- SC7.002
- Item
- [1907]
Two adults and students posing on the steps of the Winona School, which opened in 1907.
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Two adults and students posing on the steps of the Winona School, which opened in 1907.
George Frechette and Mary Workentine goof around in the doorway of the Wiggins School teacherage.
Approximately 27 unidentified students, boys and girls, pose for a photo outside Wiggins School.
Two horses, named Sea and Biscuit, hitched to a hitching post at Wiggins School.
L-R: Wilfred Frechette, Stuart McLellan, Judy Frechette, Rene Frechette, Lil Frechette, Leo Frechette.
Seven girls pose with a quilt they made through school. This quilt was likely made to be sent to the Red Cross, who would send it overseas to soldiers who served in World War II.
Walter Aseltine & Smith School Teachers
Division I and II teachers from Walter Aseltine and Smith Schools. Back row, L-R: Hazel Loucks, Elizabeth Sport, Agnes Wickett, Mae Smith, Bob Mills, Lillian Taylor, Nap Wyshynski, Eva Cleghorn, Ron Clark, Yvonne McGladdery, Leona Johnson. Front row: Vera Thorstad, Jean Black, Betty Keeping, Joan Nagy, Edna Mathison, Florence Lang, Wilbie Metheral, Tena Bylyna.
Visiting at Stewart School Dedication
L-R: Nettie Stewart, Lily Gordon, Mrs. Billy King, Mr. & Mrs. Aseltine, Marjorie (King) Clarke.
Students attending Valley City School play outside. Picture taken by Robert Goodwin, Principal of Valley City School in Fiske, Saskatchewan.
Unveiling Stewart School Plaque
Miss Nettie Stewart removing the Union Jack to unveil the plaque naming Stewart School in her honour.
Mary Gordon unveiling plaque in Smith School honouring her father, Joseph H. Smith, a school board member for many years.
Female students practice their typewriting skills at their desks while the teacher monitors their work.
Ed Kendal presenting a trophy to a boy (possibly Dave Stables) at Walter Aseltine School.
Students of Sunny Bank knit woollen squares which were assembled to make the pictured quilt. The quilt was then sent to the Red Cross which in turn sent it to soldiers overseas who served in World War II.
Four women studying with books and a microphone on the table.