View allAll Photos Tagged DALHOUSIE
I had the pleasure of chatting with my human geography professor at Dalhousie University to discuss various topics regarding culture, politics and our changing society over the last couple of years.
Title: Hotel-Dalhousie
Date: [c.1870-1880]
Extent: 1 photograph: b&w ; (21x27.5cm)
Notes: From a two album set of souvenir photographs from a voyage to and tour of duty in India.
Format: Photograph
Rights Info: No known restrictions on access
Repository: Thomas Fisher Rare Book Library, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario Canada, M5S 1A5, library.utoronto.ca/fisher
Part of: MS Coll. 292 Gilpin-Brown, Edward papers.
Finding Aid located at: www.library.utoronto.ca/fisher/collections/findaids/gilpi...
I experimented with some HDR photography. Not entirely sure of the results; whilst each individual exposure was clear the merged result is somewhat blurry and smudged. I'll have to keep on practicing and getting used to the software. But anyway, here it is: Dalhousie Obelisk, Singapore.
Sudai Bazaar, Dalhousie
I have bought meat and postcards there. Northamptonshire Regiment.
Rights info: Non commercial use accepted. Please credit to "Northampton Museums Service". Please also respect copyright by contacting the Northampton Museums Service if you wish to publish this picture.
Location of collection: Northampton Museum & Art Gallery www.northampton.gov.uk/museums
Part of: Northamptonshire Regiment Collection
Reference number: 13
Port Dalhousie, Ontario
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This article includes a list of references, but its sources remain unclear because it has insufficient inline citations. Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations. (November 2009)
The historic lighthouse and pier
Port Dalhousie, in relation to other nearby lakeports.
Port Dalhousie /dəˈluːzi/ is a community in St. Catharines, Ontario, Canada. It is known for its waterfront appeal. It is also home to the Royal Canadian Henley Regatta and is historically significant as the terminus for the first three (19th century) routes of the Welland Canal.
The city's most popular beach, on the shore of Lake Ontario, is located in Port Dalhousie at historic Lakeside Park. The park is home to an antique carousel which was carved by Charles I. D. Looff in 1905 and brought to St. Catharines in 1921. It continues to provide amusement for young and old alike, at just 5 cents a ride.
Title: The Barracks-Dalhousie
Date: [c.1860-1880]
Extent: 1 photograph: b&w ; (21x27.5cm)
Notes: From a two album set of souvenir photographs from a voyage to and tour of duty in India.
Format: Photograph
Rights Info: No known restrictions on access
Repository: Thomas Fisher Rare Book Library, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario Canada, M5S 1A5, library.utoronto.ca/fisher
Part of: MS Coll. 292 Gilpin-Brown, Edward papers.
Finding Aid located at: www.library.utoronto.ca/fisher/collections/findaids/gilpi...
Dharamshala. They call this the picnic spot..and the only place that is worth having a look at Dharamshala.
The Mall
Dalhousie
Rights info: Non commercial use accepted. Please credit to "Northampton Museums Service". Please also respect copyright by contacting the Northampton Museums Service if you wish to publish this picture.
Location of collection: Northampton Museum & Art Gallery www.northampton.gov.uk/museums
Part of: Northamptonshire Regiment Collection
Reference number: 12
Title: The Mall-Dalhousie
Date: [c.1860-1880]
Extent: 1 photograph: b&w ; (21x27.5cm)
Notes: From a two album set of souvenir photographs from a voyage to and tour of duty in India.
Format: Photograph
Rights Info: No known restrictions on access
Repository: Thomas Fisher Rare Book Library, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario Canada, M5S 1A5, library.utoronto.ca/fisher
Part of: MS Coll. 292 Gilpin-Brown, Edward papers.
Finding Aid located at: www.library.utoronto.ca/fisher/collections/findaids/gilpi...
this is griffintown, corner dalhousie/ottawa. this street was condemed at some point, when they built that train line ( on the left ) that came against the MLHP building / New City Gas building on the right.
Title: The Mall-Dalhousie
Date: [c.1878-1880]
Extent: 1 photograph: b&w ; (21x27.5cm)
Notes: From a two album set of souvenir photographs from a voyage to and tour of duty in India.
Format: Photograph
Rights Info: No known restrictions on access
Repository: Thomas Fisher Rare Book Library, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario Canada, M5S 1A5, library.utoronto.ca/fisher
Part of: MS Coll. 292 Gilpin-Brown, Edward papers.
Finding Aid located at: www.library.utoronto.ca/fisher/collections/findaids/gilpi...
A View of Dalhousie.
The mountains in the background have snow on top even in summer.
Northamptonshire Regiment",
richardasplen commented: The Army Cantonment Area. Balan Dalhousie
Rights info: Non commercial use accepted. Please credit to "Northampton Museums Service". Please also respect copyright by contacting the Northampton Museums Service if you wish to publish this picture.
Location of collection: Northampton Museum & Art Gallery www.northampton.gov.uk/museums
Part of: Northamptonshire Regiment Collection
Reference number: 15
Dated March 1, 1968, the picture shows Provost Robert R. Spink, hovering as the Earl of Dalhousie adds his signature to a document. In the background were, from left - Councillor Frank Thornton, Mrs Fay Spink and the Countess of Dalhousie.
When I first saw this MacGibbon & Ross floor-plan (after I had visited the castle), I thought I was looking at the wrong place! It shows an L-plan tower-house within a roughly rectangular courtyard wall, on the north-west corner of which is a large round tower. I thought to myself, 'Self, there's no courtyard wall round Dalhousie!' Then I remembered seeing the two vertical slots above and to either side of the doorway, which are unmistakably for the counter-balance beams of a drawbridge and I remembered thinking that they were in an unusual (although not completely unique) place - leading directly into the building.
The answer is that Dalhousie Castle was indeed as M&R drew it (although somewhat before their time), since when, as part of the process of turning a cramped mediaeval castle into a spacious residence suitable for a nobleman, the entire space between the tower-house and curtain wall has been filled in.
The Road to Dalhousie.
Near Nina Khud.
Northamptonshire Regiment.
Rights info: Non commercial use accepted. Please credit to "Northampton Museums Service". Please also respect copyright by contacting the Northampton Museums Service if you wish to publish this picture.
Location of collection: Northampton Museum & Art Gallery www.northampton.gov.uk/museums
Part of: Northamptonshire Regiment Collection
Reference number: 17