- Series 2: CPC. 1928-1933, predominant 1930-1931. - Folder 17: "Photographs."
- Stuk
- 1931
Part of W.C. Murray fonds
This image is of a sod roofed home typical of those built by early homesteaders.
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Part of W.C. Murray fonds
This image is of a sod roofed home typical of those built by early homesteaders.
Unidentified man standing outside his sod house, known locally as a ‘soddy’.
The First Pinwherry United Church Near Biggar, Saskatchewan
Part of Biggar Photograph Collection
Two people and two horses in front of a large sod building. The people are identified as Reverend and Mrs. George Gervin.
"Sod House In Kensmith School District" Near Biggar, Saskatchewan
Part of Biggar Photograph Collection
Three women, one man, one child and a dog in front of a sod house
There is a wooden building beside the sod house
Lady in long coat standing in the doorway of a sod shack.
Coulter family stands in front of a large teepee made of branches and a sod house. L-R: Ambrose Bee, Mrs. Coulter, Bessie Coulter (Mrs. J. Graham), Fred Hill, A. Fletcher, Hector Coulter, Jim Coulter, unknown, Jake Coulter.
Sod and Frame house near Kerrobert
Part of Rice's Studio collection
Black and white photograph of two men and a dog in front of a sod and frame house; there is a clothes line in front of the house.
Zonder titel
Agriculture - Buildings on the Farm
18 photographs and 4 postcards of farm buildings
Four men standing in front of the barn holding animals; four white horses, three harnessed, two dark coloured horses harnessed and one colt. The other team might be oxen. One buggy with a dog lying underneath.
The Ritchie family sod house with, L-R, Mrs. Peter Ritchie, Sr., Miss Jean Ritchie, Peter Ritchie, Sr. in front of the house. A window box contains flowers. There is a frame barn behind the house.
"Annie and her girls" (3), another small boy, "Fairman and Uncle Tom."
Sod blacksmith shop on farm of A.D. Fletcher in 1906, Zealandia, Sask.
Man in buckboard, sod barn in background. Sunflowers growing in forefront.
A lady stands outside a sod house which was the very first Winona School. The Winona district hosted "sodding bees" where they would pile sod walls three feet thick against the wooden frame of the school, producing a building which was warm in the winter and cool in the summer.
Photos of rural schoolhouses, classrooms, students, and teachers in the Rosetown area.