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Photo portrait of Bob McDougal dressed in aviator jacket, scarf, helmet and goggles. World War II era photo. Bob's parents were "Red" and Myrtle McDougal of Red Cliff, Colorado. Red was Town Marshall.
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Bob McDougal in a Red Cliff Union High School letter sweater standing at the side of a road.
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From left, Bob McDougall and Buster Beck, standing in front of the Beck house on Water Street in Red Cliff. Bob was a life-long friend of the Beck brothers. His father's 1937 Lincoln Zephyr Coupe features frequently in Bud Beck's writings. [Photo taken August 31, 1987] "Many of the kids from other parts of town came there also so we knew a lot of them but weren't really close friends with them. Our closest friends were Ray Tippett, Fred Moore,...
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Charles Robert "Bob" Warren in military uniform (no insignia), 1942. Bob was the son of Ray and Marie Warren of Red Cliff, Colorado.
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Bob Warren sitting on lumber at the Warren Brothers & Robinson sawmill. The timbers were used in mine stoping at Gilman. Bob was a partner in the sawmill and was married to Ilene Ages Warren.
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Ethel Boies Bayer's father, Brett Timothy Boies, ran an experimental farm in British Columbia. These are chickens from the farm, on a photo postcard.
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87) Bridge
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The bridge over the Eagle River, leading to the railroad viaduct and school house hill in Red Cliff.
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High school graduation photograph of Bruce Beck, 1946. Bruce was killed in action in Korea on Sept. 23, 1951, on Heartbreak Ridge.
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Bruce Beck (left) and Ron Dump seated during a break while logging on Shrine Pass. The skid horse pulls the logs.
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Bruce Beck and Albert Quinn Beck at the Beck home in Red Cliff. Bruce was later killed in Korea on Heartbreak Ridge. Quinn is wearing his Navy uniform.
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Bud Beck with sunglasses in hand, standing next to a 1941 Ford. There is snow on the ground.
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From left, Ted/Bud Beck, Buster Beck and Emmett Flaherty at the 2002 Red Cliff Union High School reunion. The dinner was held in the high school auditorium.
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Buddy Fitzgerald and Bolliver (Tom Reed's dog) standing on Water Street in Red Cliff. The Green Bridge Inn is now (2009) on the site of the building at the far right. Buddy's mother was a school teacher.
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The Burbank home in Red Cliff completely engulfed in flames. The fire took place during the evening of March 2, 1964. The building was a total loss and the occupants were left with the clothes on their back and a very few personal belongings.
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Frank Van Vleck Burbank standing in the Burbank Grocery Co. store about 1912 (later the Riepenhoff Store). Mr. Burbank came to Red Cliff in 1898 and married Lillian Horton Colburn.
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Photocopy of a postcard, the photo for which was taken by R. R. Cooper. Miners arriving for "Ole's Shift," standing in front of the bus. From Ted Beck: The Red Cliff bus line was probably started away back, probably in the 1930s, by Mickey Walsh. He got hold of a big old sedan, probably a Cadillac or Pierce-Arrow, that 7 or 8 men could crowd into and started hauling miners to Gilman. I don't think it was much of a success as it kept breaking down....
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Graduation photo of Buster Beck, Red Cliff Union High School, 1943.
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Buster Beck in uniform, age 18. World War II era photo. Buster's parents were Earl and Dessie Beck of Red Cliff, Colorado.
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Buster Beck standing in front of the doors of the Holy Cross Garage in Red Cliff. "The doors in the background were used every day so it can be assumed that the accumulation of ice took place over night." -- T. Bud Beck
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Buster Beck (L) and Bob (Charles Robert) Warren on horseback on Water Street, Red Cliff. "Twin houses" in right background. Fleming Lumber Company at upper left background. "Lou Brady was the last owner of the twin houses. He lived in one and was tearing down the other one for firewood. After he died, Alan Albert, school teacher, helped tear down the one Brady lived in and they found some money hidden in the wall."--Angela Beck