Showing 88 results

Archival description
University of Saskatchewan Photograph Collection Sports√
Print preview View:

57 results with digital objects Show results with digital objects

Men's Athletic Directorate - Members

Individual photos of Athletic Directorate members grouped. Names: G.C. Jefferson, Wallace Alexander Thomson, Gilbert Joseph Waite, Edward Henry Maddocks, Galen Gordon Heffelfinger (secretary), Cable Boville Clark, Harry Saville (president), Reuben John Haney (vice-president), Walter George Coates, Joseph Arthur MacFarlane (trasurer), Abraham J. Loeppky, A.E. Lloyd, W.E. Walker, Leander R. Biehn, Alfred Tamsett Leach.

Bio/Historical Note: The Athletic Directorate is the sovereign head for athletics within the University. Eight per cent of the chartered members from the colleges and faculties of the University constitute this bod. It legislates, for, and controls, all departments of athletics pertaining to the University itself. From: The Sheaf, November 1912, p. 48.

Men's Athletic Directorate - Members

Individual photographs of Athletic Directorate members grouped. Names: William Barr Thomson, George Franklin Boyd, A.M. Ridout, William Cecil How, P.W. Westlake, Arthur Reginald Nash, James Waddell, J. Gardiner, John Bracken, Reginald McLeod Balfour, Nellie Ann Railton, Wendell Johnson Stainsby, Percy Hathaway Maguire, Marguerite Irwin, T.S. McKechnie, James Henry Bredin, William Stockdale Benson, George Alexander Mutch, H.D. Bishop.

Bio/Historical Note: The Athletic Directorate is the sovereign head for athletics within the University. Eight per cent of the chartered members from the colleges and faculties of the University constitute this bod. It legislates, for, and controls, all departments of athletics pertaining to the University itself. From: The Sheaf, November 1912, p. 48.

University of Saskatchewan Huskies Men's Swimming - Ned Feehan

Ned Feehan of Law breaking the provincial senior men's 100 yard breaststroke record.

Bio/Historical Note: Francis Michael ('Ned') Feehan graduated from Law in 1944. Feehan died in Edmonton, Alberta in 1986.

Bio/Historical Note: The University of Saskatchewan’s first pool opened in 1916. Located in the basement of Qu'Appelle Hall, it was 18 feet wide, 45 feet long and around 8 feet deep with a spring board and changing rooms. Speed swimming, diving, water polo and recreational swimming soon became popular activities in the long Saskatchewan winters. The pool closed soon after the Physical Education pool opened in October 1964.

"Girls' Swim Meet" - Action

Four images of women's intramural diving; two images of intramural swimming races; in the Qu'Appelle Hall pool.

Bio/Historical Note: The University of Saskatchewan’s first pool opened in 1916. Located in the basement of Qu'Appelle Hall, it was 18 feet wide, 45 feet long and around 8 feet deep with a spring board and changing rooms. Speed swimming, diving, water polo and recreational swimming soon became popular activities in the long Saskatchewan winters. The pool closed soon after the Physical Education pool opened in October 1964.

University of Saskatchewan Huskiettes Track and Field Team - Group Photo

Image of the track and field team standing in front of the Physical Education Building after a successful 1975 indoor CWUAA (CIS) meet in Edmonton, Alberta. Back row (l to r): Lyle Sanderson, coach; Nancy McKercher, Donna Bauer, Diane Jones (holding women's conference trophy), Sandy Bohun, Joanne Jones, Jill Martin, Connie Waryck, Rick Bell (assistant coach), and Ron Zerr (assistant coach). Front row (l to r): Sheila Clark, Gerri Stolar, Cindy Koroluk, Joanne McTaggart, Virginia Fisher, Janet Nicholson and Debbie Ellis. Winter scene.

Resultaten 76 tot 88 van 88