Engineering - Class in Session
- A-401
- Item
- 1946
Image of Engineering students seated in Room 130 during a lecture in the Engineering Building. W.B. Baker, Director, School of Agriculture, seated in foreground.
Engineering - Class in Session
Image of Engineering students seated in Room 130 during a lecture in the Engineering Building. W.B. Baker, Director, School of Agriculture, seated in foreground.
Campus - Scenic - Physical Education Building
Elevated view looking east of University buildings from l to r: Engineering Building, Main Barn, and Physical Education Building. Greenhouses in foreground.
Elevated view looking northeast of College Building at right; Power House and Engineering Building in background. [Physics Building construction in foreground]. Winter scene.
Looking east at campus buildings (from l to r): Emmanuel College, Qu'Appelle Hall, Administration Building, Field Husbandry Building, and Engineering Building. Taken from the west bank of the South Saskatchewan River.
Visits of State - Governor General - Duke of Devonshire
The Governor General of Canada, the Duke of Devonshire, walking towards a car in front of the Engineering Building. Crowd in background at right.
Returned men working on and around a Case steamer inside the Engineering Building.
Department of Field Husbandry Building - Exterior
View of Field Husbandry Building at centre; National Research Council Building at left and Engineering Building at right.
Bio/Historical Note: Field Husbandry changed its name to Crop Science in 1962.
Field Husbandry Building and Engineering Building
Elevated view of Department of Field Husbandry (later Crop Science) Building and College of Engineering Building.
Engineering Building - Interior
Scene inside workshop in Engineering Building. Blacksmith tools like forges, anvils and other equipment standing in rows.
Bio/Historical Note: Walter C. Murray, University President, saw that the College of Agriculture would keep the university close to the life of the people. Between 1909-1912, before they had teaching space, the agriculture faculty developed the agriculture farm and traveled doing extension work, most significantly, with the Better Farming Train. The Saskatchewan Minister of Agriculture, W.R. Motherwell, supported extension work with tax revenue funds. In October 1912, the first agriculture class was taught. Both a 3-year associate course and a degree course were available. In 1937 the associate program became the School of Agriculture. The school responded to local farming problems by teaching and research and with new departments directed to these areas.
Ewes and lambs in a stock pen; Livestock Pavilion and old Engineering building in background.
Ewes and lambs grazing in a fenced-in enclosure. Engineering Building and Livestock Pavilion in background.
Two mages showing returned men working on a Case automobile in a motor mechanics class in the Engineering Building. Names from back of photo, "R.C. Lauder, Phillips, Keating, Burrows, Barker, Cutts".
Returned Soldiers - 16th Class - Group Photo
Returned men standing and sitting in front of Engineering Building.
Returned Soldiers - Training - Group Photo
Returned men, taking a short course, stand in front of the Engineering Building; winter scene.