More Byron Harmon Postcards

Here are three more Byron Harmon real photo postcards that seem intriguing. First is a photo of a passenger train emerging from the lower spiral tunnel. Above it are some cars that appear to be part of the same train, but passenger trains were not long enough to fill the entire spiral of the tunnel. The passenger car is clearly marked “Soo Line,” so the upper train is probably the Mountaineer while the lower train is the Dominion, which were operated as two sections on the same schedule west of Moose Jaw.


Click image to download a 134-KB PDF of this postcard.

The semi-streamlined locomotive is one of Canadian Pacific’s 2-10-4s, which the railroad called Selkirks. Other railroads called this wheel arrangement a Texas locomotive, but that apparently wasn’t appropriate for a Canadian railroad. CP received the first of these locomotives in 1929, so Harmon could have taken this photo anytime after that.

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In addition to train and scenery, Harmon took many photos of Indians living in and around Banff. Although this photo is simply identified “Indian Chief,” it is in fact Hector Crawler, whose Indian name was Wahchegiye, meaning “close to the creator.” Crawler was a medicine man who Harmon used in many photos.

Click image to download a 112-KB PDF of this postcard.

Speaking of Indians, here is a photo of a totem pole taken by Harmon. The pole was in Jasper, not Banff, but the back of the card still has Harmon’s standard imprint, “Along line of Canadian Pacific Railway.” Since that clearly wasn’t true, a second line, “Along line of Canadian National Railways,” was stamped on top of the first one.


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