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(114) Bulman homestead
Excerpt from page 38 of "B.C.'s Inland Empire" by Erskine Burnett associated with this image: Starting near the Rutherford homestead a trail leads over a low divide into the Frog Creek valley, crossing on the way Three Valley Creek. Frog Creek is also know as Wap River and, after passing through Frog Lake, it flows down into Mabel Lake. About one mile up from the highway the trail to Joss Mountain and Green Lake branches off to the left. The signpost read, - "Mabel Lake 20 miles, Green Lake 18 miles". The latter is one of the headwaters of the Upper Shuswap above Sugar Lake. Following the Mabel Lake trail, traces of an abandoned logging railway are visible here and there, - half-rotten ties with spikes sticking out. This trail way was abandoned about thirty years ago although there is still a good stand of timber lower down the valley. A mile of so further on we reached the Bulman homestead, headquarters of the well-known trapper and packer of that name. The buildings stand on the banks of Frog Creek at a point where the legging railway crossed it. Jack Bulman stands in the centre of the picture
Bulman, V J F, VX32482
This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete. Visit this record in UMA's new catalogue at: https://archives.library.unimelb.edu.au/nodes/view/374644Surname: BULMAN
Given Name(s) or Initials: V J F
Military Service Number or Last Known Location: VX32482
Missing, Wounded and Prisoner of War Enquiry Card Index Number: 1767186019
Item: [2016.0049.06952] "Bulman, V J F, VX32482
L. S. Hanson
"QX46012 [L]. S. Hanson [2]/1 Field Survey Jan. 1942. Aug. 1943."QX46012 [L]. S. Hanson. [2]/1 Field Survey, January 1942 - August 1943
Unitary posets and amalgamations of pomonoids
In 1927, Schreier proved that amalgams of groups are always embeddable in the category of groups. However, this is not true in the category of semigroups, as shown by Kimura. Subsequently, Howie initiated the study of semigroup amalgams by investigating when the embeddablity happens, and found that semigroup amalgams can be embeddable if the core of the amalgam is almost unitary [18]. Later, Hall proved that inverse semigroups are amalgamation bases in the category of inverse semigroups [14], and Renshaw introduced a homological structure in order to describe the amalgamated free product [32]. By using this structure, Renshaw proved that a semigroup U is an amalgmation base if, and only if, U has the extension property in every containing semi-group. Renshaw's result, which shows that a semigroup amalgam is embeddable if, and only if, it is embeddable as a monoid, allow us to focus on monoid amalgams. The subject of pomonoid amalgams was first studied by Fakhuruddin in 1986 but he only considered the commutative case [10]. Little work has been done in this category and recently Bulman-Fleming and Nasir revisited this area (see [7], [6], and [29]). They modified Fakhuruddin's definition of pomonoid amalgams, where they proved that a pomonoid amalgam that has the postrong representation extension property is strongly poembeddable [7]. They also proved that pogroups are strong poamalgamation bases in the category of pomonoids. Nasir [29] found that absolutely poatness pomonoids are strong poamalgamation bases in the category of commutative pomonoids. However, several questions remain unanswered in this area, and this research continues to study pomonoid amalgams by exploring when poembeddability can happen. It also aims to generalise some of the results in monoid amalgams. In addition, a number of subjects related to pomonoid amalgams have been considered, for example dominions and subpomonoid amalgams. New questions about the class of amalgamation bases have emerged recently and we briefly consider some of these
Letter from Carl Hayden to L. S. Williams
Letter from Carl Hayden to L. S. Williams about the potential to expand the park boundaries
Mystery Author Stan Jones and Sepculative Fiction Authors Sterling Emmal and L. S. Goulet
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Letter from L. S. Williams to Carl Hayden
Letter from L. S. Williams to Carl Hayden suggesting a boundary amendment to the national park bill
Letter from L. S. Williams to Carl Hayden
Letter from L. S. Williams to Carl Hayden about visiting Mr. Buggeln to discuss proposed park boundary changes
Letter from Carl Hayden to L. S. Williams
Letter from Carl Hayden to L. S. Williams informing the Saginaw and Manistee Lumber Company that a bill extending the timber cutting rights in the Canyon did not pass in Congress
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