Last year, museum curator Maria Martins made the decision to sell off the fire trucks and put the word out to fire museums throughout the province. This caught the attention of the mainly retired firefighters at the West Vancouver Fire Museum.
Quebec-based Thibault built only 24 Thibault AWIT models like this pumper in 1954. Sixteen of these fire trucks went to the Canadian military. Records showed that a 1954 Thibault had been sold to the Port Hardy Fire Department, and that would have ended the interest until volunteers started comparing old photos of Number 31 to current photos.
“We noticed that the right front tire had raised lettering that were the same as in a photo taken before the truck was removed from service,” says museum society president Rick Titcomb. “That’s our truck!”
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- Lheidli T enneh photo
Lheidli T enneh First Nation member Regina Toth reads the Oath of Office to chief Dolleen Logan, assisted by Prince George mayor Lyn Hall during Saturday s sweaing-in ceremony at Ron Seymour Memorial Park on the Shelley reserve. - Lheidli T enneh photo
Lheidli T enneh chief Dolleen Logan was sworn in Saturday as the second female chief in the history of the First Nation. The swearing-in ceremony took place on the Shelley reserve at Ron Seymour Memorial Park, 14 kilometres northeast of Prince George. - Lheidli T enneh handout photo The sun was beaming but the wind was blowing cold Saturday morning when Dolleen (Dolly) Logan was officially sworn in as chief of the Lheidli T’enneh First Nation and she was looking forward to the end of the outdoor ceremony at Ron Seymour Memorial Park on the Shelley reserve.