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Names
Instelling

Khaki University

  • SCN00032
  • Instelling
  • 1917-1919; 1945-1946

Khaki University (initially Khaki College or University of Vimy Ridge) was a Canadian overseas educational institution set up and managed by the general staff of the Canadian Expeditionary Force (CEF) in Britain from 1917-1919 during the First World War. The system, named for the khaki-coloured uniforms of the CEF, was set up by the efforts of Dr. Edmund Henry Oliver, Professor of History and Economics, University of Saskatchewan, and others and was supported by the Young Men's Christian Association (YMCA). The University, with makeshift colleges mainly in central England, was intended to be “a school of efficiency and citizenship, a sort of combination of an Agricultural High School and a Technical School.” Courses were offered in Agriculture, Business Efficiency, Elementary Practical Science, and Citizenship. Classes were scheduled so that battalions could attend during their rest periods. Certificates given were accepted by Canadian universities. An important part of the University’s services was a network of thirty libraries that served more than 50,000 soldiers. Operations were suspended in April 1918 because of the massive German offensive. The war was over by November and Oliver returned to Canada. The term was used again for Canadian educational programs for veterans from 1945-1946 after the Second World War.

Arlington Hotel

  • Instelling

The Arlington Hotel was built as an upscale hotel and restaurant in Humboldt, Saskatchewan in 1912 by A. Borget. It was torn down in June 1980

Biggar Pastoral Charge

  • SCAA-UCCS-0446
  • Instelling
  • 1925–

Biggar Pastoral Charge was formed in 1925 as a new United Church charge, part of Wilkie Presbytery and consisting of Third Avenue United Church, in Biggar, Saskatchewan. Third Avenue United had been originally built in 1910, as a Union Church, with a congregation of Methodists, Presbyterians, Congregationalists and Baptists. Early pre-1925 rural preaching points had also included Salter, Lett and Monarch. (By 1936, Monarch was a separate Pastoral Charge, with points at Kensmith, Gagenville and Wilson Lake). Around 1940, Biggar Pastoral Charge included preaching points at Crane Creek, Naseby and Salter, though these three returned to Cando Pastoral Charge sometime before 1946. (Cando Pastoral Charge would eventually join with Landis Pastoral Charge.)

In 2000, the charge became part of Prairie Pine Presbytery and, with the 2018 reorganization, it continued into the new Living Skies Regional Council.

United Church (Biggar)

  • SCN00308
  • Instelling
  • ca.1910–

Third Avenue United was originally built in 1910, as a Union Church, with a congregation of Methodists, Presbyterians, Congregationalists and Baptists. With the formation of the United Church of Canada, in 1925, it became part of Biggar Pastoral Charge.

Regina Knox-Metropolitan Pastoral Charge

  • SCAA-UCCS-0247
  • Instelling
  • 1951–

Knox-Metropolitan Pastoral Charge was formed after the Knox and Metropolitan United Church congregations amalgamated to form Knox-Metropolitan United Church, on the site of the (former) Metropolitan United Church, at the corner of Victoria Avenue and Lorne Street.

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