Fort-victoria.jpeg (350 × 221 pixels, file size: 32 KB, MIME type: image/jpeg)
Fort Victoria from inside, circa 1850-1853, looking east along fort street. On the left is the building that housed the officer's mess and Chief Factor's house. On the right is the schoolhouse. Photographer unknown. "Helmcken Reminiscences", originally published in The Colonist, Jan. 1, 1891, beside this text: Few photographs from the inside of Fort Victoria exist, but this well-known image, looking east toward what became Fort Street, shows the HBC officers’ mess hall, left. It was here that members of the first elected legislative assembly west of the Great Lakes were sworn in and heard Governor Douglas deliver his “elegantly well composed” speech, according to House speaker Dr. John Helmcken.
The diagram of the layout of Fort Victoria buildings (below - not to scale) locates Bachelors’ Hall where the House of Assembly met, according to Dr. John Helmcken: “Behold the seven honourable members seated in the House of Assembly this being ‘Bachelors’ Hall,’ a part of a squared log building situated in the Fort, about the spot where the Bank of British Columbia now stands.”
This file is covered under copyright in the United States, India, Australia, the European Union, and several other countries. However, because its last author died 50 or more years ago, it is believed to be in the
public domain in many countries, including most of Africa, most of Asia, Middle East and North Africa (excluding Israel, Bahrain, Oman, and Morocco), New Zealand, and possibly
Canada and
Japan. See
Wikipedia:Copyright situations by country for more information. If you want to re-use the image, we recommend that you consult your country's laws regarding copyright term expiration.
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Photos taken before 1949 are public domain in Canada, where this image was created, regardless of when the author died.
In jurisdictions where this image is not public domain, the following fair use rationale applies:
![]() | This work is
copyrighted (or assumed to be copyrighted) and unlicensed. It does not fall into one of the blanket acceptable non-free content categories listed at
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Wikipedia:Non-free content § Audio clips, and it is not covered by a more specific non-free content license listed at
Category:Wikipedia non-free file copyright templates. However, it is believed that the use of this work:
qualifies as
fair use under
United States copyright law. Any other uses of this image, on Wikipedia or elsewhere, may be
copyright infringement. See
Wikipedia:Non-free content and
Wikipedia:Copyrights. | ||
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Since this image is:
it is believed that it is fair use.
Click on a date/time to view the file as it appeared at that time.
Date/Time | Thumbnail | Dimensions | User | Comment | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
current | 23:15, 11 June 2007 |
![]() | 350 × 221 (32 KB) | Stevecudmore ( talk | contribs) | Fort Victoria from inside, circa 1850-1853, looking east along fort street. On the left is the building that housed the officer's mess and Chief Factor's house. On the right is the schoolhouse. Photographer unknown. "Helmcken Reminiscences", originally pu |
You cannot overwrite this file.
Fort-victoria.jpeg (350 × 221 pixels, file size: 32 KB, MIME type: image/jpeg)
Fort Victoria from inside, circa 1850-1853, looking east along fort street. On the left is the building that housed the officer's mess and Chief Factor's house. On the right is the schoolhouse. Photographer unknown. "Helmcken Reminiscences", originally published in The Colonist, Jan. 1, 1891, beside this text: Few photographs from the inside of Fort Victoria exist, but this well-known image, looking east toward what became Fort Street, shows the HBC officers’ mess hall, left. It was here that members of the first elected legislative assembly west of the Great Lakes were sworn in and heard Governor Douglas deliver his “elegantly well composed” speech, according to House speaker Dr. John Helmcken.
The diagram of the layout of Fort Victoria buildings (below - not to scale) locates Bachelors’ Hall where the House of Assembly met, according to Dr. John Helmcken: “Behold the seven honourable members seated in the House of Assembly this being ‘Bachelors’ Hall,’ a part of a squared log building situated in the Fort, about the spot where the Bank of British Columbia now stands.”
This file is covered under copyright in the United States, India, Australia, the European Union, and several other countries. However, because its last author died 50 or more years ago, it is believed to be in the
public domain in many countries, including most of Africa, most of Asia, Middle East and North Africa (excluding Israel, Bahrain, Oman, and Morocco), New Zealand, and possibly
Canada and
Japan. See
Wikipedia:Copyright situations by country for more information. If you want to re-use the image, we recommend that you consult your country's laws regarding copyright term expiration.
| |||
|
Photos taken before 1949 are public domain in Canada, where this image was created, regardless of when the author died.
In jurisdictions where this image is not public domain, the following fair use rationale applies:
![]() | This work is
copyrighted (or assumed to be copyrighted) and unlicensed. It does not fall into one of the blanket acceptable non-free content categories listed at
Wikipedia:Non-free content § Images or
Wikipedia:Non-free content § Audio clips, and it is not covered by a more specific non-free content license listed at
Category:Wikipedia non-free file copyright templates. However, it is believed that the use of this work:
qualifies as
fair use under
United States copyright law. Any other uses of this image, on Wikipedia or elsewhere, may be
copyright infringement. See
Wikipedia:Non-free content and
Wikipedia:Copyrights. | ||
|
Since this image is:
it is believed that it is fair use.
Click on a date/time to view the file as it appeared at that time.
Date/Time | Thumbnail | Dimensions | User | Comment | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
current | 23:15, 11 June 2007 |
![]() | 350 × 221 (32 KB) | Stevecudmore ( talk | contribs) | Fort Victoria from inside, circa 1850-1853, looking east along fort street. On the left is the building that housed the officer's mess and Chief Factor's house. On the right is the schoolhouse. Photographer unknown. "Helmcken Reminiscences", originally pu |
You cannot overwrite this file.