- A-1557
- Item
- [1915-192-?]
"Marshalia Butterfly," offspring of "The Marshall," in a field with [J. B. Rayner]. Barn in background.
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"Marshalia Butterfly," offspring of "The Marshall," in a field with [J. B. Rayner]. Barn in background.
Cattle in stalls inside a campus barn.
School of Agriculture - Architectural Sketches
Sketch of the building with a tree in the foreground.
Agricultural Machinery - Tractors and Binders
Three men in a field; a Titan 10-20 tractor pulling two binders and cutting winter rye.
Farm Boys Club - Livestock Judging - Saskatoon
Club members learning the finer points of judging horses at [University of Saskatchewan]; building in background.
Farm Boys Club - North Battleford
Group photo of club members sitting, kneeling, and standing in front of a brick building at North Battleford, Saskatchewan. Three women wearing white seated at centre of second row.
Group photo of club members in the Bowl at University of Saskatchewan. College (Administration) Building in background.
Early view showing experimental plots in foreground and the campus barns and buildings in background, including the Field Husbandry (Crop Science) Professor's residence to the left.
Graduate portrait of Len Purdy, Huskie high diver in 1930.
Dr. Arthur S. Morton - Portrait
Head and shoulders image of Dr. Arthur Silver Morton, head, Department of History, and university librarian, 1914-1940.
Bio/Historical Note: Dr. Arthur Silver Morton was born on 16 May 1870 at the village of Iere, Trinidad, British West Indies, the son of Nova Scotian missionaries. He received his early education locally and with a scholarship from the Government of the Island, he entered the University of Edinburgh, eventually receiving both an MA and a B.Divinity. In 1896, after a summer of study at the University of Berlin, Dr. Morton arrived in Canada and was ordained by the Presbytery of St. John, New Brunswick. He served as a minister until 1904 when he started his career as a lecturer in church history, first at the Presbyterian College in Halifax and later Knox College in Toronto. Dr. Morton came to the University of Saskatchewan in 1914 and served both as head of the History Department and university librarian until his retirement in 1940. Upon arriving in Saskatoon, Dr. Morton embarked on the study of Western Canadian history and the preservation of the region's historical documents and historic sites. Over the next four decades he published several books; among his best known works are "A History of the Canadian West to 1870-71," "History of Prairie Settlement," "Under Western Skies," and "The Life of Sir George Simpson." Dr. Morton received many honours during his career, including a Doctor of Divinity from Pine Hill College (1922), an honourary Doctor of Laws degree from the U of S (1941), election as a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada (1932), and appointments as Keeper of Provincial Records (1937) and Provincial Archivist (1943). Upon his retirement he was named Professor Emeritus of History. Dr. Morton continued to work on a number of projects until his death on 26 January 1945 in Saskatoon. Morton Place in the Greystone Heights neighborhood of Saskatoon honours Dr. Morton.
Shuttleworth Mathematical Society
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.
Qu'Appelle Hall and Saskatchewan Hall
Exterior view of Qu'Appelle Hall (men's residence) in foreground with Saskatchewan Hall (women's residence).
Students - Bob Japp, H.D. Hart and Unidentified Man
Three men stand on a raised ledge on campus; two men identified as Bob Japp and Howard Dixon Hart. Houses and the South Saskatchewan River in background.
Three images of student life. Image (a) shows has women in fur coats with men in white coats standing outside a campus building. Image (b) a group of men in white coats sitting on the steps of a campus building. Image (c) shows three male students in a residence room (labelled Japp, Ken, and Phil).
Engineering Building - Exterior
Damage done to exterior of the Engineering Building after a hailstorm.
Bio/historical note: The original Engineering Building was destroyed by fire on Friday, 13 March 1925.