The corner of Main and Queen Streets in St. Williams looking northeast through the ruins of the second Palace Hotel after it burnt in 1913. On the west side is the McRae General Store. On the east side are, from left to right, the old Town Hall, the McCall Furniture Store and the Johnson Store.
Harry Woodward owned the brickyard that provided the bricks of many area residences in the 1850's and 1860's.
The 1806 Monroe-Gillaspy barn was more than a century oldwhen painted by Norfolk County artist E. A. (Edgar) Cantelonin the early twentieth century.
Industrialist and merchant Daniel A. McCall, a driving force in St. Williams’ development.
Commercial fisherman Joe Crockett
and his fishing shanty in 1921.
Primitive Methodist Preacher Paul Woodward and his wife Matilda Ann Brown circa 1875.
The Troyer homestead on Long Point Bay
taken in 1921.