Administration Building - Addition - Interior
- A-7062
- Stuk
- 22 Sept. 1987
View of the President's office on the second floor of the Administration Building addition.
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Administration Building - Addition - Interior
View of the President's office on the second floor of the Administration Building addition.
Administration Building - Exterior
Looking east across the Bowl at Administration Building.
Looking east at the newly-completed College Building, prior to landscaping of the Bowl.
Looking north at the College Building with landscaping lining along a road in foreground.
Looking south at the College Building with Engineering Building at right; winter scene.
Looking southwest at the College Building.
Looking southeast at the recently-completed College Building; surplus stone sits in foreground.
Looking southeast at the College Building; evergreen trees in foreground.
View of cars in front of the College Building. The Bowl has not yet been seeded to grass. Sidewalks, driveway and shrubbery in foreground; Engineering Building at left.
Three people walk away from the College Building; winter scene.
Looking east at the College Building.
Elevated view of Engineering and Crop Science buildings at left, College Building at centre, Saskatchewan Hall at right. Taken from Qu'Appelle Hall; winter scene.
Campus - Scenic - Students Changing Classes
Looking northwest from College Building across the Bowl as students walk on pathways. Chemistry Building at right.
Homemakers' Clubs - Conventions
Group photo of convention participants taken in front of the Administration Building.
Bio/Historical Note: The Homemakers' Clubs of Saskatchewan were created at a "special conference for women" initiated by the University of Saskatchewan in 1911. The objectives as stated in the constitution, were "to promote the interests of the home and the community". It was organized virtually as part of the university. The director of Agricultural Extension, F.H. Auld, was the ex officio secretary and managing director until 1913, when these duties fell to the newly appointed director of Women's Work, Abigail DeLury. From that time until reorganization in 1952, women's extension remained as a separate unit, reporting directly to the president of the university. After 1952, its work was still carried on independently, but with a greater degree of integration with agricultural and adult education services. Unique in Canada was the Club's official association with the University, which provided the provincial secretary, secretarial staff, and extension department resources to aid the development of the club and its programs. In 1971, the name was changed to the Saskatchewan Women's Institute and the University reduced its role to supplying free office space on campus.
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