A black coil-bound notebook of about 100 pages containing the meeting minutes for the Ladies Auxiliary to the Canadian Legion in Indian Head from 1939 to 1943.
A green hardcover notebook of about 100 pages containing the meeting minutes for the Ladies Auxiliary to the Canadian Legion in Indian Head from 1943 to 1948.
A blue 3-ring letter-sized binder with about 150 pages of hand-written meeting minutes for the Ladies Auxiliary to the Canadian Legion in Indian Head from 1991 to 2002. Also includes some news clippings and correspondence. The inside front cover has a news article taped to it announcing the closure of the Ladies Auxiliary on February 7, 2002, after 83 years of service,
Two copies 21 cm X 27 cm gold-coloured 125-page paperback book written by Lt Cliff Ashfield about Saskatchewan's military history of the "mainline" (i.e. along the CPR mainline from Moosomin to Regina). It focuses on WWI and WWII. This copy of the book has an autograph from the author made out to the Indian Head Museum.
This fonds contains the autobiographies of Tony Wilson and his brother, Walter Wilson. Both accounts recall life on a homestead near Bengough, Saskatchewan just after the turn of the century, as well as their terms of service during World War II. The autobiography by Tony Wilson includes several copies of family photographs.
A mounted soldier leading a parade of a flag draped wagon pulled by four horses with two men mounted followed by a contingent of armed soldiers, civilians and band. The parade is on the 300 block of Main Street, Rosetown.
Six Model T type vehicles, one mounted soldier, flag draped wagon pulled by four horses and two mounted men and a large number of civilians at what appears to be the Rosetown Cemetery.
A legal-sized manila folder with three pages stapled to the inside. Written on both the folder and the papers are lists of members of the Ladies Auxiliary to the Canadian Legion in Indian Head as well as the prices of membership fees and which members paid them for the years from 1994 to 2002.
Six original Canadian letters from World War Two, with content about the destroyer HMCS Athabaskan, pride in service, the Wrens, criticisms of those young men not serving, and duties while in service. Two of the letters were written by Telegrapher Leonard Woolsey. The other letters were written by Barbara Woolsey. The letters were addressed to Eldon Woolsey, brother of Leonard and son of Barbara, who served overseas with the RCAF.