Financial and student and other records of Jubilee School. Includes inspectors' reports, half-yearly returns, receipts for coal, wood and other goods and services.
A laminated photograph of the Glenn Lynn Cairn Committee standing around the completed cairn. (left to right Allan Oudot. Marion Scott. Hartley Scott. Alma Williamson. Brian Scott). The photograph has a sticky label at the top with the caption and one at the bottom with the names of the people.
Five copies of a 26-page coil- bound booklet about the history of Glenn Lynn School, prepared by Grace (Devlin) Morton. It includes poetry and contributions by former students and residents of Glenn Lynn SD 333.
A large brown 3-ring binder with 48 pages of photos of Glenn Lynn SD 333 and its students. The pages are cardboard adhesive backed photo album inserts with plastic overlays.
Seven legal-sized pages stapled together which are photocopies of attendance registers of Glenn Lynn SD 333 from 1911 -1919, including October, 1911; June, 1914; September, 1914; June, 1915; August, 1916; August, 1917; April, 1919.
Ten legal-sized pages stapled together that are photocopied attendance registers of Glenn Lynn ScD 333 from 1920 to 1928, including January, 1920; January, 1921; February, 1922; August, 1923; July, 1924; August, 1925; August, 1926; August, 1927; June, 1929.
Nine legal-sized pages stapled together that are photocopied attendance registers of Glenn Lynn SD 333 from 1948 to 1959 including June, 1949, 1950, 1951, 1952, 1954, 1956, 1957, 1958, 1959,
Ten legal-sized pages stapled together that are photocopied attendance registers of Glenn Lynn SD 333 from 1960 to 1964 including June, 1960, 1961, 1962, 1963, 1964.
Glenn Lynn School was the only two-room country school in the district. The series consists of a photo/text album prepared by Alma Williamson for the Indian Head Museum and the Indian Head History Book, three copies of “Glenn Lynn Heritage” by former teacher Grace Worden, copies of student registers (1911-1964) and textual items from the July 1, 2000 dedication of the cairn marking the school’s former location.
Contains a description of Indian Head and Saskatchewan and Canada. The letter was intended to be sent to a not-yet-determined student in another country but was not sent.