Bibliography

Below you will find a bibliography for the entire project. This contains both primary sources (firsthand accounts, oral histories, or photographs) and secondary sources (sources which use primary sources, either as a historical overview, or to say something more on them).

COPLAC – Council of Public Libertal Arts Colleges logo

A Special Thank-You…

We would like to note a special thank you to the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, and to COPLAC Digital for the opportunity to participate in this project. We would also like to thank Dr. Ken Cooper and Dr. Joe Wiebe for their leadership and guidance in this course, and to Leah Tams for her technical suggestions and support.

 

 

Primary

Camrose and District Centennial Museum, Accession 1977.3.27, image (Dam with fish ladder, 1913).

Camrose and District Centennial Museum, Accession 1989.9.29d, image (Trestle Bridge Over Stoney Creek).

Camrose and District Centennial Museum, Accession 2009.65.510, image, (Colour, fountain looking north, 2001).

Camrose and District Centennial Museum, Accession 2015.1.144, image (Colour 1960s Mirror Lake postcard).

Camrose and District Centennial Museum, Accession 2015.1.297, image (Drilling for Oil, Camrose, 1950).

Camrose and District Centennial Museum, Accession 2016.6.89f, image, (Colour image of swans on lake, printed 1985).

Camrose and District Centennial Museum, Accession 2016.82.255, image (Dam running over with fish ladder, 1930).

Camrose and District Centennial Museum, Accession 2016.87.24, image (Locomotive and wagon in front of railway station).

Camrose and District Centennial Museum, Accession 2017.1.65, image (Inside Power Plant).

City of Camrose, The Rose City, PHID201, image (2008 aerial of Mirror Lake facing Northwest), http://www.therosecity.net/PhotoView.aspx?PHID=201

Gwendolyn Bracken, personal collection IMG_0500, image (Cracks in the pavement around Mirror Lake).

Gwendolyn Bracken, personal collection IMG_0501, image (Vacant bench north side of Mirror Lake). 

Jeremy Enarson. Interview by Gwendolyn Bracken and Curtis Rempel. 27 February 2018. COPLAC Digital Nature Writing Project. Camrose, Alberta. Personal Collection. Click here if you would like to listen to the full interview

Oscar Hammerstein II (songwriter), and Richard Rodgers (composer), “Getting to Know You,” The King and I, 1951, sung by Julie Andrews, recorded 1992.

Peel’s Prairie Provinces, University of Alberta Library Collection, PC003130 “[Camrose, Alberta]”, image (Black and white 1940s view), http://peel.library.ualberta.ca/pcimages/PC/003/web/PC003130.jpg

Rajan Rathnavalu. Interview by Gwendolyn Bracken and Curtis Rempel. 22 March 2018. COPLAC Digital Nature Writing Project. Camrose, Alberta. Personal Collection. Click here if you would like to listen to the interviewNote that the recording device did not capture the full interview in this instance.

What’s Wrong with You, Mr. Lake? Directed by Curtis Rempel, Written by Curtis Rempel and Gwendolyn Bracken. Original Film. 2018, 4 minutes.

 

Secondary

“Camrose.” Central Alberta Museums: Unlock the Past with CARMN. http://www.unlockthepast.ca/Camrose

Early History of Camrose Alberta and District. Publisher Unknown. 1947.

The Golden Trail. Publisher Unknown. 1955.

“How Mirror Lake got its Name.” Camrose Now Online. http://www.camrosenow.online/node/54767

A Light into the Past: A History of Camrose 1905-1980. Edited by JR Stan Hambly. Camrose Historical Society. 1980.

 

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