Aviation was in its infancy when Sarnia became a city in 1914.
Few of the 11,000 residents had seen what things looked like from an open biplane, and no one had yet taken a camera aloft to record the scene for posterity.
In this issue, The Journal presents ‘Sarnia, Above it All,’ a 16-page pullout section devoted entirely to aerial photos of Sarnia, Point Edward and Corunna.
The images were shot by award-winning photojournalist Glenn Ogilvie, who worked closely with pilot Jason Brent of Huron Flight Centre to create a unique photo album of our community.
The Journal began ‘Sarnia, Above it All’ as a Centennial project, and it’s being released today on the six-month anniversary of our own launch as this community’s local independent newspaper.
We hope you enjoy it, and have fun picking out various landmarks that look so different from above.
We also hope it becomes an artifact itself one day, giving future Sarnians a snapshot of what their community looked like way back in the year 2014.
- George Mathewson
SEE THE FULL 16-PAGE SECTION IN OUR 'VIRTUAL PAPER' AT WWW.THESARNIAJOURNAL.CA