Langley Centennial Museum
Hello, Guest
Add As Favorite
Language
Viewing Object
Print
Saved List Options
My Saved List
Select
/
Clear
Create a New Saved List
Add
Object Description
Share
Object Name
Print, Photographic
Object ID
1996.055.075
Title
Bears Truck in the Fort Langley May Day Parade.
Date
May 1983.
Description
A photograph of the Bear's truck display from the Fort Langley May Day Parade on Glover Road. It is a truck with 2 crossed flags attached on top of the cab, and there are two stuffed animals on the hood, probably a bear and a beaver.
People/Subject
Glover Road
The Langley Trunk Road (sometimes referred to as Trunk Road) was renamed Glover Road following W.W. I after Lieut. F.W. Glover, Langley's first municipal engineer.
See From: Langley Trunk Road, Trunk Road
See Also: streets and roads
Term Source: Roads and Place Names in Langley, B.C., pg. 57 (Pepin)
May Day celebrations
Fort Langley established its May Day in 1922, and it continues to be an annual tradition (2003). In Langley, May Day refers to the 24 of May, the date of the birth of Queen Victoria. The first May Day was held in Fort Langley, then the event moved to Langley Prairie from 1923-1957. In 1958 the Langley Kinsmen gave up the event, and it returned to Fort Langley where it was organized by the Community Improvement Society and the Fort Langley Lions club, and finally a community committee. May Day celebrations include the crowning of the May Queen and the May pole dancing.
Superbase See Also: May Day Celebrations - Langley Prairie
Term Source: Warren Sommer's "From Prairie to City", p. 154.
Print
Saved List Options
My Saved List
Select
/
Clear
Create a New Saved List
Add
Opens in a new window.
Argus v4.4.2.32 - Langley Centennial Museum