"Home Circle" Oban, Saskatchewan
- 75.254.55
- Pièce
- ca. 1920
Fait partie de Biggar Photograph Collection
Sixteen women and one dog posing for a group photograph on the steps of a building
"Home Circle" Oban, Saskatchewan
Fait partie de Biggar Photograph Collection
Sixteen women and one dog posing for a group photograph on the steps of a building
Fait partie de Biggar Photograph Collection
A group of people posing for a group photograph next to a small log and/or sod building
Sans titre
Fait partie de Organizations Collection
Group of 13 men standing around a banquet table in a posed photo. All men are wearing masonic regalia.
Fait partie de Rosetown General Photograph Collection
Order of the Eastern Star members standing with large numerals "25". The group consists of 12 unidentified women. OORP observed their 25th anniversary in 1951.
Fait partie de Frank Glass Photograph Collection
Elks Hall.
This fonds reflects the activity of Heritage Moose Jaw. It includes one scrapbook of heritage buildings in Moose Jaw and material about the Moose Jaw Cemetery. The organization received a grant to help restore some of the tombstones in the cemetery and they collected information about the individuals buried there.
Sans titre
Farm Boys and Girls Club - Swine Club - Wiseton
Fait partie de University of Saskatchewan Photograph Collection
Group photo of club with four hogs in the foreground and some members holding a sign saying," Wiseton Boys Swine Club, Annual Fair Oct 20, 1931, Toronto 1926 and 1930".
Morton Historical Association - Executive - Group Photo
Fait partie de University of Saskatchewan Photograph Collection
A.S. Morton and G.W. Simpson pose with the executive of the Morton Historical Association in academic robes. Names of members not supplied.
Membership in the Historical Association, formed in 1917-1918, was open to any student who had taken one course in history at the University. Professor A.S. Morton fostered the society from the beginning and proved a source of inspiration in awakening and sustaining interest not only in ancient history and historical research, but also in modern problems and events. A photograph of members and a brief account of the Associations activities appears in most editions of the official yearbook or Greystone.
Morton Historical Association - Executive - Group Photo
Fait partie de University of Saskatchewan Photograph Collection
Executive of the Morton Historical Association. Written on back of photo are names: K.M. Benson, Jean E. Murray, Ruth Smith, P. Jordan, Jean MacKay, Beth Stewart and Jack Purves.
Bio/historical note: Membership in the Historical Association, formed in 1917-1918, was open to any student who had taken one course in history at the University. Professor A.S. Morton fostered the society from the beginning and proved a source of inspiration in awakening and sustaining interest not only in ancient history and historical research, but also in modern problems and events. A photograph of members and a brief account of the Associations activities appears in most editions of the official yearbook or Greystone.
Farm Boys Club - Short Course - Wynyard
Fait partie de University of Saskatchewan Photograph Collection
Group photo of club members sitting and standing on roadway at Wynyard, Saskatchewan. Trees and houses in background; winter scene.
Farm Boys Club - Short Course - Birch Hills
Fait partie de University of Saskatchewan Photograph Collection
Group photo of club members kneeling and standing on snow-covered roadway, while attending a Short Course at Birch Hills, Saskatchewan. Houses and power poles in background; winter scene.
Fait partie de University of Saskatchewan Photograph Collection
Group photo of club members sitting and standing on grass, with trees in background.
Fait partie de University of Saskatchewan Photograph Collection
Group photo of club members sitting and standing on lawn at Regina Exhibition; monument and trees in background.
Shuttleworth Mathematical Society
Fait partie de University of Saskatchewan Photograph Collection
Members of the Shuttleworth Mathematical Society.
Bio/Historical Note: The Shuttleworth Mathematical Society was designed to give students interested in mathematics an opportunity to meet in an informal setting, and was open to all students who had completed one math class and were registered in a second. The Society was originally formed in November 1916 as the University Mathematical Society. It was renamed in honour of Roy Eugene Shuttleworth, a brilliant honours student who had been the first president of the organization. Shuttleworth was born in 1896 in Leavenworth, Washington. He studied mathematics and physics at the University of Saskatchewan. He joined the Army in the spring of 1917 and served as a private with the Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry (Eastern Ontario Regiment). Shuttleworth died in combat during World War I on 26 August 1918 at Vimy Ridge, France. His name is inscribed on the Vimy Memorial. The society has been inactive for many years.
Homemakers' Clubs - Conventions
Fait partie de University of Saskatchewan Photograph Collection
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.
Sans titre