Our Museum

Inside the Museum

Our Outside Displays

The Museum's Mission Statement

Our Collection

Our Archives

The Museum's Current Events

Our Community Memories Project

Read Our Newsletters

Contact the Museum

Go to the Village of Lytton

Go to the Lytton and District Chamber of Commerce

Welcome to our new website!

We are launching our new website.

The links in the left sidebar will take you to our Museum pages as well as to the Village of Lytton website and the Lytton and District Chamber of Commerce website.

We have added an Archives section. Here you will find many pictures from our Archives. There is a search function to help narrow the browsing.

copper kettle

A Simple Copper Kettle

Edited from James Baker:

The copper kettle for which the restaurant in Lytton was named probably belonged to my maternal great grandmother Isobel Marie Loring. My maternal grandmother, Sevilla Isobel Pudney (nee Loring), started the Elite Tea Room in Lytton in the late 1920s and served tea from the copper kettle.

My mother, Rose Isobel Baker (nee Pudney), moved from Pudney Flats in the late 1930s into Lytton to help her mother run the Tea House, which had become a full service restaurant.

The name was changed in the late 1940s to the Copper Kettle Cafe and the copper kettle was retired from service and placed on display until the restaurant closed in the early 1970s.

The Baker family kindly donated the copper kettle to the Lytton Museum and Archives. After the Copper Kettle Cafe closed, it was purchased by new owners and later burned in the fire that consumed Gammie's store.

A well known landmark in Lytton, the Copper Kettle Cafe had become a favourite restaurant throughout the Fraser Canyon.

The Lytton Museum and Archives published articles by Rose Baker in the Volume 3 Issue 2 and Volume 4 Issue 2 newsletters.