Canadian section of the Upper Steel Arch Bridge [Falls View Bridge] going downriver on moving remnants of ice bridge, 3:25 pm. From a Buffalo Evening News photograph in the Buffalo Erie County Historical Society, Buffalo, N.Y.
This collection includes photographs of buildings (residential, commercical, industrial and public), streets (streetscenes), structures, businesses, stores, attractions and areas of Niagara Falls to reflect the look of the city in 2015.
Mist and fog over the Horseshoe Falls, Incline Railway and Table Rock Welcome Centre as seen from the Keg restaurant on the 9th floor of the Embassy Suites Hotel
Original held in the collection of Earl W Brydges Public Library, Niagara Falls, New York ; A close up view of the entrance of the Canadian terminus. The gatekeeper seated on the chair at the left was outfitted in a uniform of blue broadcloth with silver buttons and a cap of the same material embellished with gold lace and the letters NSB, The large white stone markers on either side of the entrance were placed there to keep carriages from cutting too sharp a corner and damaging the edge of the woodwork at the entrance. The corrugated iron panels are in view behind the entrance - George Seibel ;
This view from the Canadian side shows a train crossing the bridge to the American side. It also details of the girders,cross supports and wind guys of the Railway Suspension Bridge's steel truss.
Plaque on the Niagara River Recreation Trail at the Niagara Parks School of Horticulture Botanical Gardens. “Niagara Parks School of Horticulture. Established in 1936 of 40 hectares (100 acres) of land, the Niagara Parks School of Horticulture is the only known school of its kind in North America. Its graduate gardeners obtain positions in parks and in floriculture, horticulture, nursery and greenhouse enterprises in Canada and the United States”.
Plaque on the Niagara River Recreation Trail at the Niagara Parks School of Horticulture Botanical Gardens. “Niagara Parks School of Horticulture. Established in 1936 of 40 hectares (100 acres) of land, the Niagara Parks School of Horticulture is the only known school of its kind in North America. Its graduate gardeners obtain positions in parks and in floriculture, horticulture, nursery and greenhouse enterprises in Canada and the United States”.