with far too much time on their hands (wink, wink) has built a mini-Stonehenge out of random blocks of concrete. Why? Wait, the big question is why not? It’s one of...
There we were returning from a little hike out in Kananaskis Country (here: Eagle Hill) and out of nowhere it’s a chance discovery. It’s a highway Surf Side, caught along the Trans-Canada and a fitting end to a great road-trip adventure. It’s like the cherry on top β a good...
A chance encounter earns us a couple wonderful minutes getting to know the locomotives of 40 Mile Rail down in Southern Alberta. Trains are something we’re more into than our readers so normally not many pics like this are shared. Emphasis on normally. With such a spectacular setting we just...
We’re in downtown Castor Alberta and armed with an old image to be used in another BIGDoer.com Then & Now comparison. Standing roughly on the same spot where the original photographer did about a 110 years ago, we’ll look into what’s the same (a little) and what’s changed (a lot)...
There were once thousands of wood grain elevators across the Canadian plains, but the numbers have thinned considerably over the years. Almost every town in the grain belt had one, or more, and long before you arrived, you’d see them off in the distance. In this post we’ll take a...
We’re taking you back to when coal was king and use of the fuel wide spread. It heated homes and powered industry, among others. The rather insignificant building seen here is hidden away in a coulee and functioned as a mine substation. Right here and on this very spot was...
There we were driving about the provincial capitol and minding our own business, when out of nowhere something catches our eye. A couple blocks ahead, a familiar form is spotted, on the move, and soon a chase ensues. Always at posted speeds that is. If it times right, we just...
Today it happens down on the waterfront in Slocan British Columbia and for your enjoyment we present two comparison photos taken eighty one years apart. The first, captured in 1940, shows a railway barge setup and the other, how the location looks in 2021. The βthenβ photo comes thanks to...
Finally! Here's the very first Crossley Then & Now. At 1st St (now Erlton St) & 25th Ave SE Calgary, 1961 & 2024. Click see more π
This was just blocks from Crossley's house. The old fellow on the porch may be one Mr Potter who according to the directory lived at this residence at the time. It's also noted as the Potter House on the slide. Look at that old style street sign above his head.
This house dates to at least the 1910s & gone by the 1980s.
The old truss bridge was torn down shortly after Crossley's photo & replaced by the open-deck span still use today. More Then & Nows using his slides as soon as we get the chance!
Shout out to: Jason Sailer. _______
Exploring history with Chris & Connie from Off the Beaten Path. Thanks, Chris.
September 1980 - inside an abandoned house in rural Saskatchewan - awesome panelling too. More below π
The calendar came from the Herbert Meat Market, Herbert SK, "Groceries - Produce & Homemade Sausage - Custom Slaughtering - Cutting & Wrapping". That's a very Saskatchewan scene there! That fake wood wall covering was big in the 1970s & 1980s. Okay, who had a house with it? Downstairs - den - rumpus room? Speak up!
Photo: 2014. _______
Exploring history with Chris & Connie from Off the Beaten Path. Thanks, Chris.
(From 2016) No electricity & no plumbing but they did have a phone installed in the 1980s. Important - read more below π
You can see the junction box beside the lower right window & we found a dated install tag there. This house was last lived in not long afterwards. We did a full history of this house for the landowner but it's not online at the moment.
Did you know what over 70% of people who like, comment or share on our page are not subscribers? The very BEST way to keep on top of posts & to encourage new content, is to subscribe by clicking the "like" or "follow" buttons. They're on the right hand side of the page & above this post window. Our content is rather varied, but it's always interesting - if we see something we have to peel away the layers & then talk about it.
Thanks! _______
Exploring history with Chris & Connie from Off the Beaten Path. Thanks, Chris.
Crossley slides (unrestored), "Museum Train 1958" at CN's station a bit south of downtown Calgary. Click "see more" π
The Palliser Hotel far in back still exists. The church does as well - St Mary's & its steeple is just poking out above the locomotive. So does the station in back (barely seen - peaked roof) - it's used by Alberta Ballet now. There's a still a bridge at this spot - no more trains but you can walk it. Remarkably the locomotive, CN #40, is still around too & in storage at a museum in Ontario. It dates back to the 1870s!
We're not sure about the passenger cars, as we could find no record of which ones were used. Perhaps some are still around.
CN's museum train traveled all over Canada in celebration of the railway & its connection to this country & its people.
"The train was promoted with a lengthy documentary that was presented on the CBC. The locomotives and cars were museum specimens, and employees were selected to dress up in period costumes (i.e. Ca. 1850s to 1880s). The railway cars contained a very large display of historical records mainly relating to CNβs corporate predecessors..." - Andrew Elliott Transportation Archivist.
Shout out to: Jason Sailer. _______
Exploring history with Chris & Connie from Off the Beaten Path. Thanks, Chris.
Legends of the Fall 1994 & 2014. We're so lucky these history projects take us to special places we could otherwise not visit. Channeling Brad Pitt & enjoying the view! _______
Exploring history with Chris & Connie from Off the Beaten Path. Thanks, Chris.
Lost Highways: A section of old 95 in SE BC still used for local access (& apparently a handy place to abandon cars). More π
This section is still paved, but in some spots badly deteriorated. It was bypassed in the late 1960s & the new highway runs a bit to the north. Chris recalls this was a great place for some fun reckless driving as a teenager in the 1980s, since traffic on it was minimal. That's still the case. Photo: 2022. _______
Exploring history with Chris & Connie from Off the Beaten Path. Thanks, Connie.
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