photograph
Artwork
Accession Number
2012.007.001.073Description
Sepia toned photograph of seven children and one woman standing on the road in front of a house.Narrative
Depicted in this photograph (L to R) are Joan Marion Dunsmuir (Marion), Laura Mary Dunsmuir (Maye), Laura Miller Dunsmuir, Emily Elinor Dunsmuir (Elinor), James Dunsmuir Jr. (holding his mother's hand), Elizabeth Maude Dunsmuir (Bessie), Jessie Muriel Dunsmuir (Muriel), and Kathleen Euphemia Dunsmuir (Kat). They are standing on the circular driveway at the entrance to Burleith, the Dunsmuir home on Victoria's Gorge waterway.
In this photograph, James Jr. is 'unbreeched', meaning he has not yet started wearing trousers. Until the late nineteenth century, both male and female infants and toddlers were dressed in petticoats and dresses. Breeching, the occasion when a boy wore trousers for the first time, was a significant rite of passage for boys in the western world and could happen any time between two and eight years old, depending on family preference. Often, the first haircut would happen at this time too. James Jr. is probably about two years old in this photograph.
History of Use
This photograph was taken in about 1896 and placed in an album created by the James and Laura Dunsmuir family at Burleith, their home on Victoria's Gorge Waterway. In 1906 it was probably taken by the family to Victoria's Government House where they lived while James served as British Columbia's eighth Lieutenant Governor. From there it was taken to the family's new house, Hatley Park, in 1910.
Sometime after Laura Miller Dunsmuir's death in 1937, the album became the property of Dola Frances Dunsmuir (also known as Mrs. Dola Cavendish) and was kept at her house Dolaura in Colwood, B.C. After hear death, the album was owned by her sister Kathleen's daughter, Judith Humphreys (also known as Mrs. Judith Joy). Her daughter donated the album to Craigdarroch Castle in 2012.Date
circa 1896Dimensions
7.5 x 7.9 cmSupport
Paper, Photographic paperCountry of Origin
Canada