- IHM.2024.0001
- Pièce
- December 09, 2022
Fait partie de Recreation Collection
Stories of 1950 and 1960s baseball in Saskatchewan relating to the North Battleford Beavers, Moose Jaw Mallards, Global World Series and other tournaments.
Sans titre
169 résultats avec objets numériques Afficher les résultats avec des objets numériques
Fait partie de Recreation Collection
Stories of 1950 and 1960s baseball in Saskatchewan relating to the North Battleford Beavers, Moose Jaw Mallards, Global World Series and other tournaments.
Sans titre
Barr Colonist [Battleford] Trail near Saskatoon
Fait partie de Barr Colony Heritage Cultural Centre Collection
Barr Colonist [Battleford] Trail near the Hebrew Cemetery west of Saskatoon, Saskatchewan.
Sans titre
Fait partie de University of Saskatchewan Photograph Collection
Exterior view of Saskatchewan Hall on the campus of the University of Saskatchewan
Fait partie de University of Saskatchewan Photograph Collection
Image of Joseph Proctor of Dundurn, Saskatchewan, seated on horseback outside a rural dwelling.
Bio/Historical Note: Joseph Proctor (1851-1918) bequeathed 560 acres of property southwest of Dundurn to the University of Saskatchewan.
Fait partie de University of Saskatchewan Photograph Collection
Progress shot of construction of the most westerly gate of the Memorial Gates. Thorvaldson (Chemistry) Building in background.
Bio/Historical Note: The Memorial Gates are a military memorial that is part of the University campus. Sixty-seven University students and faculty lost their lives while on service during World War I. The impact of the war on the University was immense: 330 students and faculty served during the War, a number equivalent to nearly all of the students who had registered the year prior to the beginning of the conflict. The desire to honor the staff and students who had fallen during the Great War was strong within the University community. As early as August 1918, 3 months prior to the formal Armistice, University President Walter C. Murray began making enquiries into the cost of a suitable memorial. What was settled upon were gates made of solid bronze, imported from England; the remainder, made of local greystone. Architect David R. Brown estimated the cost of what would come to be known as the Memorial Gates to be $30,000, with an additional $10,000 required for the memorial. The cement work was done by Richard J. Arrand in 1927-1928. A concerted fundraising effort among students and alumni helped cover the costs. The Memorial Gates were unveiled by President Murray and dedicated by the Bishop of Saskatchewan on 3 May 1928. A stone tablet, positioned between the bronze gates, bears the inscription: "These are they who went forth from this University to the Great War and gave their lives that we might live in freedom." For many years after, the site was used for the university’s Remembrance Day services at which wreaths are still laid every November 11th. These Gates were originally the entrance gates to campus and flanked University Drive. In the 1980s, due to increased traffic to the southwest portion of the campus, primarily Royal University Hospital, a new road entrance was built to the west. The gates remain, with the remnant of University Drive passing through them renamed Memorial Crescent. The gates are now primarily used by pedestrians, though the roadway is open to vehicles.
Saskatchewan Leads Canada, North America, and the World in the Fight Against Tuberculosis
Fait partie de Jim Daschuk Collection
Article from the Western Development Museum's Winning the Prairie Gamble on the history of tuberculosis in Saskatchewan.
Sans titre
Fait partie de Wanuskewin Heritage Park fonds
Fait partie de University of Saskatchewan Photograph Collection
Head and shoulders image of Karen K. Tanino, Professor of Plant Sciences. Tanino chairs the Northern Agriculture Thematic Network, University of the Arctic (a consortium of over 121 institutions circumpolar) and holds an Adjunct Professorship with IWATE University, Morioka, Japan.
Fait partie de Saskatoon Sanatorium fonds
Exterior image of the Saskatoon Sanatorium.
Sans titre
Fait partie de Saskatoon Sanatorium fonds
Exterior image of the Saskatoon Sanatorium.
Sans titre
Fait partie de Saskatoon Sanatorium fonds
Exterior image of the Saskatoon Sanatorium.
Sans titre
TB Survey at the University of Saskatchewan
Fait partie de The Saskatchewan Anti-Tuberculosis League fonds
A mobile TB survey truck surveying students in front of the Administration Building (now referred to as the Peter MacKinnon Building) at the University of Saskatchewan.
Name tags for Legion convention attendance by Doug Roberton
Fait partie de Military Collection
Name tags of Doug Roberton representing the Indian Head Legion Branch as a delegate at the Royal Canadian Legion - Saskatchewan Command 33rd and 34th biennial conventions in Saskatoon (1985) and Regina (1987).
Geology Building - Construction
Fait partie de University of Saskatchewan Photograph Collection
Construction nearing completion of the Geology Building; winter scene.
Bio/Historical Note: The construction of the Geology Building marked a return to the early style of campus architecture. The Department of Geology had been formed in 1927 and for the next six decades was based in the east wing of the Engineering Building. A growing faculty and student population had forced the department to cobble together makeshift accommodation in trailers and remote campus buildings. Designed by the architectural firm Black, McMillan and Larson of Regina, the building was given a neo-Collegiate Gothic exterior to blend harmoniously with the other buildings in the central campus. The two-and-a-half-storey building was erected just south or the Bowl side of the W.P. Thompson Biology Building, providing 8,543 square metres for office, laboratory, library, classroom, and storage space for rock and fossil samples. The exterior was clad with greystone and dressed with tyndal limestone. The dominant feature of the interior was a two-story atrium that featured the mosaics for the former exterior walls of the Thompson Building, a life-size skeleton of a Tyrannosaurus Rex and geological and biological displays. The $18.5 million Geology Building was completed in 1988 and fused the space between Physics and Biology and linked, through a walkway, with Chemistry, creating an integrated science complex on campus.
Fait partie de University of Saskatchewan Photograph Collection
Geology Building in winter; students walking in foreground.
Bio/Historical Note: The construction of the Geology Building marked a return to the early style of campus architecture. The Department of Geology had been formed in 1927 and for the next six decades was based in the east wing of the Engineering Building. A growing faculty and student population had forced the department to cobble together makeshift accommodation in trailers and remote campus buildings. Designed by the architectural firm Black, McMillan and Larson of Regina, the building was given a neo-Collegiate Gothic exterior to blend harmoniously with the other buildings in the central campus. The two-and-a-half-storey building was erected just south or the Bowl side of the W.P. Thompson Biology Building, providing 8,543 square metres for office, laboratory, library, classroom, and storage space for rock and fossil samples. The exterior was clad with greystone and dressed with tyndal limestone. The dominant feature of the interior was a two-story atrium that featured the mosaics for the former exterior walls of the Thompson Building, a life-size skeleton of a Tyrannosaurus rex and geological and biological displays. The $18.5 million Geology Building was completed in 1988 and fused the space between Physics and Biology and linked, through a walkway, with Chemistry, creating an integrated science complex on campus.