Vintage tourism images offer glimpse into New Brunswick's past - Action News
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New Brunswick

Vintage tourism images offer glimpse into New Brunswick's past

Photo archivist Josh Green and summer student Emily MacLeod have spent the past three summers sorting through Tourism New Brunswick photos that date as far back as the early 1900s.

The old photos show images of people doing activities that would no longer be common in N.B.

A group of men stand by a pile of logs and marvel at how a chainsaw works in 1946. At the time, chainsaws were not common in New Brunswick. (Submitted by Provincial Archives of New Brunswick)

A woman sits outside a house working on a spinning wheel, logs float down the St. John River and a group of men watch as someone demonstrates how to work a chain saw.

These are all individual images found at the Provincial Archives of New Brunswick.

They're scenes people in New Brunswick no longer see in their day-to-day lives, but photo archivist Josh Green and provincial archives summer student EmilyMacLeodperuse through images of similar scenes every day while working in the archives.

Emily MacLeod (left) and Josh Green (right) have spent the last few summers scanning through more than 50 boxes of slides and prints. (Vanessa Vander Valk/CBC)

They've spent the last few summers scanning through more than 50 boxes of slides and prints from Tourism New Brunswick that date as far back as the early1900s. While locations may be familiar, the landscapes and activities can look completely different.

"The scenes that they were taking photos of for tourism in like the30sand40swere things that a lot of people back then would have found quite commonplace, but now are really interesting," he said in an Interview withCBC'sShift.

A large group of people along with a priest gathered on a wharf for the blessing of the fleet at Caraquet. (Submitted by Provincial Archives of New Brunswick)

Green andMacLeodget more photos every year and they have to figure out what photos are worth keeping and which ones are just taking up space.

"There's a lot of stuff in those thousands or tens of thousands of tourism slides and photos that aren't fascinating to people right now, but we try and pick the best," Green said.

This isMacLeod's third year working as a summer student at the provincial archives and she said she still gets excitedseeing photos of people doing activities that aren't commonplaceanymore for the first time.

"Then you'll see it literally 200,000 more times and by the end, you're almost mad at yourself for having gotten excited in the first place," saidMacLeod, who studies at theUniversity of New Brunswick.

A photo from 1946 shows logs floating down the St. John River in the Edmundston area. (Submitted by Provincial Archives of New Brunswick)

She said they have to be careful when sorting through different versions of the same story.

"One photo might have even the name of a ship where the second photo doesn't quite have the full name and things like that become important."

MacLeodsaid one of the most interesting photos they've stumbled across was of a clambake in 1903 outside of Saint John.

A woman sits on the lawn in front of a house working on a spinning wheel in 1946. (Submitted by Provincial Archives of New Brunswick)

"We were so excited about the image, it was almost borderline pathetic," MacLeod said, laughing.

The pair still has thousands of photos left to go through.

"What I like so much about the job is that there's always something different going on and you're never doing the same thing two days in a row," she said.

With files from Shift