- AG2.007
- Stuk
- [ca 1910]
Posed for the camera, Gramma Empey, Annie Ritchie and the children (6) and Gramma Ritchie(?).
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Posed for the camera, Gramma Empey, Annie Ritchie and the children (6) and Gramma Ritchie(?).
House built in 1925 by T.E. Smith, Glamis. Picture taken by Ward's Photo Studio, March 16, 1929. Painted buildings in the background.
Zonder titel
Sod house and sod blacksmith shop, barns and livestock.
Two women and two children standing in front of a rough log house. Long skirts indicate early 20th century. Snow and desolate yard scene.
Homesteader Ball, Rosetown District, 1908
13 men in suits and ties, two boys, seven women. Two men holding fiddles. Showing fashions and hairstyles of 1908.
Prairie sod buildings. Tee-pee of wood. Young boy and dog in foreground with wagons in yard.
S. Gilchrist drawing of a homestead
A sketch of the Harry Hearn homestead consisting of sod buildings and a log tee-pee with three people in the scene.
Rosetown General Photograph Collection
The Rosetown General Photograph Collection spans approximately ten decades of the history of Rosetown and district, consisting of photographs taken by and collected by the Rosetown Centennial Library Archives.
Sod house with people standing in front. L-R: Bill Whyte, Mary McCuaig (Mrs. Jas Ritchie), Rod McCuaig, Jack McCuaig (holding a little dog). The McCuaig homestead is located NE 35-31-13.
Wedding of Mr. and Mrs. G.A. Mercer
Part of MJ General Photograph Collection
Family and guests attending the wedding of Mr. and Mrs. G.A. Mercer; names of those in attendance not supplied.
Zonder titel
Part of MJ General Photograph Collection
Ash Stoneman’s Ranch, south of Mortlach, Saskatchewan
John D. Fraser and Donald McBean
Part of MJ General Photograph Collection
Studio portrait of Marlborough District homesteaders, John D. Fraser and Donald McBean
Zonder titel
Murphy’s ‘Flop House’ on the Old Pole Trail
Part of MJ General Photograph Collection
View of a stop-over or ‘flop house’ on the ‘Old Pole Trail’ (also known as the Wood Mountain Trail) which ran south of Moose Jaw to Fort Walsh and the Cypress Hills area; this stop-over was operated by a man named Murphy and was located on the shores of Old Wives Lake.
The Ritchie family (3 men, 2 women, 6 children) and two dogs pose in front of their sod house homestead. Only identification provided lists the photo subjects as "Annie and her girls" and "Fairman and Uncle Tom."
Part of W.C. Murray fonds
A Mennonite barn is seen to the rear of the house on a prairie homestead. Several chickens and a wagon are also seen in the foreground.