{"@context":"http://iiif.io/api/presentation/2/context.json","@type":"sc:Manifest","@id":"https://iiif.quartexcollections.com/qstarter29/iiif/6c8fcdc7-cb8c-4bf3-a477-213948f28241/manifest","label":"bhs_204976","metadata":[{"label":"Identifier","value":"bhs_204976"},{"label":"Rights","value":["Copyright status unknown. Responsibility for determining the copyright status and any use rests exclusively with the user."]},{"label":"Language","value":["EN"]},{"label":"Format","value":["JPEG"]},{"label":"Type","value":["Photograph"]},{"label":"Subject","value":["Houses"]},{"label":"Description","value":"This was the homestead built for William Wood in 1858 by James Cushie Bent and Jabez Bent. The contract price was 500, including the board of James Bent and his men. James Bent did the joinery, and Jabez Bent the brick and masonry, and lathing and plastering. From ca 1891 the Farms and Farming had been worked by Irvine Devitt, his brother Milton and their father Isaac (1837 - 1907) and mother Mary Ann (1838 - 1912). In March 1907 Milton died when a straw stack collapsed: \"While Milton Devitt, of Burlington, aged about forty years and unmarried, was assisting Monday to load a waggon with straw, a short distance from town, the stack, which was heavily loaded with ice and snow, gave way, burying Devitt. It was twenty minutes before the man could be got out, and death resulted shortly after.\" The 20 November 1907 Gazette Documented that \"Mr E. R. Wood has sold his Farms and Farming \"The Willows\" on the Middle Road, to Mr Irvine Devitt. The latter will take possession in January.\" According to Murray Fisher, in \"Farewell to the Garden of Canada\", Irvine Devitt Farms and Farminged the north side of the Middle Road (QEW), north of Cumberland Avenue. He was an \"entertainer, singer at local concerts, and played the auto harp\". The Farms and Farming was renamed \"Hickory Farms and Farming\" and was later sold to Gordon Barber \"church worker\",and his wife Alice, then to Nicholson Lumber. The building has been adapted for office use by the Tamarack Lumber Company. Its current address is 3269 (formerly 3265) North Service Road."},{"label":"Creator","value":"Bill Schnurr"},{"label":"Date","value":"1994"},{"label":"Date (EDTF)","value":"D:00 M:00 Y:1994"},{"label":"Title","value":"The Willows, 3265 / 3269 North Service Road, 1994"},{"label":"Repository","value":["Burlington Historical Society"]}],"description":"The Willows, 3265 / 3269 North Service Road, 1994","sequences":[{"@type":"sc:Sequence","canvases":[{"@id":"https://iiif.quartexcollections.com/qstarter29/iiif/6c8fcdc7-cb8c-4bf3-a477-213948f28241/canvas/_1","@type":"sc:Canvas","label":"The Willows, 3265 / 3269 North Service Road, 1994","height":972,"width":1600,"images":[{"@type":"oa:Annotation","motivation":"sc:painting","resource":{"@id":"https://iiif.quartexcollections.com/qstarter29/iiif/6c8fcdc7-cb8c-4bf3-a477-213948f28241/full/full/0/default.jpg","@type":"dctypes:Image","format":"image/jpeg","service":{"@context":"http://iiif.io/api/image/2/context.json","@id":"https://iiif.quartexcollections.com/qstarter29/iiif/6c8fcdc7-cb8c-4bf3-a477-213948f28241","profile":"http://iiif.io/api/image/2/level2.json","tiles":[{"width":512,"scaleFactors":[1,2,4]}]},"height":972,"width":1600},"on":"https://iiif.quartexcollections.com/qstarter29/iiif/6c8fcdc7-cb8c-4bf3-a477-213948f28241/canvas/_1","metadata":[]}],"thumbnail":{"@id":"https://iiif.quartexcollections.com/qstarter29/iiif/6c8fcdc7-cb8c-4bf3-a477-213948f28241/full/500,500/0/default.jpg","@type":"dctypes:Image","height":500,"width":500}}]}],"thumbnail":"https://iiif.quartexcollections.com/qstarter29/iiif/6c8fcdc7-cb8c-4bf3-a477-213948f28241/full/500,500/0/default.jpg","logo":"https://iiif.quartexcollections.com/qstarter29/iiif/logo"}